ChromeOS may step up to add background blur and other camera effects for video conferencing

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 ChromeOS may step up to add background blur and other camera effects for video conferencing 

ChromeOS may step up to add background blur and other camera effects for video conferencing


Video conferencing is a big deal, period. Never mind the ongoing ordeal that we're still living, video conferencing would have gone big one way or another. So much so, a number of chat clients including Google Meet have integrated cloud-powered background blurring effects for the many of us that are stuck in our messy, unpresentable bedrooms. For Chromebook owners, though, you might be getting more blur for your buck soon with OS-level capabilities.

9to5Google has marked down a rather self-explanatory potential feature flag in the Chromium Gerrit called #vc-background-blur that's been in the works for a while. Digging deeper, the feature could actually be one of multiple effects in the works — including something called Portrait Relighting — as made possible by something that is either called or at least involves the EffectsStreamManipulator. EffectsStreamManipulator was described to be "extensively tested" on ChromeOS boards running with Intel Tiger Lake and Alder Lake chips (11th- and 12th-gen Core products). Separately, another feature called "AUTO_FRAMING" was also mentioned in that commit. If it's anything like what we saw with what was Google Duo, this means your chat client's field of view will crop and adjust to your positioning relative to where you are in the camera.

There are some hurdles the development team will need to clear before the feature goes live in earnest — one of them includes how to latch the manipulator onto the stream that goes into the client — so we're willing to make the bet that the wait on these features will last months.

Re-basing background blur and other video effects from a cloud service down to local hardware will preclude the need for some users to pay for those extra features, but, as indicated with the benchmark hardware, you'll probably need a pricier ChromeOS device to take advantage of them.


( Details and picture courtesy from Source, the content is auto-generated from RSS feed.)

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