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by bastijn
4006 days ago
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I mean the author no harm, nor want to talk bad about his work. His work is very cool and I like the amount of information that he gives. Yet, this is far from comparable to academic work. I am inclined to say that you mixed up the sides in your statement, IMHO. Academic work would have explained the benefit of the algorithm. It would have presented it with a side by side comparison with common algorithms and explain it's pros and cons against these algorithms. It would have covered all aspects like quality, size, performance to name a few. It would have explained me if I could use this new algorithm in my field, and why (not). None of this is present in the current work shared here. You say this is half done, I would say this is not even 20% done.. To end on friendlier terms, I completely agree that more academic work should have been made available. Yet, I know the pressure in that world and can understand keeping it for yourself for a while. More often than not you will have to drag out a couple of other papers in the same field. |
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Furthermore, the traditional paper would have to make a lot of guesses about the kinds of images people were likely interested in and the range of characteristics that mattered. What kind of noise spectrum due your images have, how does increasing contrast affect things, what about the spacial frequency distribution in the images themselves, and so on... Different fields have radically different "typical" images and the attempts at covering a reasonable range of the in traditional papers were not necessarily very limited.
Instead, I see this model of publication as exploiting the possibilities of the 'Net to allow more effective communication and collaboration. And it is publication: it is making public, which is what makes the difference between science and alchemy... if there had been a "Proceedings of the Alchemical Society" we'd have had chemistry a thousand years ago.
What this model of publication does not (yet) have is a reputation mechanism, but it isn't clear it needs one, because you can see the results (and the code) for yourself. As such, I think the author has not only done something interesting in the image compression space, they are pointing the way on the future of scientific publication.
Measuring this model as if it could be described as a certain amount of progress along a line toward the old endpoint is mistaken. This is a paradigm shift, and the models are incommensurable.