Real-Time Video Enhancement
Real-time video enhancement processes frames as they arrive rather than after recording. ClapClip applies AI sharpening, denoising, and upscaling on the fly using your Windows GPU, so you can see improved quality live — useful for streaming, video calls, and previewing enhancement settings before committing to a full render.
- Live enhancement as frames arrive
- Preview settings before full render
- Useful for streaming and video calls
- Requires a capable GPU for smooth speed
Windows 10・11
Live preview of enhancement settings
Instead of rendering an entire video to see whether your settings work, real-time mode lets you preview the result as the video plays. Adjust strength, toggle denoising, or switch enhancement modes and see the effect immediately.
Streaming and webcam use cases
A webcam in a dim room or a game capture at lower resolution can both benefit from real-time enhancement. Apply AI denoising or upscaling to the live feed so the stream or call looks better without post-production.
GPU-dependent performance
Real-time processing demands more from your GPU than offline rendering. A mid-range or better NVIDIA, AMD, or Intel GPU keeps enhancement smooth at common resolutions, while lower-end hardware may need reduced settings for real-time speed.
よくある質問
What does real-time enhancement mean?
It means frames are enhanced as they arrive, fast enough to display or stream live, rather than processing a saved file after the fact.
Can I use it for live streaming?
Yes. Real-time enhancement can improve a webcam or capture feed on the fly, so your stream benefits from AI denoising or sharpening without post-production.
Do I need a powerful GPU?
Real-time processing is more GPU-intensive than offline rendering. A mid-range or better dedicated GPU (NVIDIA, AMD, or Intel) handles common resolutions smoothly.
