- cross-posted to:
- linux@sh.itjust.works
- hackernews@derp.foo
- cross-posted to:
- linux@sh.itjust.works
- hackernews@derp.foo
Please create a comment or react with an emoji there.
(IMO, they should’ve limited comments,and gone with reaction count there, its looks mess right now )
Yeah, but do either of those match the aims?
If you have a face unlock, you only rarely need to run it. It’s not like you’re constantly doing face recognition on a stream of video. You don’t have the power-consumption problem.
If you have an archive of 10000 photos, you probably don’t need to do the computation on battery power, and you probably don’t mind using a GPU to do it.
I mean, I can definitely imagine systems that constantly run facial recognition, like security cameras set up to surveil and identify large crowds of people in public areas, but:
I suspect that most of them want access to a big database of face data. I don’t know how many cases you have a disconnected system with a large database of face data.
I doubt that most of those need to be running on a battery.
The reason I mention speech recognition is because I can legitimately see a laptop user wanting to constantly be processing an incoming audio stream, like to take in voice commands (the “Alexa” model, but not wanting to send recorded snippets elsewhere).