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Sensei has been used to power a variety of features in Adobe's creative software, such as object selection in Photoshop and image auto-enhancement in Lightroom. Firefly expanded its capabilities to Illustrator, Premiere Pro, and Express, particularly for generating photos, videos and audio to enhance or alter specific parts of the media.
Example image with fireflies (click to enlarge and examine closely). Image with fireflies removed through postprocessing. Fireflies are rendering artifacts resulting from numerical instabilities in solving the rendering equation. They manifest themselves as anomalously-bright single pixels scattered over parts of the image.
For this edition of the Scrub Hub, we looked at if fireflies are disappearing across Indiana. The answer is yes, hurt by chemicals and light pollution.
These editors produce more logically structured markup than is typical of WYSIWYG editors, while retaining the advantage in ease of use over hand-coding using a text editor. Lyx (interface to Latex/Tex, via which can convert to/from HTML)
Fireflies are found throughout the United States, according to the National Wildlife Federation. Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Tennessee is a hotspot to see thousands of synchronous ...
wikEd is a full-featured, in-browser text editor that adds enhanced text processing functions to Wikipedia and other MediaWiki edit pages (currently Mozilla, Firefox, SeaMonkey, Safari, and Chrome only). Features include: Pasting formatted text, e.g. from MS-Word (including tables) Converting the formatted text to wikicode; Wikicode syntax ...
Photopea (/ ˈ f oʊ t ə ˈ p iː / FOH-tə-PEE) is a web-based photo and graphics editor developed by Ivan Kutskir. It is used for image editing, making illustrations, web design or converting between different image formats. Photopea is free advertising-supported software, and offers a premium ad-free subscription
Shotcut is a free and open-source, cross-platform video, audio, and image editing program for FreeBSD, [5] Linux, macOS and Windows. [6] Started in 2011 by Dan Dennedy, Shotcut is developed on the MLT Multimedia Framework , [ 7 ] in development since 2004 by the same author.