The real world version of video enhancement capabilities has been available in professional video editing tools and dedicated forensic applications. And now MotionDSP vReveal brings single-click enhancement to consumer video (www.vreveal.com).
vReveal is priced at $49.99 online. But the real test is to try it out to see how it works with your own videos. You can download the free 30-day trial (it applies a watermark to exported and captured videos) at www.vreveal.com/download.
Forensic video enhancement applications designed for law enforcement and military use include Ocean Systems dTective which has some 1500 installed systems (packaged with Avid workstations starting at around $12K, www.oceansystems.com/dtective), as well as products that run on Windows PCs like MotionDSP Ikena (starting at $7K, www.motiondsp.com/products/Ikena) and Sarnoff Video ResolvR (around $4K, www.sarnoff.com/products/video-enhancement).
vReveal was originally released in March 2009, and is priced at $49.99 online. It's optimized for NVIDIA CUDA-enabled graphics processors (GPUs) to run up to five times faster. It's actually sold through the NVIDIA online store (www.vreveal.com/redirect/nvidia_store_usa).
But the real test is to try out vReveal for yourself to see how it enhances your own videos. You can download a free 30-day trial (which applies a watermark to exported videos) at www.vreveal.com/download.
A free 30-day trial of vReveal is available for download today on the vReveal web site located at www.vreveal.com. It is also available for download from EVGA and PNY and for purchase for $49.99 from www.nzone.com.
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