deepViewer: Picture Catalog & Search Engine

There’s this ridiculously smart Intel guy I meet with on a regular basis named Francois. He’s a big car guy, currently favoring the Nissan GTR, and also happens to be incredible knowledgeable about all things SSE and video related. For the past couple of years Francois has been showing me a little application called deepViewer pretty much every time I meet with him.

deepViewer is a photo organizing application, it allows you to quickly navigate through all of your photos. The pictures are organized in a large calendar, you can zoom in and out very quickly (assuming you have a fast hard drive, or SSD, and fast CPU); the whole thing is very movie like.

I’ve never written about deepViewer before because the application isn’t out yet (although it will be soon). While navigating through your pictures quickly is a cool feature, it’s not enough to get excited about. Today in my Intel meeting Francois showed me something a little more interesting.

deepViewer got an upgrade, it can now find all similar pictures in your library. Simply right click on your photo and then tell the software to find similar images.


The circles in the image above are the portions of the image deepViewer looks to match in its database. The larger the circle, the higher the weight of that part of the image.

Internally, the application samples a number of points from the image and searches for similar elements in all other images. The search works according to elements of the image like faces or backgrounds and colors. The search isn’t exactly live, all of this data is sampled when you index your images and it’s simply updated as you add more photos to your library.

The process of searching isn’t very CPU intensive, it’s the indexing that needs a fast CPU. Naturally, Francois demonstrated deepViewer on a Core i7 (it was overclocked to 4.6GHz using water).

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  • vjoose - Friday, March 13, 2009 - link

    Somebody please send a copy of this vista driver to my mail box...
    vjoose@asiamail.com

    Enough suffers with the fxxking Intel driver. I just can't hold myself dreaming of turning my mini 12 to the one shown in CES ...
  • icrf - Tuesday, January 13, 2009 - link

    "The Imagination Technologies staff also ran a dual stream video decode demo where they had a Atom/Poulsbo netbook playing one 8Mbps H.264 video and a 1080p H.264 video on an external display, simultaneously."

    I thought Poulsbo could only output 1366x768, so it's not outputting 1080p anywhere.

    http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/intel/showdoc...">http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/intel/showdoc...
  • syrup1971 - Monday, March 23, 2009 - link

    The Video decoder, can decode 1080P video, so it is showing a 1080P video, which is scaled using the graphics core, to format for the display. The display pipeline is capable of higher resolutions than 1366x768, as witnessed for example in Sonys vaio P, with its 1600x768 display.
  • sprockkets - Sunday, January 11, 2009 - link

    The HP pictures are wrong. The first two are the new HP Linux GUI interface netbook, http://www.shopping.hp.com/webapp/shopping/compute...">http://www.shopping.hp.com/webapp/shopp...imi_seri...

    The other one must be the business one. I recently used a Dell Mini 9. Keyboard is a bit too small. But those HP ones are nice.
  • JonnyDough - Saturday, January 10, 2009 - link

    "Intel gave a few examples of how this system could be used. Say the car in front of yours with this system in place applied its breaks (hence illuminating the LED brake lights), data embedded in those lights can be sent to your car and processed by an onboard computer (powered by an Intel Atom, of course). The computer could then either warn you that the car in front of you is slowing down or even apply the brakes for you."

    I just wanted to say that this is going to present major problems. People will get used to auto-braking and the sound that tones when someone in front of you brakes. Ice over the sensor or headlights, a dead sensor, or a dead pulse switch is going to leave you in the rear-end of the car in front of you.

    Oh, and Anandtech: Quote button doesn't work right.
  • sprockkets - Saturday, January 10, 2009 - link

    Cars apply their "breaks" all the time, huh?
  • vailr - Friday, January 9, 2009 - link

    Re: "The SGX543 will probably show up in designs in about 2 years."
    I'd tend to doubt that statement. I'm guessing: more like one year or less. Also: there was a mention somewhere online about a dual-core Atom CPU being in development. Any news about that?
  • Penti - Friday, January 9, 2009 - link

    Dual core atoms is available today it's called Atom 330 which is a 8W TDP dual-core desktop Atom.
  • ebayne - Friday, January 9, 2009 - link

    The same folks who bought the jellybean colored macbooks will buy the Sony in droves. For the same reason. They're cute. Women, students and metrosexual execs will line up to purchase it because it looks "nice" and because all their friends want them. Feature conscious road-warriors aren't Sony's target demographic.
  • JimmiG - Friday, January 9, 2009 - link

    That Sony netbook doesn't even look very good IMO. I like the look of that new HP Mini a lot more.

    I also agree that Atom-powered netbooks only make sense in the <$400 segment. Even with a GeForce GPU, there just isn't enough raw CPU power to justify spending $600 or more on an Atom netbook. If you want to spend more, just buy a 13" Core2 machine with better graphics. I do like my $290 Aspire One, though.

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