Image tools should be a global open resource – instantly accessible for all humans, all human languages

Patrick Piantadosi @ptpiantadosi  any calcium imaging folks have a good pipeline for correcting (or otherwise dealing with) rather severe motion in 1p miniscope recordings? https://pic.x.com/dr3cmdmywy
Replying to @ptpiantadosi

Many groups use registration, stacking, “lucky images” and “flow”. It is growing fast, and nearly impossible to follow completely. I label it as a “solved problem where the knowledge is being manipulated to benefit a few”. Or “a lot is known, but it is still scattered and hoarded and fragmented”. There are groups taking 1 image every few decades, and ones taking billions of images each second. They all can use “multiple image methods”.
 
( “image” “registration” “stacking” ) has 1.77 Million entries
( “image alignment” ) has 431,000 entries
 

Duplicate research and duplicate reinvention is one of the most serious Internet problems in my opinion. Tens of thousands of higher education, and hundreds of thousands of high school level. Now tutors, private education, online “education” of all sorts. All teaching out of date methods. And forcing billions of humans into an Internet paper chase.

Filed as (Image tools should be a global open resource – instantly accessible for all humans, all human languages)

Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation

Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

The Internet Foundation Internet policies, global issues, global open lossless data, global open collaboration


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