Yeah, I think that'll happen. I think it's already happening. And if someone wraps it in a terrible app with ads, makes millions of dollars, and I never see any of the money, yes I'll be very sad. But I'm trying to take a bigger perspective here. There's a lot of experience and tools that could be built off this, and I can't possibly build them all.
And if I hid the code away so only I could use it, there's a good chance no one would ever create any of those experiences. Creating a successful app requires mobile UI people, devops, designers, marketing/SEO, monetization, etc. I don't want to do ANY of that... in the land of app creation, I'm more of a Tom Bombadil-type.
This is also my first project out of graduate school. I feel like I'll probably have other ideas down the road, and maybe I'll try to monetize those ones with what I've learned from this adventure.
This is AMAZING, my 3 year old draws the cutest pictures and I can animate them!
One thing with the browser version, it all works fine up until the animation and then its flipping my image upside down? Could this just be the photo metadata rotation/orientation??
It’s not metadata, you would see that when you upload the photo at the beginning.
I’m guessing that the nose key point is located below the shoulders in your child’s drawing?
That’s a known issue caused by how we ‘apply’ poses onto the characters. It’s fixed in the GitHub code but not in the browser version. Try moving the nose keypoint to the top of the characters head and that should resolve it
I assume you're referring to the demo at sketch.metademolab.com?
The server is returning an .mp4 file that is displayed by your browser, so you should be able to download it. On Chrome, if I maximize the video and click the three vertical dots, I get the option to download the video.
Is it actually possible to use the code and create an app for sale out of it. The MIT license says so I think, just wondering if anything else would speak against it.
Code and dataset are here: https://github.com/facebookresearch/AnimatedDrawings
And a browser-based version of it is here: http://sketch.metademolab.com/