Went to try it on one of the sample photos, and it wanted me to create an account when I clicked the "Start Repair" button, before seeing results. No thanks.
All the sample photos are obviously photos that were originally in good condition, but you added the scratches, unwanted objects, etc. on top of them. This of course makes it very easy to show a before/after, but feels like false advertising. Use real photos, even if they are cherry-picked.
For a moment I thought the landing page before/after picture was an onion skin type control. Tried dragging it, site redirected me to a button that said "Start Repair". Clicked and was presented with a "Create account" screen. Closed to never return.
Came here to say this, it's a nice demo but feels like removing the black from a face to make it white (which would also be removing melanin) or the other way around. Maybe remove a big pimple as a demo ;)
This would be nice for a quick fix of a non personal picture, but for personal stuff, local is preffered.
Anyway, nice work, the fence removal is impressive :)
You might want to put a CDN/cache in front of the S3 bucket deeplor.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com you are serving some static assets from, otherwise the S3 network egress costs might go up rapidly.
Your website needs to be more responsive; remove the start repair button as it makes no sense; you could've shown the results after we release the mouse. It turns me off, especially if I'm going to do something, and it interrupts me to create an account. For a lot of users, that is a significant turn-off. I suggest you remove the create account prompt.
show me the results without signing in but make me sign in to save to my album, otherwise the photo will be deleted automatically. this balances privacy, disk storage, and user incentives/gamification all at the same time.
it feels like it was written in a different language and then translated to English at the last second.
using a picture of a kid in the category for 'resumes, prom and family albums, or dating apps' is strange
the 'blemishes' in the before/after don't look real, it looks artificially added, so there's no demonstration of what 'real' blemishes would look like if this thing were to remove it.
tried it out, clicked start repair, it wanted me to log in.. theres no way im ever going to use this if i have to log in first to even see what it can do
thank you! The model is based on GAN so it may generate artificial content to fill the holes. However, most of the results are consistent with the original content so that you will notice the difference. Try to remove large area and see the results. You will be impressed. We will definitely polish the UI and wording. thanks again.