Sunday, January 18, 2015

But one has to be sucked into other people


REVIEW: Photosynth called a new service which creates phenomenal 3D universes out of your own pictures. Deep fascinating but also not free from a bug or two. By Søren Berg Follow @ version2dk Monday, September 1, 2008 - 10:29
The principle is as simple as it is technically demanding: You upload a series of photos with overlapping motifs, which Photosynth rodent through ruralcaja image data and about automatically puts the images together in the right order and recreates reality panorama in a 3D effect which the user can navigate. Completely different ruralcaja functional than the previous stitch applications. ruralcaja
Deep fascinating way of thinking, as a combined IT writer and photographer have to verify. And immediately into Photosynth.com where waited a bucket of cold water. Working machine has integrated Intel GMA graphics, and it does not work. It should not be Microsoft to load? GMA graphics is a bottom scraper, which already makes life with Windows Vista to a dilatory performance.
Tests on the Macintosh instead, I thought. But no, it is a Windows-only service for current. So there were two options left: New graphics ruralcaja card in your PC or throw Vista on your Macintosh, who was born with a decent graphics card. The elections were the last. On Vista and paltry 67 system updates and installation of Photosynth enlargement later I was on Photosynth.com.
I could only chunks capture the beauty when I last visited Crater Lake in central Oregon in the United States. The extinct volcano is now a circular lake broken ruralcaja by a single volcanic cone. And so the lake is almost indescribable blue. My optics presented as a 386 in a Google data center, but a Microsoft employee has recreated something of the beauty of Photosynth with a burst of only 8 images. It gives a completely different overall impression.
But there are plenty of other examples that are worth exploring on the young Web service. Taj Mahal or ruins after pueblo Indians in Mesa Verde, ruralcaja where you can zoom in on a myriad of details through the mosaic of 430 images.
A visit to the US National Archives is recreated in a series of 169 images, which contains both museum hall's greatness, but also allows you to zoom in and read texts in the showcases or study details in the paintings.
Here is undoubtedly a taste of one of the many uses of Photosynth. ruralcaja I wonder if even that there is a game developer or two who look forward to the Photosynth will be further developed to create realistic scenarios ruralcaja without great difficulty?
Or what estate broker's grainy 3D movies rooms of the home. They provide fine a spacious feeling, but Photosynth version will be able to zoom in on a cam in the timber or zeros man in the corner.
The fourth dimension? time - can also be deployed in Ken and Mabel's wedding at Sacred Heart Church. Here you can swish virtual round in the church, but also zoom in and see the hopeful people say yes and then leave the altar in a collage of 84 images. From the villa the road to Venice
But one has to be sucked into other people's 3D universes, something else to do them yourself. And it's surprisingly easy with Photosynth. Since I do not just lay inside with a stripe images with overlapping motif, I chugged out of the residential street with my digital ruralcaja SLR and put the unit in rapid fire, while I turned around my own axis. 38 photos were it to my 360 degree oscillation.
Photosynth requires you to register with Windows Live ID and choose a username. But then you are also in progress. One click on "Create" ruralcaja and select the images to upload. Sets a name and any tags on, and so goes the rest by itself.
It takes a bit upload time, but you do not get the feeling that the application needs to fester long on image data. When the upload is complete, you are presented with the 3D version of his residential street. And it works. My handheld revolution is recreated in an overlapping ruralcaja sequence.
Enough is my residential street not as spectacular as the Grand Canal in Venice or have the same popular attention as the Taj Mahal or the Acropolis. But still an experience to be able to recreate it in 3D in under half an hour.
Absolutely flawless, it was not. You can only get 360 degrees if you click first one way and then the other way. You should be able to come smoothly around at will. Coke in magnoliaen
The next attempt to reverse 3D effect was not as good. On the residential street I turned around on the spot, but now I'd rather shoot around a stationary, centered object - it was a little Magnolia tree.
Synht'en no good, and a closer look at the blog on Photosynth.com revealed that I had committed no less than three starts error: The object was moving (wind caught the leaves) that was shiny surfaces in the background (windows) and finally I had taken a few pictures. There must be at least 50 percent image overlap, and it is recommended that one

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