willguest 2 days ago

thanks for helping people to lie

  • netsharc 2 days ago

    Geez, I'm reminded of a business student's idea of "Uber for photoshoppers" (this is ~20 years ago): you upload your picture, you say what you want changed, and I guess you pick which photoshopper's work looks convincing from a marketplace of them...

    He had a website, and the sample pic is a girl lying on her back, and in the "after" picture she's wearing a bigger cup-size..

    • raffa667 a day ago

      This is intentionally much narrower: no custom requests, no creative edits. It only does technical corrections that photographers already apply (lighting, white balance, perspective, sharpness).

      Think more automated Lightroom than crowdsourced Photoshop.

      • [removed] a day ago
        [deleted]
  • raffa667 a day ago

    I don’t see it as lying any more than adjusting exposure or white balance on a camera does.

    It doesn’t add or remove anything from the scene, it just fixes bad lighting, color cast, perspective, and sharpness, basically what any decent photographer already does in post.

    If anything, it helps photos reflect how the place actually looks in real life instead of dark, crooked, yellowish snapshots.

wateralien 2 days ago

Works great. I hate it.

  • wateralien 2 days ago

    Just kidding. I bet you will do very well marketing it to estate agents and AirBnb renters. It's just the "prettification" of the world which gets to me. I hate Instagram for the same reason. Just grumpy me.

    • raffa667 a day ago

      Totally get the concern, and I actually agree on the “Instagram-ification” problem.

      What ProntoPic does is basically what a professional real estate photographer already does in Lightroom: fix lighting, white balance, perspective, and sharpness. No adding pools, no changing furniture, no fake sunsets, no staging things that aren’t there. My girlfriend is an interior designer, so I see firsthand how much effort goes into making spaces look 100% accurate but well presented.

      The goal isn’t to misrepresent reality, just to make photos look like they were taken properly.

      In practice this mostly helps small hosts and agents who don’t have the budget or time for professional shoots. Right now they’re uploading dark, crooked, yellowish photos that actively hurt bookings (like the ones in the hp, real examples).

      I guess I need to make it clearer in the site. Thank you for the feedback!