Put flip
somewhere in your $PATH
and chmod a+x
it.
Copy fuck
into ~/.bashrc
.
#!/bin/bash | |
# Taken from: https://gist.github.com/tklein23/9730737 | |
set -ex | |
NUM_CORES=$(grep '^processor\s*:\s*' /proc/cpuinfo |wc -l) | |
NUM_JOBS=$((NUM_CORES+3)) | |
BUILDDIR="$(pwd)/build-before-pr" |
Probably the most straight forward way to start generating Point Clouds from a set of pictures.
VisualSFM is a GUI application for 3D reconstruction using structure from motion (SFM). The reconstruction system integrates several of my previous projects: SIFT on GPU(SiftGPU), Multicore Bundle Adjustment, and Towards Linear-time Incremental Structure from Motion. VisualSFM runs fast by exploiting multicore parallelism for feature detection, feature matching, and bundle adjustment.
For dense reconstruction, this program supports Yasutaka Furukawa's PMVS/CMVS tool chain, and can prepare data for Michal Jancosek's CMP-MVS. In addition, the output of VisualSFM is natively supported by Mathias Rothermel and Konrad Wenzel's [SURE]
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6565357/git-push-requires-username-and-password
A common mistake is cloning using the default (HTTPS) instead of SSH. You can correct this by going to your repository, clicking the ssh button left to the URL field and updating the URL of your origin remote like this:
git remote set-url origin git@github.com:username/repo.git
See http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7773181/git-keeps-prompting-me-for-password, make sure you are cloning your repos using ssh
:
ssh://git@github.com/username/repo.git
"""Creates a 3D surface plot, can be used as an example for demonstrating gradient descent | |
Author: Markus Frey | |
E-mail: markus.frey1@gmail.com | |
""" | |
import numpy as np | |
import pandas as pd | |
import os | |
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt |