Result for A6B30C7BD70DE81AF674441A552D4AFFA2686C4C

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/enfuse/enfuse.pdf
FileSize833385
MD5D10ACCE0F67BDA7ADE7DA9C631C4E71D
SHA-1A6B30C7BD70DE81AF674441A552D4AFFA2686C4C
SHA-2567FF9F439F81E1C8140CB6FF5658BD7F7CB897D547374A6EC5B618968352EE9CA
SSDEEP12288:wfr1QM0GVgllt5nOErx2kKmWb25x0MLjXVlOObUsIa/ZgyJLoK6:N5nOErx2NTC53LDOOI1gRJL56
TLSHT109059DA8F5980CCDF4C7DF598B3AB42E526F31A7DDD83C5154788A06E089459AB83BC3
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 1)

The searched file hash is included in 1 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize2616706
MD587B9E9E71DB52B9E726AE25CA04270E3
PackageDescriptionimage exposure blending tool Enfuse blends differently exposed images of the same scene into a nice output image, without producing intermediate HDR images that are then tonemapped to a viewable image. This simplified process often works much better and quicker than the currently known tonemapping algorithms. . The exposure blending is done using the Mertens-Kautz-Van Reeth exposure fusion algorithm. The basic idea is that pixels in the input images are weighted according to qualities such as proper exposure, good contrast, and high saturation. These weights determine how much a given pixel will contribute to the final image. . Enfuse does not align images for you. Use a tool like Hugin or PanoTools to do this. The TIFFs produced by these programs are exactly what Enfuse is designed to work with.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameenfuse
PackageSectiongraphics
PackageVersion4.0+dfsg-4ubuntu1
SHA-150CAD29547EE7E941D89C75E08F3C278C19EEE98
SHA-256C553290333BFD43A49998C6E001B3A8EDC19B824F0003805BBA5CD76E7DA0EA2