Active Topics

 



Notices


Reply
Thread Tools
timsamoff's Avatar
Posts: 1,605 | Thanked: 1,601 times | Joined on Mar 2007 @ Southern California
#11
Originally Posted by joeD View Post
...a Panoramic image stitcher...
Actually, this would be a really cool method for making "Image Sets" as well. These are a series of four images that apply to the four panoramic desktops in Maemo 5.

Tim
__________________
http://samoff.com
 

The Following User Says Thank You to timsamoff For This Useful Post:
Posts: 2,102 | Thanked: 1,309 times | Joined on Sep 2006
#12
I agree with you! Even though the idea for a stitcher is cool, I cannot imagine being able to do a 'good' job of it on such a tiny screen. Heck, when I bought a 1920x1200 monitor for my desktop to do this, it was like night-and-day for doing this compared to before -- I cannot imagine what it would be like on a tablet.
The stitching is all done in software (or at least it could be, no idea what those apps make you do), though I agree that viewing the panorama may not be ideal on a small screen. But who am I to question someone else's dream?
 

The Following User Says Thank You to lardman For This Useful Post:
Posts: 3,319 | Thanked: 5,610 times | Joined on Aug 2008 @ Finland
#13
Maybe if you had cam app assistance it would be easier... As in, choose a panorama mode, and then show 1/4 of the previous image overlaid in the cam app and remember to use the same cam settings as previously (exposure, ISO, etc). It probably would be bad at high-res photos, but for wallpaper/web class stuff it might be more than enough and it requires little to no postprocessing.
 

The Following User Says Thank You to attila77 For This Useful Post:
Mandibela's Avatar
Posts: 270 | Thanked: 195 times | Joined on Aug 2009 @ Finland
#14
http://store.ovi.com/content/23154

It seems someone did create a program for shooting panoramic images. (Only a) Trial is available already, but this will be a commercial app.
 

The Following User Says Thank You to Mandibela For This Useful Post:
Posts: 184 | Thanked: 49 times | Joined on Feb 2010 @ US
#15
Just tried the trial version, a cool app. The picture quality sucks big time but with steady hands can it be improved?
 

The Following User Says Thank You to flydeep For This Useful Post:
Posts: 1,994 | Thanked: 3,342 times | Joined on Jun 2010 @ N900: Battery low. N950: torx 4 re-used once and fine; SIM port torn apart
#16
With steady hands you could fly a plane in a snowstorm, or walk a rope while wearing a blindfold. With steady hands (translation: tripod stand and alidad) you could take an ideal panorama, and the application wouln't have to compare them to determine their relative positions - it would have only to stitch them accurately.
The fact is, Nokia Panorama application has excellent interface, and not-ideal-but-almost-perfect stitching. However, today as I tried to take a panorama, it crashed during stitching (four photographs, nothing complex) and rebooted the whole operating system. The four photographs and warps.txt are still here. I am attempting to stitch the four photographs with desktop-Hugin, but it's frustrating. Who knows HFOV of Nokia N900 camera? Or its lens type?
The idea: create script which would check whether Panorama is running; if not, then check if there are any files in /home/user/.Panoramatmp ; if yes, then check that the latest photographs (beginning from P0.jpg; number of them could be determined from warps.txt, I expect) don't have a corresponding already-stitched Panorama in /home/user/MyDocs/Panorama ; if yes, then stitch the photographs using the warps.txt and add it to /home/user/MyDocs/Panorama .
This script could be run either manually, if you don't mind having to remember to click it each time Panorama crashes during stitching, or be typed into Panorama shortcut to run after Panorama closes - just in case Panorama crashed. It should not be run before Panorama opens - it is quite uncomfortable to wait for lengthy process of stitching when you just wanted to take a new Panorama.
So, who knows the meaning of numbers in warps.txt? Who would be willing to create a command-line application to stitch the photographs? It should be much easier than porting whole Hugin.
Best wishes.
_________________
Per aspera ad astra...
 

The Following User Says Thank You to Wikiwide For This Useful Post:
pichlo's Avatar
Posts: 6,447 | Thanked: 20,981 times | Joined on Sep 2012 @ UK
#17
Originally Posted by Wikiwide View Post
Who knows HFOV of Nokia N900 camera?
Today I took the highly scientific method of measuring it with a ruler. At an 11 cm distance from the target, I measured how much of the ruler fitted in the field of view. The result: 11.9 cm, in both 4:3 and 16:9 mode. That means the horizontal field of view (HFOV) is 56.8° (let's say ±0.5° for my precision error).

Does anyone have the official figure to confirm my measurement?

BTW, using the HFOV and the focal length (5.2 mm, according to EXIF in the pictures taken by the phone), the photo sensor horizontal size comes out as 5.6 mm. Which sounds about right
__________________
Русский военный корабль, иди нахуй!

Last edited by pichlo; 2014-03-15 at 00:16. Reason: Added bit about sensor size
 

The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to pichlo For This Useful Post:
Posts: 1,378 | Thanked: 1,604 times | Joined on Jun 2010 @ Göteborg, Sweden
#18
Originally Posted by pichlo View Post
.....the photo sensor horizontal size comes out as 5.6 mm. Which sounds about right
Indeed it does : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_sensor_format

Sensor is 1/2.5" with width of 5.76 mm so you were 0.16mm off the mark. Not bad for a... what did you say.... "pano-newbie"?
 

The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to handaxe For This Useful Post:
pichlo's Avatar
Posts: 6,447 | Thanked: 20,981 times | Joined on Sep 2012 @ UK
#19
Thanks, handaxe. Obviously there are a number of rounding errors in all calculations. My sensor width came out exactly at 5.625 mm, I rounded it to one decimal. That puts me only 0.135 mm off The 1/2.5" may also be rounded. My distance from target may have a mm or two error. The focal length may be rounded. And finally, my figure gives the size of the active section, the 1/2.5" may be the absolute size.

Having said all that, I would still like to see the official figure
__________________
Русский военный корабль, иди нахуй!
 

The Following User Says Thank You to pichlo For This Useful Post:
Reply

Tags
image, n900, panorama, photography


 
Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 23:11.