Android 4.2+ devices have a photosphere shooting mode as well as an
immersive viewer. The viewer is ok, but since I haven't yet managed to
create a full spherical 'photosphere' without horrible stitching errors the
spherical shooting mode hasn't been much use.

The photosphere mode does however do acceptable stitching of partial
panoramas. These panoramas are in cropped equirectangular format, so they
need some Hugin processing to create nice static images.

So a new gpano2pto script (in the Panotools::Script Mercurial repository on
Sourceforge) reads the GPano XMP tags in the photosphere panorama, figures
out the correct field of view and vertical shift, and writes a Hugin .pto
project that you can open for remapping, levelling etc...

Here's an example:
Before (equirectangular projection)
https://secure.flickr.com/photos/brunopostle/12891685135/
After (remapped to Pannini projection)
https://secure.flickr.com/photos/brunopostle/12891690425/

Hope somebody else finds this useful.

-- 
Bruno

-- 
A list of frequently asked questions is available at: 
http://wiki.panotools.org/Hugin_FAQ
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