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Manual image annotation is the process of manually defining regions in an image and creating a textual description of those regions. Such annotations can for instance be used to train machine learning algorithms for computer vision applications. This is a list of computer software which can be used for manual annotation of images.
Computer Vision Annotation Tool (CVAT) is an open source, web-based image and video annotation tool used for labeling data for computer vision algorithms. Originally developed by Intel , CVAT is designed for use by a professional data annotation team, with a user interface optimized for computer vision annotation tasks.
Digital transaction management (DTM) is a category of cloud services designed to digitally manage document-based transactions. DTM removes the friction inherent in transactions that involve people, documents, and data to create faster, easier, more convenient, and secure processes. [ 1 ]
VoTT (Visual Object Tagging Tool) is a free and open source Electron app for image annotation and labeling developed by Microsoft. [1] The software is written in the TypeScript programming language and used for building end-to-end object detection models from image and videos assets for computer vision algorithms.
LabelMe is a project created by the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) that provides a dataset of digital images with annotations. The dataset is dynamic, free to use, and open to public contribution. The most applicable use of LabelMe is in computer vision research. As of October 31, 2010, LabelMe has 187,240 ...
Photopia Optical Design Software: Proprietary: Yes No No No Picogen: GPLv3 Yes No Yes No Pixar RenderMan: Proprietary: Yes Yes Yes No Pixie GPL: Yes Yes Yes No POV-Ray: AGPLv3: Yes Yes Yes Quadoa Optical CAD: Proprietary: Yes No Yes No Rayshade: pre-gpl open source, gpl-like Yes Yes Yes Yes Radiance: BSD: Yes Yes Yes No Realsoft 3D: Proprietary ...
The first version was released around the year 2000 under the name EAT, Eudico Annotation Tool. It was renamed to ELAN in 2002. Since then, two to three new versions are released each year. It is developed in the programming language Java with interfaces to platform native media frameworks developed in C, C++, and Objective-C.
CloudCompare is a 3D point cloud processing software (such as those obtained with a laser scanner).It can also handle triangular meshes and calibrated images. Originally created during a collaboration between Telecom ParisTech and the R&D division of EDF, the CloudCompare project began in 2003 with the PhD of Daniel Girardeau-Montaut on Change detection on 3D geometric data. [2]