32 comments

  • wackget an hour ago

    Is this post a spam submission?

    The website looks like a super generic landing page template; the kind you find when you search "youtube video downloader" and similar.

    Take that "#1 AI Image Upscaler" banner for example. #1 according to who? The AI Image Upscaler Academy Awards panel?

  • xnx 3 hours ago
    • jazzyjackson 2 hours ago

      I'll just add one more as a happy customer who would never upload personal photos to some AI service: ACDSee [0] has local AI tagging and super resolution upscaling without any associated cloud services or subscriptions, it's just a one time purchase lifetime license - basically a lightroom classic competitor.

      [0] https://www.acdsee.com/en/photo-studio/ai/

      • jakub_g 2 hours ago

        ACDSee - wow, it's been a while since I saw this name!

        For the not familiar: it's been one of better photo viewer apps on Windows in early 2000s. At some point I learnt about IrfanView though and moved to it. (And then moved to MacOS).

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACDSee

        • m4rtink 40 minutes ago

          XnView is good & multi platform. :)

          https://www.xnview.com/en/

          • KronisLV 36 minutes ago

            Seconding this, their XnView MP version works on various platforms, too: https://www.xnview.com/en/xnviewmp/

            I especially like the batch operations, for when I want to do stuff with format conversions, resizing, EXIF data and other things. Really pleasant software.

            I used IrfanView before then, it was honestly great for Windows. It was mentioned in the parent comment, here's their page, too: https://www.irfanview.com/

            But my use cases have been regular image operations, never really the fancy AI stuff, no idea what the software landscape there is like (have to mention, given the topic).

        • scotty79 an hour ago

          Last time I heard it was before I switched to FastStone

      • xnx 2 hours ago

        Very cool. More of these AI capabilities need to be available locally without managing a Python environment.

    • giantrobot an hour ago

      > Anything that sets it apart from the dozens of other open-source/free/pay upscalers?

      This needs a very compelling answer since it's asking for a Netflix* subscription to do 50 images in a month.

      * Or whatever streaming service that's providing decades worth of content for $15 a month.

      • mentos 39 minutes ago

        Haha I mean you could also argue Netflix is underpriced?

  • mawise 2 hours ago

    It's important to remember that these upscalers will hallucinate new content. Especially when law enforcement tries to use these to find suspects from blurry photos. See this example from the lower left of their front-page demo where it adds a person to the boat: https://imgur.com/a/Vo3zlO3

  • halostatue 3 hours ago

    Google login only? Not interested. I’m trying to reduce my dependence on Google properties.

  • Nihilartikel an hour ago

    This looks pretty good! Results of roughly this caliber are already really common with local, and freely usable tools and models though. Picking one randomly: https://github.com/jtscmw01/ComfyUI-DiffBIR

    The Reddit StableDiffusion and related groups have a ton of upscaling workflows that use diffusion models, GANS and the like to dream up the additional pixels for extreme zoom-and-enhance use cases.

  • kierenj 3 hours ago

    "Top interior design trends" - title of the login page?

    • kierenj 3 hours ago
      • troebr an hour ago

        Maybe they're cranking out AI SaaS products to see what sticks. I was going to say low effort, but it's not zero effort and does offer some kind of service. I could have used some AI help for my kitchen design, I hated the process.

  • trebor 6 hours ago

    Upvoted because your ToS is very clear about the images we scale aren't used to improve training. Thank you for that.

    I have some pretty old photos I may have to pull out and upscale. They're from back in the old 1MP camera days.

  • TripleChecker 3 hours ago

    Are you planning to provide an API for uploading images?

    You also have a typo 'with with', see our report: https://triplechecker.com/s/88266/imageupscaler.io.

  • an hour ago
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  • 2 hours ago
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  • rasz 3 hours ago

    Those should be legally forced to be called Hallucinators.

    • jrm4 2 hours ago

      Honestly, this is the first time I've seen "hallucinate" used usefully and properly. I get that putting legal teeth on this idea is difficult and fraught with pitfalls, but I believe the benefit outweighs the risk.

      Similar to, but more useful than, when food producers lobby for fake versions of their food to be labelled as such, and to perhaps not have that name.

    • echelon 2 hours ago

      Should we legally call image editing software "bag of assorted image processing algorithms"?

    • slipperybeluga 3 hours ago

      [dead]

    • addaon 3 hours ago

      Where do you live where you feel that this is an important issue for your legislators to focus on? It sounds nice!

      • hidelooktropic 2 hours ago

        Where do you live where your community only has room for one piece of legislation?

      • exe34 3 hours ago

        to be fair, every government of a reasonably prosperous country is trying to figure out how to control the potential AI economy.

        if not legally, we should at least as a community remind people that it's basically making up the details. personally I look forward to seeing it used in court and completely tanking a case or two. that should draw some attention to the danger.

  • dmead 3 hours ago

    I'm going to try my astrophotography pics

    • dmead 3 hours ago

      Nothing works.

  • theusus 2 hours ago

    > Can the Image Upscaler be used for enlarging images other than just photos?

    Ehh