Panorama Viewer
Contents |
[edit] Panorama Viewer
[edit] The application
An application for viewing panoramas was created by Daniel Martin Marin. The application allows to view panoramas, which have been aligned with Hugin before. The application makes use of OpenGL and therefore can exploit 3D acceleration provided by modern graphic cards to transform and display the images.
You can download the report here. The source code of the software is available under the terms and conditions of the GPL. You can download it here: panorama.tar.gz (74 kByte).
[edit] Todo
- Hugin's parameters for camera distortion are not supported yet.
- Support for different types of projections.
[edit] Gallery
The gallery shows some panorama images created with Hugin.
[edit] West Kirby
[edit] Hilbre Island/Little Hilbre
Also see friends of Hilbre web-page.
[edit] Dublin Port
Also see Dublin Port website.
[edit] London Heathrow
Panorama of London Heathrow created with Hugin and Enblend.
[edit] Landscape for Stellarium
Stellarium is a free and open source planetarium software with an emphasis on photorealism. Stellarium allows you to define custom landscapes. The software accepts different types of panorama images. For real-time display the panorama is converted to a sphere consisting of textured polygones. This object can be rendered in real-time using hardware acceleration provided by modern graphics cards.
See Stellarium-Wiki for download and installation instructions.
[edit] See Also
[edit] External Links
- Photo stitching software PtGui (commercial)
- Rodriguez Matrix
- Panorama Tools software suite (mirror of Helmut Dersch's former web-page)
- Hugin
- Enblend
- Autopano-SIFT
- Depth of focus for panorama tools
- Autostitch (commercial)
- Wikipedia picture of the day Nov 12th is a nice example of a panorama picture
- Panoptics is a Sheffield based company offering high quality panorama photography
- Paul Bourke's homepage offers lots of information about planetarium projections
- Construction of panoramas from video sequences
- Microsoft Photosynth
- Panotools Meeting 2007