HumanAIGC / OutfitAnyone

Outfit Anyone: Ultra-high quality virtual try-on for Any Clothing and Any Person
5.27k stars 407 forks source link

Stop give this project stars until they release the code. #19

Open TonyGeez opened 6 months ago

TonyGeez commented 6 months ago

I think there’s alot of peoples forgot about the concept of Github.

Qiu-Jun commented 6 months ago

I think there’s alot of peoples forgot about the concept of Github.

Hate doing it

ghost commented 5 months ago

@Qiu-Jun try yourself or else keep looking at default models using clothing images. Read carefully. They already mentioned that it's for research. They never release code.

If they release, many AI developers like me would replicate in few days though code doesn't work. They stick to their policies and principles. You become grand father till you see the code working.

For now, Just Enjoy. It's NOT waste of Github resource.

Try to bring or pull the best by using their previous repos like ClothtoTex and other similar repos with combine diffusion models..

Do you need the code to see for free???? What you do? You make it available for commercial? What's next? Making Money? That's what they restrict. It's purely for research and they are DONE. They will move on to other kind of development. That's ALL

TonyGeez commented 5 months ago

Do you need the code to see for free???? What you do? You make it available for commercial? What's next? Making Money? That's what they restrict. It's purely for research and they are DONE. They will move on to other kind of development. That's ALL

Well, arXiv.org already exists as a platform dedicated to research purposes.

In my view, using GitHub to publish projects that are commercial in nature or contain ‘empty code’ seems like an inefficient use of GitHub’s resources.

Such content might appear to have limited utility for both the wider community and even the repository’s author. I believe this practice could be partly motivated by a desire to attract more users to their website.

Indeed, whether an individual wants to sell their software or offer it for free aligns with the principles of open-source. The essence of open-source is to provide freedom over how software is used, modified, and distributed, whether for commercial purposes or otherwise. Notably, a significant portion of software in the modern digital landscape is built upon open-source foundations.

To put it into perspective, a staggering 97% of applications use open-source code, and about 90% of companies incorporate it in some manner. Therefore, it’s quite likely that even paid software you encounter will be a derivative or a fork of an open-source project.

This widespread adoption underscores the importance and impact of open-source software in both commercial and research domains.