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iPhone Aquiplicity (released 04 April 2011) - The iPhone version 1.0 of Aquiplicity was completed in April of 2011. The advantage of the iPhone version are that the computer used for stitching the images together and the camera are one unit. This makes for a seamless and user friendly process that is much like carrying around an Aquiplicity machine. Within a simple button press the results can be created and then emailed to your friends and family directly! With the advent of the iPad-2 Aquiplicity takes on even more power with additional cameras, resolution, and processing muscle. While creating clone images is both artistic and fun there are many more advanced uses for the software. For instance, a phone left at your desk snapping pictures every so often can compress the images and tell you who was at your desk while you were gone without reviewing a video as long as the time you were absent. This sort of surveillance, trend analysis and other possibilities are just the beginning. Think user friendly and have fun!
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Windows Aquiplicity (released 15 June 2010) - Windows Aquiplicity version 1.0 is easy to use and a powerhouse for combining your images but probably not for the newbie who just got a camera this week. Knowing how to use your camera should come first. The more of a photographer or artist you are the more amazing your results will be. Because Aquiplicity is very economical it is now used by thousands of people around the globe. It has the ability to stack images into an artsy clone scene as illustrated in the motorcycle image at the bottom of this page. Aquiplicity 1.0 boasts of multi-threading, advanced image correction or polishing with lasso tools, advanced memory handling, and the ability to ingest large images over 21 million pixels in size. Additionally one can use programs around the internet to break video into multiple images and do trend analysis. For instance tracking who left the restaurant in the image clip below. One could also stack all of the images of a thunderstorm into a single Aquiplicity image. This video stacking would find out where the lightening struck all summed up in one image. In this way you can use YouTube and other video sources to practice your Aquiplicity stacking skills. It's widely known that closed circuit televisions don't move much. Aquiplicity may be key in future versions to helping security people review many hours of video in one consolidated image to see what happened and save time. Who wants to review 24 hours of fast forwarded security video to see if there was activity outside their building? For now the favorite use of Aquiplicity is Art such as the Ducati motorcycle image below. Think bigger and go farther!
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