Head-tracked replay
The skier stays centered so you can compare rhythm, stance, and upper-body movement across turns.
Product proof
Poser is easiest to understand when you see the outputs. These examples show the current beta focus: clearer replay views that make real skiing easier to inspect.
The skier stays centered so you can compare rhythm, stance, and upper-body movement across turns.
The overlay gives a simplified reference for hips, knees, shoulders, and turn timing.
Clear framing and steady filming make every replay output more useful.
The head-tracked view keeps the skier centered so body movement is easier to compare from turn to turn. It is especially useful when the original camera pans or when the skier moves quickly across the frame.
Use this view to inspect rhythm, body quietness, and whether the skier stays organized through the transition. It is not trying to beautify the clip. It is trying to remove camera motion from the review.
The skeleton overlay gives a simplified view of body alignment on top of the video. It can make hip movement, shoulder line, leg timing, and stance width easier to talk about, especially when the skier is wearing bulky clothing.
The overlay is an estimate, not a medical measurement. Treat it as a visual aid for technique review and compare it against the original video when something looks surprising.
The strongest observations usually come from replay plus context: a late edge change, a left-right difference, a skier dropping inside before pressure builds, or a camera angle that makes the clip hard to analyze.
Future Poser feedback will connect these visual signals to written technique cues. For now, examples should show what the app can reliably generate and how a skier can use it for a better conversation.
Replay output is most useful when it comes from a turn you remember. Upload one clear clip and review it slowly.