i want a bot that can look for image and find the model

there are times i want to buy a model like hair&clothes&people but i can't find the model

a bot that looks at the image like one of galleries images then find that model it will help a customer to buy that model

Comments

  • MattymanxMattymanx Posts: 6,949

    Considering how much people can kit bash the products and how many products there have been released across all the stores in the past 15 years, I dont see how any system could be trained to "look" at an image, be able to seperate what is what and id each item.

  • KitsumoKitsumo Posts: 1,216
    The closest thing to that would be Google image search or Tineye.com. They might lead you to the product page, but probably won't. Your best bet is to find the artist and ask, or create a "what item is this" forum post.
  • Kitsumo said:
    The closest thing to that would be Google image search or Tineye.com. They might lead you to the product page, but probably won't. Your best bet is to find the artist and ask, or create a "what item is this" forum post.

    can you ask the people how sell in daz3d site

  • ChoholeChohole Posts: 33,604
    Kitsumo said:
    The closest thing to that would be Google image search or Tineye.com. They might lead you to the product page, but probably won't. Your best bet is to find the artist and ask, or create a "what item is this" forum post.

    can you ask the people how sell in daz3d site

    file a ticket for a feature request?   
    https://helpdaz.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/requests/new
     

  • nasseralbassamnasseralbassam Posts: 107
    edited October 2018
    Chohole said:
    Kitsumo said:
    The closest thing to that would be Google image search or Tineye.com. They might lead you to the product page, but probably won't. Your best bet is to find the artist and ask, or create a "what item is this" forum post.

    can you ask the people how sell in daz3d site

    file a ticket for a feature request?   
    https://helpdaz.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/requests/new
     

    ok

    Post edited by nasseralbassam on
  • Kitsumo said:
    The closest thing to that would be Google image search or Tineye.com. They might lead you to the product page, but probably won't. Your best bet is to find the artist and ask, or create a "what item is this" forum post.

    In the case of gallery images, or even Daz Store promo images, the artist may not want to reveal what they're using because they don't want everyone using it. For recognizable characters like Pretty 3D's customized figure used for all their promos, it creates confusion when someone else uses it because it's already associated with Pretty 3D.

    However, for store promos, it would be nice if the vendor was required to list everything used in the images, even if it's "custom-morphed G2/G3/G8 figure - not available for sale" or "custom hair - not available to the public".

  • JonnyRayJonnyRay Posts: 1,744

    While I agree it would be nice (and I try to tag items I used in my gallery images for the same reason), a copule of points to keep in mind.

    1. Content artists don't always render all of their own promo shots. Some of them partner with other artists for artistic shots of their products, so the person selling the product may not know what the other person used.
    2. They may not remember where they got the content. I have a lot of things in my runtime libraries that I've moved around over the years, things I've converted to Genesis 8, etc. that I wouldn't be able to tell you for sure where they came from or what the product was called.
    3. There may be a MASSIVE list for some images. Even a simple character portait could have kitbashed clothing from multiple outfits, hair, jewelry, additional custom textures, etc. Multiply that by 4-10 promo shots and the list of additional products used in the images may be longer than the rest of the product page.
    4. Sometimes it's content that isn't available anymore. Would you be more or less frustrated to find out that they used a discontinued product just because it artistically fits the render?
    5. Sometimes the content is from another marketplace. While that may be fine for an artistic render, if I were Daz I wouldn't want to be advertising things that you had to buy from somewhere else.
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