Post by sabbirislam258 on Feb 14, 2024 5:45:46 GMT
INTERVIEWSZiff Farbman, Co-Founder and CEO of Literx - Interview SeriesmmUpdate on January 31, 2019By Anton Tardoff Zeev is the co-founder and CEO of Farbman. Literacts , the pioneer of innovative technology that bridges the gap between imagination and creation. As an AI-first company, with a mission to build an innovative photo and video creation platform, their goal is to enable content creators and brands to produce engaging, high-performing content. Their cutting-edge technology focuses on image and video processing and is based on both groundbreaking computational graphics research and creative AI features. What initially drew you to computer science? I grew up in a scientifically minded household with both parents trained as mechanical and electrical engineers. We immigrated to Israel when I was 12, where I developed an interest in computers and always loved making beautiful pixels, starting to use Basic when I was only ten.
The field's capacity for problem solving and innovation Hungary Telemarketing Data was a big draw. By the time I entered university, computers had already become valuable tools for creative work, such as enhancing images, as done for high-end magazines. Although I was drawn to computer graphics and image processing, I was fascinated by all areas of computer science and learned what I needed to further my education. Can you share the story of how you had an intellectual discussion about editing photos on a smartphone that suddenly sparked a lightbulb moment for a new business opportunity? My research colleagues and I were working on new ways to manipulate the properties of the pixels that make up a digital image. This was when social media was just entering the era of the “selfie,” and we were having fierce academic debates about the limits of image editing on mobile devices.
We were exploring how smartphones, despite their growing camera capabilities, lack sophisticated editing tools. This gap in the market led to a eureka moment. We envisioned a mobile app that could make professional-level photo editing for the average smartphone user, as simple as a few taps on the screen. So how did this discussion transition to the launch of Lytrix? We realized that scholarly research, while valuable, would not have such a broad impact on most people. And with the explosion of social media, there was an opportunity to capitalize on our knowledge – so we made the transition from academia to industry and built Lightricks, a fully bootstrapped company. The first product you launched in 2013 was Facetune. What was the initial concept for this app, and what made it such a huge success? Facetune's initial concept was to democratize photo retouching.
The field's capacity for problem solving and innovation Hungary Telemarketing Data was a big draw. By the time I entered university, computers had already become valuable tools for creative work, such as enhancing images, as done for high-end magazines. Although I was drawn to computer graphics and image processing, I was fascinated by all areas of computer science and learned what I needed to further my education. Can you share the story of how you had an intellectual discussion about editing photos on a smartphone that suddenly sparked a lightbulb moment for a new business opportunity? My research colleagues and I were working on new ways to manipulate the properties of the pixels that make up a digital image. This was when social media was just entering the era of the “selfie,” and we were having fierce academic debates about the limits of image editing on mobile devices.
We were exploring how smartphones, despite their growing camera capabilities, lack sophisticated editing tools. This gap in the market led to a eureka moment. We envisioned a mobile app that could make professional-level photo editing for the average smartphone user, as simple as a few taps on the screen. So how did this discussion transition to the launch of Lytrix? We realized that scholarly research, while valuable, would not have such a broad impact on most people. And with the explosion of social media, there was an opportunity to capitalize on our knowledge – so we made the transition from academia to industry and built Lightricks, a fully bootstrapped company. The first product you launched in 2013 was Facetune. What was the initial concept for this app, and what made it such a huge success? Facetune's initial concept was to democratize photo retouching.