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  2. Flicker (screen) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flicker_(screen)

    Software can cause flicker effects by directly displaying an unintended intermediate image for a short time. For example, drawing a page of text by blanking the area to white first in the frame buffer, then drawing 'on top' of it, makes it possible for the blank region to appear momentarily onscreen. Usually this is much faster and easier to ...

  3. Flutter (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flutter_(software)

    First described in 2015, [5] [6] Flutter was released in May 2017. Flutter is used internally by Google in apps such as Google Pay [7] [8] and Google Earth [9] [10] as well as other software developers including ByteDance [11] [12] and Alibaba. [13] [14] Flutter ships applications with its own rendering engine which directly outputs pixel data ...

  4. Flux (text-to-image model) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flux_(text-to-image_model)

    Flux (also known as FLUX.1) is a text-to-image model developed by Black Forest Labs, based in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany. Black Forest Labs were founded by former employees of Stability AI. As with other text-to-image models, Flux generates images from natural language descriptions, called prompts.

  5. Coded exposure photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coded_Exposure_Photography

    Coded exposure photography, also known as a flutter shutter, is the name given to any mathematical algorithm that reduces the effects of motion blur in photography. The key element of the coded exposure process is the mathematical formula that affects the shutter frequency.

  6. Flicker fusion threshold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flicker_fusion_threshold

    For the purposes of presenting moving images, the human flicker fusion threshold is usually taken between 60 and 90 Hz, though in certain cases it can be higher by an order of magnitude. [5] In practice, movies since the silent era are recorded at 24 frames per second and displayed by interrupting each frame two or three times for a flicker of ...

  7. Contrastive Language-Image Pre-training - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contrastive_Language-Image...

    In text-to-image retrieval, users input descriptive text, and CLIP retrieves images with matching embeddings. In image-to-text retrieval , images are used to find related text content. CLIP’s ability to connect visual and textual data has found applications in multimedia search, content discovery, and recommendation systems.

  8. Text-to-image model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text-to-image_model

    An image conditioned on the prompt an astronaut riding a horse, by Hiroshige, generated by Stable Diffusion 3.5, a large-scale text-to-image model first released in 2022. A text-to-image model is a machine learning model which takes an input natural language description and produces an image matching that description.

  9. List of optical illusions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_optical_illusions

    An autostereogram is a single-image stereogram (SIS), designed to create the visual illusion of a three-dimensional (3D) scene from a two-dimensional image in the human brain. An ASCII stereogram is an image that is formed using characters on a keyboard. Magic Eye is an autostereogram book series. Barberpole illusion