6/15/2023 0 Comments Autopano giga not maskingA quick note: whatever is in the center of your preview will be what is the center of your view when the 360° video starts playing, so may sure to rotate the image around and center up what you want to start on. If you want to do some fast adjustments or only have a minor tweak to do, you can do it right in the preview window by clicking and dragging the mouse to rotate things around. But that’s ok because you can easily adjust the position of the video. You can see a preview of what the video will look like now, which will look quite weird and probably will not have a nice straight horizon line. You pick your camera setup (ours most closely matches the GoPro Hero 3+/4 setting) and click Stitch. Once you have your videos synced, you click the Stitch button. Since the videos need to be synced exactly for this to work well, I have used Adobe Premiere to sync them, trim the ends and export each angle as a new clip. From my testing, this feature seems a bit lacking and I have had inconsistent results from it. I can then click the sync button and have it try to sync via audio or motion. It also doesn’t hurt to have a visual marker as well, such as rotating the stand so the cameras spin for a second. The best thing to do is clap your hands so there is an audio marker that can be used to sync the cameras. ![]() I then move the playback indicator down the timeline until I get to a point where I think it should be able to sync the videos. To start, I launch the Autopano Video Pro software and import the 6 streams of video. Autopano Video Pro will allow you to sync and stitch together the videos, while Giga gives you a ton of control over how the videos assemble and stitch together as well as helping to smooth out color and exposure differences between cameras. The software we use for that is Kolor’s Autopano Video Pro with Autopano Giga. That means that when everything is done, you end up with 6 streams of video that you need to sync up, edit and stitch together into the final video. We at DVS have been digging to the world of 360° video recently, so I wanted to give you an inside look at the process of working with the footage to make that cool looking 360° video. ![]() It adds a new interactive facet to a music video, or a neat way to show off some new cars. Other Software: XnConvert for down-scaling, GIMP for dust removal.360° videos are becoming more and more popular. Individual Image Size: 3000x2000 (Down-scaled) Please use the other image I posted without the dust removed for any reverse engineering attempts, I may have unintentionally modified some structures in the dust removal process! GIMP was then used to manually remove all of the dust and solder particles which I was unable to remove prior to taking the image. ![]() Autopano Giga does not like the 24MP photos and rarely works with them, but it was able to handle the down-scaled photos just fine! ![]() This allowed me to use Autopano Giga, another software tool which performs better than Microsoft ICE at stitching these images (when it works). I used XnConvert to downscale each of the 88 photos by 50% from their original size. I took some advice from Pauli Rautakorpi from another post to downscale the individual images since they are higher resolution than the smallest details my microscope can resolve. I was hoping I could keep it in working order after opening up the lid but I unfortunately slipped as the lid came off and slit 3 of the wires. It operates at 3.3 Volts (Modern chips use ~1.4 Volts), has a maximum power consumption of 13.4 Watts and can operate from 0☌ - 70☌. It most likely uses the P54CQS processor core and is based on the P5 micro architecture. The cooler was not properly attached to the processor (2 clamps broken) and it did not have any thermal paste or pads. It was pulled from an old desktop that was given to me by a friend. English: This is an Intel Pentium 120MHz with an sspec of SY062.
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