| Yury - wrote on 13. Jul 2010 | |
| I am architect, it is interesting to see the sceleton in move | |
| SIDASHIERVE - wrote on 12. Jul 2010 | |
| Hi Everybody, I am not brand new to the site but I suspected right now was as great as time as any to say greetings, so.. well greetings :) | |
| SIDASHIERVE - wrote on 12. Jul 2010 | |
| Hi Everyone, I am not completely new on the site but I thought at present was as good as time as any to say hello, so.. well greetings :) | |
| Steven Barr - wrote on 28. Jun 2010 | |
| This is a fascinating site. I do use it and enjoy it, although many questions come to mind. This precision is such a small part of the world of emotion recognition and I use it as an add on to other movement analysis experiments. The Wow factor is significant. | |
| Sky - wrote on 03. Jun 2010 | |
| This is great! I've noticed that many women swing their arms out in a kind of circle around the axis of their spines, as if their hands were following the circuference of a circle or a hula-hoop! I've seen very few women hold their arms relatively close to their sides as depicted in the animation. Just IMHO :-) Cool animation. One can definitely "read" most of those floating points! |
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| Helene Sisti - wrote on 24. May 2010 | |
| It is beautiful work. Thank you for sharing. | |
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