I am currently using a Hough Circle to extract the clock face, then preforming a canny edge detection and dialating the image. Then finally a Hough Line transform to extract the hands. However, the Hough Line tranform also detects some erronous lines on the edge of the clock and numbers ect along with the clock hands.
To fix this i tried, getting the center of the clock and checking if that point lies on the line that was detected, as the hands of the clock always pass through the center. However, the Hough Lines are not always 100% accurate and neither is the center point so not all of them pass through the center. Is there anyway to see if a line passes close to a point?
I want to change an image every minute. When the computer's clock moves from 8:50 to 8:51 then to 8:52 all the way back to 8:49 I want my picture to change from 0001.jpg to 0002.jpg to 0003.jpg all the way to 1440.jpg.
Since I am going to be using the computer's clock, I am interested in using JavaScript. I am also just starting out, so full code (which would be awesome!) is probably not what I need. Instead, I am looking for a place to start and maybe a direction to go. Any resources online that you know of would also be helpful
I have been trying forever, and it will not do it, but i don't even know if that is an option, so can anyone explain??? I have downloaded multiple apps on my versa in order to change the face into one of my pics. there was one app that worked, and that was slideshow. Just give me some advice for the clockface thing.
Thanks for your efforts while checking the Fitbit App Gallery and let me help you with your inquiry. Fitbit has developed a clock face named "Photograph" which will allow you to choose a picture from your library to set it as a clock face for your Versa 2. You'll only need to try the following instructions:
Thanks for following the steps described above. Usually when a clock face isn't installing correctly, it's because your Versa 2 isn't syncing correctly or a firmware is pending to update. If your watch was recently setup to your account, you may need to wait a few days to receive this update. Assuming this is correct, please leave the Fitbit app running in the background so your watch can sync regularly and receive the update soon. You'll see a banner prompted on the Fitbit app when the firmware is ready to download.
@Jenniecee Thanks for the details and efforts while working on this situation. Let me share that the Photograph clock face developed by Fitbit is free and available for your Versa 2. You can follow the instructions posted above to change the clock face. Please make sure the one you're selecting is the same one that appears in the link shared by @Guitarplayer which says By Fitbit.
Thanks for joining this thread, as well as trying the steps suggested above. I'm glad you were able to put a picture as a clock face, and I hope you can keep enjoying the experience with your Versa 2.
@harriet2720 Thanks for trying the suggestions shared in this thread. As our friend mentioned, the changes should update once you select the Photograph clock face and pick your picture. Just make sure your watch is syncing correctly so the changes can be applied. Please check my previous post for detailed instructions and keep me posted.
I think it was just timing and he likely never seen the threads in the past since there are so many topics and they can get pushed down the list quickly. JM's thread for the recent batch was going for a few months and then when it got bumped a few days ago it likely caught the attention of Rick. Such a shame and it's not like PPS is going to start offering these for sale (even if he did it would not include the Stern animations). I know Stern gets a lot of shit but mods are the one thing they really don't crack down unless its competition for something they plan on selling them self like a topper. I'm sure plenty of employees from Stern have seen the posts for these clocks and could have pulled a "Contributory Infringement" card like Rick but they have chosen not to.
You cannot make a copy of the card, because the etching makes the card unreadable from a computer (it appears unformatted).
The hex files required to operate the clock are rather small hex files, about 500kB.
what does this mean for pinMame etc... all those roms contain these dmd images etc... Or is it because the clock is sold and making a small profit they have put a complaint it?
Will this effect pin2dmd colouring?
damn, i have the old image from when i bought my rundmd. i bought very early on and never updated. hopefully someone finds the files. if anyone has them pm me so i can figure out a way to get the files from you then upload them to mega/googledrive/zippyshare/etc
Now THAT is some great info. I forgot just how many stupid redundant animations are in there from Ghostbusters and WWE. Seriously, out of 3000+ animations, about 25% are just those two games - and fully half of those are essentially the same thing. I forgot just how much custom filtering I had done on my image - those, and some of the more violent Dirty Harry & Judge Dredd animations (because the wife and some guests are not fond of headshots at the dinner table, heh). The information above sounds like a good way to back up your own custom filtered image - I'm going to have to try that.
Within three weeks, hundreds of millions of healthy people worldwide contract various forms of aggressive cancer, and the proliferation, seemingly a viral outbreak, stumps the best scientific minds available. But after a leading cancer researcher loses his wife and watches his nine-year-old daughter begin to succumb to the same illness, he must race against the clock to end a global conspiracy that could propel the world straight into WWIII...or worse.
From the OAK-SoM datasheet, I see it outputs the 24 MHz camera clock reference. This is a start as it can drive a clock on the host system side, but I don't see any other signals to help correlate to system clocks.
Hi meaton ,
I believe OAK cameras sync their internal clock to hosts std::chrono::steady_clock (also accessible on Python via dai.Clock.now()). So you could also compare eg. frame timestamp (imgFrame.getTimestamp()) with this host timestamp to calculate time-to-host (from camera) delay as described here. Thoughts?
Thanks, Erik
Thanks for the quick reply! The information you provided is very useful. I also realized I can route the COM_AUX_IO2 (Frame Sync Input) output signal to the host system to timestamp events on a common clock.
Fitspiration is a popular social media trend that aims to inspire individuals to improve their health and fitness through diet and exercise. However, viewing fitspiration content on Instagram has been identified as a contributor to negative body image, especially for young women. With the growing popularity of the video sharing platform TikTok and concerns over its content, the present study aimed to experimentally examine the effect of exposure to fitspiration TikTok videos on young women's body dissatisfaction, appearance comparison and mood. The roles of state appearance comparison as a mediator and trait fit ideal internalisation as a moderator were also considered. Young women (18-25, N = 120) from Australia were randomly allocated to view a set of fitspiration videos or a set of art control videos from TikTok. Results indicated that exposure to fitspiration TikTok videos increased state appearance comparison and state negative mood relative to art TikTok videos but did not directly increase state body dissatisfaction. State appearance comparison significantly mediated the effect of TikTok videos on body dissatisfaction and mood, however, there was no moderating effect of trait fit ideal internalisation. These findings highlight the importance of state appearance comparison in relation to viewing fitspiration content on TikTok.
If your monitor is on a VGA (not DVI) cable, you need to set the clockand phase right. The test image below is best viewed in full-screenmode and should appear grey from a distance, but from close by, youmay notic that it is a fine pattern of interleaved black and whitepixels. A red line on the sides may help you with the horizontalposition (clock). Your video card resolution must match the nativeresolution of your screen for this test(see Display settings). On anoccasional LCD monitor, the clock/phase settings are called "focus" or"coarse/fine". Most monitors have an "autoset" option such that itwill tune the clock and phase automatically.
First adjust the clock until the vertical bands (left image)disappear. On some monitors, it is called "coarse". If this is notpossible, try changing the video mode refresh rate (usually 60Hz). Next you can adjust the clock (sometimes: 'fine') to get rid of theshimmering patterns (right image).
You can change the keystone setting in the beamer, but this will probably cause the projected image to be distorted. Ideally, you should switch of the keystone correction and locate the beamer such that the image is rectangular. Otherwise, I would suggest that you switch off the keystone just while doing these tests, since otherwise some of the tests may not produce reliable results.
Copyright Han-Kwang Nienhuys, 2008. The text and accompanying images may not be redistributed. This includes placing the images on other websites, either as a copy or through hotlinking. Read more...
You will however to ensure that one (randomly selected) of the 4 images is associated with the right answer, and that the already picked images are no longer considered for selection of the next image to show (since having one with the right answer 11 is somewhat not that challenging if all the other one show the same wrong possible answer), but that is definitely possible to do.
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