_ Take hi-resolution image A from camera and store in archive I.
_ Process hi-resolution image A from archive and process with Image ready to small jpg: call it image B then Store in archive II
_ later (let's say a month or more) someone else goes into Archive I, finds image A again and it is processed a second time, using exactly the same parameters, scale and jpg quality, to a small image, call it image C and stored in Archive II with a different file name.
OK now image B and C will look exactly the same on screen, but to what extent their binary data will be a precise match, given that they were processed at different times, even though they came from the same original... we will see.
On Saturday, July 19, 2003, at 05:35 PM, Vikram Singh wrote:
From: Vikram Singh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Sat Jul 19, 2003 5:35:27 PM Pacific/Honolulu To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Image recognition tool Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Siva,
I think if you use md5digest it may give you what you want.
Regards Vikram
===== Original Message From Sannyasin Sivakatirswami <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> =====
Probably too much to ask... but does anyone think that there would a
way for revolution to determine if one image was a duplicated of
another? I mean, not by file name but from the image data itself?
Sannyasin Sivakatirswami Himalayan Academy Publications at Kauai's Hindu Monastery [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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