| Gopal Karemore - wrote on 22. May 2007 | |
| I have never seen such a excelent research on human motion analysis. Extraordinary work |
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| Rusty Williamson - wrote on 05. May 2007 | |
| If I could only get an avi file exported or, be able to scrub through it and see frame numbers (i.e. use this as an animated rotoscope)!! Great work! | |
| alieksdugfvuisdgb - wrote on 03. May 2007 | |
| hi. i like your website. =] | |
| aled wassell - wrote on 30. Apr 2007 | |
| hey all i just came out as a homosexual... but really i wanted to say good programm | |
| PAULO NASCIMENTO - wrote on 07. Apr 2007 | |
| Impressionante! Fantástico! Através desse estudo entendemos o quanto ainda há por descobrir, estudar, entender e aperfeiçoar no comportamento humano. Mesmo no meu pobre português gostaria de prestar minha modesta homenagem. | |
| Patricia Uma Rawal - wrote on 23. Mar 2007 | |
| I am trying to make walkcycle using Python for Blender. I am not very happy. How can Bimotion help in this regard? | |
| Mario Pesendorfer - wrote on 15. Mar 2007 | |
| Dear Niko and colleagues! Please make sure to replace the link to our labsite with the one you see below. Thank you for your visit to Vienna and your great discussions. Greetings Mario and others from the Huber Lab |
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| Wiz - wrote on 19. Feb 2007 | |
| Pretty neat - I tried judging "Age" from 10-60, and in many cases it was quite easy to guess the walker's age, however it didn't seem there was all that much variety, particular in the under-20 area. In the end, it ended up extrapolating that 10 year-olds swing their hips rather wildly, which is obviously untrue. Also, I found that squinting your eyes while watching the animations helped enormously in envisaging the person behind the walk. | |
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