X-Git-Url: https://git.sesse.net/?p=movit;a=blobdiff_plain;f=README;fp=README;h=62c99d0c936b9ec4ee8b5f6ae5a146c9217e8ee1;hp=05ba9f3cd89f292cf9a10e1d8fd93a71b9f5fb00;hb=c06f1c4cc39bbebe13fe8e42a9278a55b5d0a216;hpb=4b08ab8b7c55672e8a44afea18f5a6b3a66bd502 diff --git a/README b/README index 05ba9f3..62c99d0 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -45,10 +45,10 @@ Blur, diffusion, FFT-based convolution, glow, lift/gamma/gain (color correction), mirror, mix (add two inputs), luma mix (use a map to wipe between two inputs), overlay (the Porter-Duff “over” operation), scale (bilinear and Lanczos), sharpen (both by unsharp mask and by Wiener filters), saturation -(or desaturation), vignette, and white balance. +(or desaturation), vignette, white balance, and a deinterlacer (YADIF). Yes, that's a short list. But they all look great, are fast and don't give -you any nasty surprises. (I'd love to include denoise, deinterlace and +you any nasty surprises. (I'd love to include denoise and framerate up-/downconversion to the list, but doing them well are all research-grade problems, and Movit is currently not there.) @@ -102,7 +102,8 @@ While from a programming standpoint I'd love to say that it's 2015 and interlacing does no longer exist, but that's not true (and interlacing, hated as it might be, is actually a useful and underrated technique for bandwidth reduction in broadcast video). Movit will eventually provide -limited support for working with interlaced video, but currently does not. +limited support for working with interlaced video; it has a deinterlacer, +but cannot currently process video in interlaced form. What do you mean by “high-performance”?