Core product

Ski video analysis from the clip you already filmed

Poser uses AI to turn a short skiing clip into replay views that make body position, timing, and turn shape easier to study. It gives skiers and coaches clearer visual feedback between lessons.

What Poser gives you today

After upload, Poser asks you to trim the useful part of the clip to a maximum of 20 seconds. The analysis pipeline uses artificial intelligence (AI) to track the skier through the run, estimates body pose in 3D using AI, and produces views such as a head-tracked replay and a skeleton overlay.

Poser also calculates turn segments, which side each turn is on, and the duration of each turn. A transition is detected when the skier's center of gravity crosses the midpoint between the feet and the skis reach a minimum edge angle.

Those outputs are designed to make the video easier to read. Keeping the skier centered helps you inspect the same movement across the turn instead of chasing a fast subject across the frame. The skeleton overlay makes shoulder line, hip movement, stance width, and body angles easier to discuss.

Original ski video clip before Poser analysis
Input The raw video clip gives Poser the skier, camera angle, slope, and turn context.
Poser output showing head-tracked skeleton overlay and turn segment durations
Output The output keeps the skier centered, overlays the skeleton, and shows left/right turn segments with duration.

How to film for better results

First, ski toward the camera. Have the person filming stand still below you, ski toward them, then pass by with enough space that the close pass is not rushed. Front view is the best first priority because the upper body, hands, legs, boots, and skis are visible at the same time.

Second, make the skier large in the frame. Use optical zoom when available, or digital zoom when the alternative is a tiny skier. The practical test is whether you can see the upper body, legs, boots, and skis without guessing, while still keeping the whole skier in frame.

Third, keep the skier's contours clear. Avoid filming straight into the sun or against backgrounds where the skier becomes a silhouette. Good contrast and visible body shape matter more than dramatic scenery.

What is coming next

The long-term goal is quantitative and qualitative ski technique feedback: clearer movement metrics, per-turn comparisons, and plain-English observations that help skiers decide what to try next. Poser already has the foundations for replay, tracking, and pose estimation, and the product will keep adding technique-specific interpretation carefully.

That careful rollout matters. Skiing is a physical skill, and Poser has to be honest about what you can trust as well as any uncertainty.

Use your own ski clip as the test.

Replay output is most useful when it comes from a turn you remember. Upload one clear clip and review it slowly.