How To Use MyHeritage Deep Nostalgia to Animate Old Photos | Why is it Trending ?
Photo source: Screenshot from MyHeritage |
Deep nostalgia is a new AI-powered technology from the online family tree service MyHeritage that adds face animations, such as smile, nodes, blinks, and tilts, to still photos. Through the website or mobile app, users can choose from a range of recorded animations that can be inserted on their still images. The service warns that its technology should not be used to "deepfake" public figures or videos of someone else without their permission. You can crop the face with group shots, but you can't animate multiple people in one frame. A watermark indicates that such animations are being created artificially.
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HOW TO USE DEEP NOSTALGIA TO ANIMATE OLD PHOTOS
STEP 1: You can either download the application on you smartphone from playstore or else you can also go it's official website MyHeritage.STEP 2:Once you are done with downloading application will ask you to sign up with some required details like name, email,and password.
STEP 3:Next you have to upload yours old photos that you want to animate than Click in Ho option.
STEP 4: The application will take some time to turn still photos into animation.
STEP 5:Once the animated video is ready it will start playing immediately and after that you can download that video or you can also share directly on Whatsaap, Facebook, Twitter,and Instagram.
Users can sign up for a free account to take advantage of deep nostalgia. However, you are limited to a very small number of animations until you purchase a subscription. The animations can be easily published on social media and are exported as MP4 files. The technology has gone viral on social media.
People post examples of "Harry Potter" style animated portraits. In India, Karthik Sasidharan, author of The Dharma One, is one of the users who has published animations of Indian freedom fighters and other historical personalities. Some very interesting pictures of him have been posted here.
Kind of surreal to take a photo of the singularly inspiring Bhagat Singh -- a revolutionary voice in 1920s India, who was hung by the British in 1931, at the age of 24 -- run it through the Heritage AI algorithm, and see him reanimated. pic.twitter.com/CfC0Gu6Gxk
— Keerthik Sasidharan (@KS1729) February 28, 2021
Swami Vivekananda probably would have laughed at such algorithmic efforts to reanimate photos, but as a great believer in the powers of science to improve material aspects of human lives, he would have probably wanted to understand the details of how it all works. pic.twitter.com/3zFu9suGar
— Keerthik Sasidharan (@KS1729) February 28, 2021
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