by noiv on 12/4/24, 7:36 PM with 56 comments
by ndr42 on 12/8/24, 11:37 AM
This was real incredible - no need to focus again - it is like living in this hidden world.
If you never experienced this I recommend to try it - at least for me it was a wow moment.
by BiteCode_dev on 12/8/24, 12:02 PM
by thih9 on 12/8/24, 10:04 AM
Edit: found this https://piellardj.github.io/stereogram-solver/ , it works well for single layer images; but it isn’t great for 3d surfaces. Another one, though not online, seems better: https://github.com/MikhailPedus/AutostereogramSolver
[1]: https://www.vexels.com/blog/stunning-3d-effect-with-gif-2-fr...
by gcanyon on 12/8/24, 1:37 PM
And these were easy. The first one literally took 15 seconds to "drop in." The second maybe ten. The third was near-instant. The only one that gave me any trouble was the continuous function one like an egg crate, with no sharp edges, just dropping down and up. That took maybe twenty seconds, and once I recognized what I was looking for, it was easy.
So has the technique changed/improved? Or has my brain changed?
by tzs on 12/9/24, 6:57 PM
It is the herman2 entry here: http://www.ioccc.org/years.html#2001
Note that the source code is itself such an image.
by a1o on 12/8/24, 10:11 AM
by TheJoeMan on 12/9/24, 12:40 AM
by matsemann on 12/8/24, 9:59 AM
Almost think textbooks should utilize images like these, worked very well.
by starshadowx2 on 12/8/24, 12:36 PM
To me these all look like they're reversed from what this says, like they're further away from me behind the flat part.
by wolpoli on 12/9/24, 9:10 AM
by aclindsa on 12/8/24, 1:10 PM