
Beautification software
Israeli computer scientists recently created a computer program that changes photographs of people’s faces into more attractive images based on an algorithm that determines ideal distances between lips and chins, foreheads and eyes, and distances between eyes.
Tagged: technology
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My neighbour, John Evans, an 88-year-old electrical engineer, built himself a TV in the 1970s and watched it until digital took over. Read more

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YOU'RE SAYING (7)
kombizz said | 17 October, 2008
how about make beautiful inside people!
nice programe
jfalco7 said | 23 June, 2009
Great — so we can all look even more homogenized than we are already starting to
nicole said | 15 August, 2009
Pretty soon we’re all gonna look like Bratz dolls.
Trevor said | 15 August, 2009
I fail to see the point in this software.
Vanity run rampant!
Allie J said | 2 September, 2010
Frankly, her real face is far more striking than the doctored image.
Steve said | 21 August, 2011
I’d love to see this on my face and see what it came up with. I’d definitely call myself “average looking” rather than either attractive or particularly ugly.
HAVE YOUR SAY
London-based artist Kareena Zerefos, originally from Sydney, creates wispy, delicate images that depict the innocent and magical connection children have with animals. Read more
Rock nerds everywhere are salivating over this Kiss Robot vinyl figure now available for pre-order from BigBadToyStore. Personally, I’m waiting for the Alice Cooper version, if they ever make one.
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This is the greatest invention. Ever. Commuters in South Korea can now do their grocery shopping whilst waiting for the train to arrive using their mobile phone to scan the QR codes of the virtual goodies they want. The order is then delivered direct to their doorstep the next day. Amazing! Sure beats moaning about the crowds, delays, smells, noises … Read more
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The Futurebirds are an unruly band of boys from Athens, Georgia, but they might as well have been reared in the backwoods of Woodstock by Levon Helm himself. Their debut release, Hampton’s Lullaby, is out on July 13 via Autumn Tone Records.
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Clara Kraetsch and Doreen Schulz are the designers behind the hot Berlin design label C-Neeon, which hit hard onto the fashion radar after winning the Young Designers competition at the Hyeres Festival. Read more
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If you have a Twitter feed that focuses on cool pop cultural things and you’d like to swap Tweets with Lost At E Minor and other like-minded Twitterers, drop us a note (with Tweet Swap in the title). We have a system in place and we’d like to have you in on it! [illustration by Brad Fitzpatrick]
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curiousmoth said | 17 October, 2008
It’s the differences that make us beautiful.