What would be the practical applications of something like this?
+ Can you embed it in a mirror to portray information if a face is recognized?
+ Or can you make glass semitransparent when something is recognized?
+ What about windows that blur anything that looks like a face? Preferably keeping other objects the same. A bit of an autoencoder where only certain objects are blurred.
+ Can the amount of light shining on it lead to different results? Then you can show a little movie by shining more and more light through the glass using it in reverse.
It's a simple embodiment but I guess there are thousands of applications we haven't thought of yet. Really cool train of thought!
>Can the amount of light shining on it lead to different results? Then you can show a little movie by shining more and more light through the glass using it in reverse.
I don't think movies, but some monotonic changes should be possible using critical refractive angles.
It now also reminds me of the controversial Moon Mode on the Huawei P30 Pro. On smartphone cameras you might now incorporate things in the lens rather than in the firmware. Be it improved lunar pictures or snapchat/instagram filters...
+ Can you embed it in a mirror to portray information if a face is recognized?
+ Or can you make glass semitransparent when something is recognized?
+ What about windows that blur anything that looks like a face? Preferably keeping other objects the same. A bit of an autoencoder where only certain objects are blurred.
+ Can the amount of light shining on it lead to different results? Then you can show a little movie by shining more and more light through the glass using it in reverse.
It's a simple embodiment but I guess there are thousands of applications we haven't thought of yet. Really cool train of thought!