Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-07-11 Thread Aruna Inversin
I'm late to the party but.. The Sense from Cubify is shit.  It's not even
close to prosumer / consumer level. Check Ben Hecks podcast to see how
finicky it is.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLFonu92Wn4

disclaimer: I have one, was part of a package deal, would never buy one on
it's own.


On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 2:56 PM, Chris Noellert cnoell...@gmail.com wrote:

 Photoscan.  Horrible learning materials and interface but it does what it
 says on the tin and surprisingly well.

 Best,
 Chris

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 30, 2014, at 6:52 PM, Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that creates
 dense point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset which has
 provided great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited it yet.


 On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:

 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low
 res, near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy scans.

 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data
 is really not usable for pro work.

 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not
 realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with
 textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and
 scan your neighbourhood :)



 Regards.
 Dave



 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:

  just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:

 Yikes!

  Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:

   The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not
 include the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

  ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex
 Tax) per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in
 LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries
 please don’t hesitate to contact me.






 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


  On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year 
 but can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


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Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-07-11 Thread David Yu
Agisoft.

Cubify is crap. Is crappier than the Kinect.


On Sat, Jul 12, 2014 at 12:39 AM, Aruna Inversin inver...@d2.com wrote:

 I'm late to the party but.. The Sense from Cubify is shit.  It's not even
 close to prosumer / consumer level. Check Ben Hecks podcast to see how
 finicky it is.

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLFonu92Wn4

 disclaimer: I have one, was part of a package deal, would never buy one on
 it's own.


 On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 2:56 PM, Chris Noellert cnoell...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Photoscan.  Horrible learning materials and interface but it does what it
 says on the tin and surprisingly well.

 Best,
 Chris

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 30, 2014, at 6:52 PM, Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that creates
 dense point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset which has
 provided great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited it yet.


 On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:

 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low
 res, near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy scans.

 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data
 is really not usable for pro work.

 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not
 realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with
 textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and
 scan your neighbourhood :)



 Regards.
 Dave



 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:

  just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:

 Yikes!

  Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:

   The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not
 include the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

  ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex
 Tax) per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in
 LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries
 please don’t hesitate to contact me.






 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


  On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year 
 but can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


 Sent from my iPhone___
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 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users

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   ohufxLogo_50x50.png http://www.ohufx.com *vfx compositing
 http://ohufx.com/index.php/vfx-compositing | workflow customisation and
 consulting http://ohufx.com/index.php/vfx-customising *

  

Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread David Yu
Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low res,
near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy scans.

Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data is
really not usable for pro work.

Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not
realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with
textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and
scan your neighbourhood :)



Regards.
Dave



On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:

  just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:

 Yikes!

  Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:

   The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include
 the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

  ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex Tax)
 per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in
 LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall – https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries please
 don’t hesitate to contact me.






 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


  On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year but 
 can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


 Sent from my iPhone___
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 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users

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Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread Michael Garrett
Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that creates dense
point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset which has provided
great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited it yet.


On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:

 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low
 res, near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy scans.

 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data is
 really not usable for pro work.

 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not
 realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with
 textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and
 scan your neighbourhood :)



 Regards.
 Dave



 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:

  just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:

 Yikes!

  Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:

   The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include
 the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

  ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex
 Tax) per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in
 LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries
 please don’t hesitate to contact me.






 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


  On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year but 
 can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


 Sent from my iPhone___
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 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users

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Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread Nathan Rusch
Only throwing this out there because it just came up on another list, but it 
might be worth taking a look at.

http://pix4d.com/

-Nathan



From: Michael Garrett 
Sent: Monday, June 30, 2014 9:52 AM
To: dave...@gmail.com ; Nuke user discussion 
Subject: Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that creates dense 
point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset which has provided 
great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited it yet.



On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:

Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low res, 
near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy scans.  

Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data is 
really not usable for pro work.

Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not realtime 
but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with textured mesh. 
Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and scan your 
neighbourhood :) 



Regards.
Dave




On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:

just by a few zeros ;) 



On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:

Yikes!

Apparently I was waaay off!


Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:


The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include the 
pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:


ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld unit. The 
data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you buy processing 
credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of flexibility and means 
you don’t have a large upfront software cost or annual maintenance charges. The 
credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex Tax) per credit which is equivalent to 2m 
of data capture. Discounts are available for larger depending on how many 
credits you purchase at once. 



I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to allow 
you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in LAZ or 
PLY format.

Exhibition Hall – https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

2 Story Building – https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and have a 
look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare www.cloudcompare.org (open 
source software)  



You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News 
following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who recently 
went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to your line of 
work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the system: 
http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf



I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries please 
don’t hesitate to contact me.






On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

Hey Ari,

You may be thinking of the
Zebedee? (Zeb1)

https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data. 

From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

What do you want to use it for?
Could photogrammetry be an option?


Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein mailto:a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there and 
have positive feedback ?

There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year but 
can't recall the company name, anyone ?

Thx
Ari
Blue Sky


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Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread theodor groeneboom
Go agisoft photoscan or go home :)


On 30 June 2014 18:05, Nathan Rusch nathan_ru...@hotmail.com wrote:

   Only throwing this out there because it just came up on another list,
 but it might be worth taking a look at.

 http://pix4d.com/

 -Nathan


  *From:* Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com
 *Sent:* Monday, June 30, 2014 9:52 AM
 *To:* dave...@gmail.com ; Nuke user discussion
 nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk
 *Subject:* Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

  Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that creates
 dense point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset which has
 provided great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited it yet.


 On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low
 res, near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy
 scans.

 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data is
 really not usable for pro work.

 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not
 realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with
 textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and
 scan your neighbourhood :)



 Regards.
  Dave



 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:
 just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:
 Yikes!

 Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:

 The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include the
 pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

 ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex Tax)
 per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in
 LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall – https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries please
 don’t hesitate to contact me.





 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


 On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein mailto:a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year but 
 can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


 Sent from my iPhone___
 Nuke-users mailing listnuke-us...@support.thefoundry.co.uk, 
 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users

 ___
 Nuke-users mailing listnuke-us...@support.thefoundry.co.uk, 
 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users


 --
   ohufxLogo_50x50.png http://www.ohufx.com *vfx compositing
 http://ohufx.com/index.php/vfx-compositing | workflow customisation and
 consulting http://ohufx.com/index.php/vfx-customising *
 ___
 Nuke-users mailing list
 Nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk, http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/
 http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users


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 Nuke-users mailing listnuke-us

Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread Fredrik Pihl
Photoscan surprised me when doing a really (really) sloppy test with no
calibration whatsoever... Surprisingly good cloud and mesh..

http://www.agisoft.ru/products/photoscan

And cheap too!


On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 7:05 PM, Nathan Rusch nathan_ru...@hotmail.com
wrote:

   Only throwing this out there because it just came up on another list,
 but it might be worth taking a look at.

 http://pix4d.com/

 -Nathan


  *From:* Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com
 *Sent:* Monday, June 30, 2014 9:52 AM
 *To:* dave...@gmail.com ; Nuke user discussion
 nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk
 *Subject:* Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

  Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that creates
 dense point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset which has
 provided great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited it yet.


 On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low
 res, near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy
 scans.

 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data is
 really not usable for pro work.

 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not
 realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with
 textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and
 scan your neighbourhood :)



 Regards.
  Dave



 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:
 just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:
 Yikes!

 Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:

 The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include the
 pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

 ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex Tax)
 per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in
 LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall – https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries please
 don’t hesitate to contact me.





 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


 On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein mailto:a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year but 
 can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


 Sent from my iPhone___
 Nuke-users mailing listnuke-us...@support.thefoundry.co.uk, 
 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users

 ___
 Nuke-users mailing listnuke-us...@support.thefoundry.co.uk, 
 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users


 --
   ohufxLogo_50x50.png http://www.ohufx.com *vfx compositing
 http://ohufx.com/index.php/vfx-compositing | workflow customisation and
 consulting http://ohufx.com/index.php/vfx-customising *
 ___
 Nuke-users mailing list
 Nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk, http

Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread Fredrik Pihl
Haha... Groeneboom came before me by a couple of seconds :D



On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 8:17 PM, theodor groeneboom plateryt...@gmail.com
wrote:

 Go agisoft photoscan or go home :)


 On 30 June 2014 18:05, Nathan Rusch nathan_ru...@hotmail.com wrote:

   Only throwing this out there because it just came up on another list,
 but it might be worth taking a look at.

 http://pix4d.com/

 -Nathan


  *From:* Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com
 *Sent:* Monday, June 30, 2014 9:52 AM
 *To:* dave...@gmail.com ; Nuke user discussion
 nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk
 *Subject:* Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

  Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that creates
 dense point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset which has
 provided great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited it yet.


 On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low
 res, near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy
 scans.

 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data
 is really not usable for pro work.

 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not
 realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with
 textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and
 scan your neighbourhood :)



 Regards.
  Dave



 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:
 just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:
 Yikes!

 Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:

 The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include
 the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

 ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex
 Tax) per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in
 LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries
 please don’t hesitate to contact me.





 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


 On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein mailto:a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year but 
 can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


 Sent from my iPhone___
 Nuke-users mailing listnuke-us...@support.thefoundry.co.uk, 
 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users

 ___
 Nuke-users mailing listnuke-us...@support.thefoundry.co.uk, 
 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users


 --
   ohufxLogo_50x50.png http://www.ohufx.com *vfx compositing
 http://ohufx.com/index.php/vfx-compositing | workflow customisation and
 consulting http://ohufx.com/index.php/vfx-customising *
 ___
 Nuke-users mailing list
 Nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk, http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/
 http

Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread Diogo Girondi
Thanks for the tip Nathan! That Pix4d looks nice, I'll try it out when I
find some time.

But Photoscan is great and so far is what I've used for real with a limited
degree of success. There are also the ones from Photomodeler
http://www.photomodeler.com/index.html but it's all Win only and I
couldn't spend to much time with the demos at the time.




On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 3:19 PM, Fredrik Pihl fre...@gmail.com wrote:

 Haha... Groeneboom came before me by a couple of seconds :D



 On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 8:17 PM, theodor groeneboom plateryt...@gmail.com
  wrote:

 Go agisoft photoscan or go home :)


 On 30 June 2014 18:05, Nathan Rusch nathan_ru...@hotmail.com wrote:

   Only throwing this out there because it just came up on another list,
 but it might be worth taking a look at.

 http://pix4d.com/

 -Nathan


  *From:* Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com
 *Sent:* Monday, June 30, 2014 9:52 AM
 *To:* dave...@gmail.com ; Nuke user discussion
 nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk
 *Subject:* Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

  Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that creates
 dense point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset which has
 provided great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited it yet.


 On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low
 res, near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy
 scans.

 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data
 is really not usable for pro work.

 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not
 realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with
 textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and
 scan your neighbourhood :)



 Regards.
  Dave



 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:
 just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:
 Yikes!

 Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:

 The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include
 the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

 ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex
 Tax) per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in
 LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries
 please don’t hesitate to contact me.





 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


 On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein mailto:a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year 
 but can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


 Sent from my iPhone___
 Nuke-users mailing listnuke-us...@support.thefoundry.co.uk, 
 http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users

 ___
 Nuke-users mailing listnuke-us...@support.thefoundry.co.uk, 
 http

Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread theodor groeneboom
Runs on win,osx  linux too.


On 30 June 2014 21:35, Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com wrote:

 Photoscan was mentioned to me recently actually, seems like there's a bit
 of consensus.


 On 30 June 2014 15:44, Diogo Girondi diogogiro...@gmail.com wrote:

 Thanks for the tip Nathan! That Pix4d looks nice, I'll try it out when I
 find some time.

 But Photoscan is great and so far is what I've used for real with a
 limited degree of success. There are also the ones from Photomodeler
 http://www.photomodeler.com/index.html but it's all Win only and I
 couldn't spend to much time with the demos at the time.




 On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 3:19 PM, Fredrik Pihl fre...@gmail.com wrote:

 Haha... Groeneboom came before me by a couple of seconds :D



 On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 8:17 PM, theodor groeneboom 
 plateryt...@gmail.com wrote:

 Go agisoft photoscan or go home :)


 On 30 June 2014 18:05, Nathan Rusch nathan_ru...@hotmail.com wrote:

   Only throwing this out there because it just came up on another
 list, but it might be worth taking a look at.

 http://pix4d.com/

 -Nathan


  *From:* Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com
 *Sent:* Monday, June 30, 2014 9:52 AM
 *To:* dave...@gmail.com ; Nuke user discussion
 nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk
 *Subject:* Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

  Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that
 creates dense point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset
 which has provided great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited
 it yet.


 On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low
 res, near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy
 scans.

 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor.
 Data is really not usable for pro work.

 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not
 realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with
 textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper 
 and
 scan your neighbourhood :)



 Regards.
  Dave



 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:
 just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:
 Yikes!

 Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:

 The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include
 the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

 ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex
 Tax) per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data 
 in
 LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries
 please don’t hesitate to contact me.





 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


 On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein mailto:a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out 
 there and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year 
 but can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


 Sent from my iPhone___
 Nuke-users mailing

Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread Michael Garrett
I think I had not paid attention to it before because I thought it was one
of those old win-only programs. Great that it's on all platforms.


On 30 June 2014 16:40, theodor groeneboom plateryt...@gmail.com wrote:

 Runs on win,osx  linux too.


 On 30 June 2014 21:35, Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com wrote:

 Photoscan was mentioned to me recently actually, seems like there's a bit
 of consensus.


 On 30 June 2014 15:44, Diogo Girondi diogogiro...@gmail.com wrote:

 Thanks for the tip Nathan! That Pix4d looks nice, I'll try it out when I
 find some time.

 But Photoscan is great and so far is what I've used for real with a
 limited degree of success. There are also the ones from Photomodeler
 http://www.photomodeler.com/index.html but it's all Win only and I
 couldn't spend to much time with the demos at the time.




 On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 3:19 PM, Fredrik Pihl fre...@gmail.com wrote:

 Haha... Groeneboom came before me by a couple of seconds :D



 On Mon, Jun 30, 2014 at 8:17 PM, theodor groeneboom 
 plateryt...@gmail.com wrote:

 Go agisoft photoscan or go home :)


 On 30 June 2014 18:05, Nathan Rusch nathan_ru...@hotmail.com wrote:

   Only throwing this out there because it just came up on another
 list, but it might be worth taking a look at.

 http://pix4d.com/

 -Nathan


  *From:* Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com
 *Sent:* Monday, June 30, 2014 9:52 AM
 *To:* dave...@gmail.com ; Nuke user discussion
 nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk
 *Subject:* Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

  Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that
 creates dense point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset
 which has provided great results on occasion and I haven't fully 
 exploited
 it yet.


 On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect.
 Low res, near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy
 scans.

 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor.
 Data is really not usable for pro work.

 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's
 not realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud
 with textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone
 chopper and scan your neighbourhood :)



 Regards.
  Dave



 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:
 just by a few zeros ;)


 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:
 Yikes!

 Apparently I was waaay off!


 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com
 wrote:

 The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not
 include the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

 ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the
 handheld unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model
 and you buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a 
 lot
 of flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex
 Tax) per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.



 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links
 to allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the 
 data
 in LAZ or PLY format.

 Exhibition Hall –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

 2 Story Building –
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw



 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud
 and have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)



 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR
 News following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related 
 to
 your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the
 system:
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf


 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries
 please don’t hesitate to contact me.





 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

 Hey Ari,

 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?


 Sent from my iPhone


 On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein mailto:a...@curvstudios.com 
 a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out 
 there and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k

Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-30 Thread Chris Noellert
Photoscan.  Horrible learning materials and interface but it does what it says 
on the tin and surprisingly well.

Best,
Chris

Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 30, 2014, at 6:52 PM, Michael Garrett michaeld...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 Can you recommend a particular photogrammetry-based tool that creates dense 
 point clouds? Obviously there is Nuke's internal toolset which has provided 
 great results on occasion and I haven't fully exploited it yet.
 
 
 On 30 June 2014 04:42, David Yu dave...@gmail.com wrote:
 Sense and all the Depth sensor type of scanner is like the Kinect. Low res, 
 near field scanning.  No more than 10 feet range and very noisy scans. 
 
 Kinect  and Asus Xtion Pro Live 640 x 480 resolution depth sensor. Data is 
 really not usable for pro work.
 
 Better off using Photogrammetry tools for Lidar like scans. It's not 
 realtime but the output is much better and gives a dense point cloud with 
 textured mesh. Photogrammetry have no scale limits. Use a drone chopper and 
 scan your neighbourhood :) 
 
 
 
 Regards.
 Dave
 
 
 
 On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:
 just by a few zeros ;)
 
 
 On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:
 Yikes!
 
 Apparently I was waaay off!
 
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:
 
 The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include 
 the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:
 
 ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld 
 unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you 
 buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of 
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or 
 annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex Tax) 
 per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are 
 available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase at once.
 
  
 
 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to 
 allow you to download some sample data below - you can download the data 
 in LAZ or PLY format.
 
 Exhibition Hall – https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw
 
 2 Story Building – 
 https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw
 
  
 
 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud and 
 have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare 
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)  
 
  
 
 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News 
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who 
 recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related 
 to your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the 
 system: 
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf
 
  
 
 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries 
 please don’t hesitate to contact me.
 
 
 
 
 
 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:
 Hey Ari,
 
 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/
 
 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data. 
 
 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy
 
 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?
 
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein a...@curvstudios.com 
 wrote:
 
 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out 
 there and have positive feedback ?
 
 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last 
 year but can't recall the company name, anyone ?
 
 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky
 
 
 Sent from my iPhone___
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 http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users
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 Nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk, http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/
 http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users
 
 
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Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-29 Thread Frank Rueter|OHUfx

just by a few zeros ;)

On 29/06/14 16:46, HSK wrote:

Yikes!

Apparently I was waaay off!


Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com 
mailto:fr...@ohufx.com wrote:


The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not 
include the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.

This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD(ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the
handheld unit. The data processing is charged using a
pay-as-you-go model and you buy processing credits as and when
you need them. This allows a lot of flexibility and means you
don't have a large upfront software cost or annual maintenance
charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD(ex Tax) per credit
which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are
available for larger depending on how many credits you purchase
at once.

I have attached a brochure for your information and also some
links to allow you to download some sample data below - you can
download the data in LAZ or PLY format.

Exhibition Hall --
https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw
https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

2 Story Building --
https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw
https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw

You can open the data in any software that can accept a
pointcloud and have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud
Compare www.cloudcompare.org http://www.cloudcompare.org (open
source software)

You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR
News following a recent trial and evaluation by an American
surveyor who recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It
may not be related to your line of work, but it gives you an idea
of the capabilities of the system:
http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf

I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further
queries please don't hesitate to contact me.






On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

Hey Ari,

You may be thinking of the
Zebedee? (Zeb1)

https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

What do you want to use it for?
Could photogrammetry be an option?


Sent from my iPhone


On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubensteina...@curvstudios.com  wrote:

Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there and 
have positive feedback ?

There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year but 
can't recall the company name, anyone ?

Thx
Ari
Blue Sky


Sent from my iPhone___
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Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-28 Thread Randy Little
Ari there is this one for objects that is only $400
http://cubify.com/Products/Sense


Randy S. Little
http://www.rslittle.com/
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm2325729/




On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there
 and have positive feedback ?

 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year
 but can't recall the company name, anyone ?

 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky


 Sent from my iPhone___
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 Nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk, http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/
 http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users

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Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-28 Thread HSK
Hey Ari,

You may be thinking of the
Zebedee? (Zeb1)

https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data. 

From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

What do you want to use it for?
Could photogrammetry be an option?


Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein a...@curvstudios.com wrote:
 
 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?
 
 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year but 
 can't recall the company name, anyone ?
 
 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky
 
 
 Sent from my iPhone___
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 Nuke-users@support.thefoundry.co.uk, http://forums.thefoundry.co.uk/
 http://support.thefoundry.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nuke-users
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Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-28 Thread Frank Rueter|OHUfx
The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include 
the pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.

This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:

   ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD(ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld
   unit. The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and
   you buy processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a
   lot of flexibility and means you don't have a large upfront software
   cost or annual maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50
   AUD(ex Tax) per credit which is equivalent to 2m of data capture.
   Discounts are available for larger depending on how many credits you
   purchase at once.

   I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links
   to allow you to download some sample data below - you can download
   the data in LAZ or PLY format.

   Exhibition Hall --
   https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw
   https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw

   2 Story Building --
   https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw
   https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw

   You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud
   and have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare
   www.cloudcompare.org http://www.cloudcompare.org (open source
   software)

   You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR
   News following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor
   who recently went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be
   related to your line of work, but it gives you an idea of the
   capabilities of the system:
   http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf

   I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries
   please don't hesitate to contact me.






On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:

Hey Ari,

You may be thinking of the
Zebedee? (Zeb1)

https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/

I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data.

 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy

What do you want to use it for?
Could photogrammetry be an option?


Sent from my iPhone


On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein a...@curvstudios.com wrote:

Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there and 
have positive feedback ?

There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year but 
can't recall the company name, anyone ?

Thx
Ari
Blue Sky


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Re: [Nuke-users] Prosumer Lidar ?

2014-06-28 Thread HSK
Yikes!

Apparently I was waaay off!


Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 28, 2014, at 11:00 PM, Frank Rueter|OHUfx fr...@ohufx.com wrote:
 
 The pricing of that one is actually around $25k. That does not include the 
 pay-as-you go data processing which I found a bit annoying.
 This is the info I got recently from a vendor in Australia:
 
 ZEB1 is charged at $24,860 AUD (ex Tax, ex Shipping) for the handheld unit. 
 The data processing is charged using a pay-as-you-go model and you buy 
 processing credits as and when you need them. This allows a lot of 
 flexibility and means you don’t have a large upfront software cost or annual 
 maintenance charges. The credits are charged at $0.50 AUD (ex Tax) per credit 
 which is equivalent to 2m of data capture. Discounts are available for larger 
 depending on how many credits you purchase at once.
 
  
 
 I have attached a brochure for your information and also some links to allow 
 you to download some sample data below - you can download the data in LAZ or 
 PLY format.
 
 Exhibition Hall – https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnI5eFVFSzhUQw
 
 2 Story Building – https://www.hightail.com/download/elNLQmtWUnJ0NjgxWjhUQw
 
  
 
 You can open the data in any software that can accept a pointcloud   
 and have a look at the data output. You can use Cloud Compare 
 www.cloudcompare.org (open source software)  
 
  
 
 You may also be interested in reading an article written in LiDAR News 
 following a recent trial and evaluation by an American surveyor who recently 
 went on to purchase a system of his own. It may not be related to your line 
 of work, but it gives you an idea of the capabilities of the system: 
 http://www.lidarnews.com/PDF/LiDARMagazine_Gutelius-Zeb1Review_Vol4No1.pdf
 
  
 
 I hope this information is helpful. If you have any further queries please 
 don’t hesitate to contact me.
 
 
 
 
 
 On 29/06/14 14:09, HSK wrote:
 Hey Ari,
 
 You may be thinking of the
 Zebedee? (Zeb1)
 
 https://www.fxguide.com/quicktakes/meet-zebedee-handheld-lidar-scanning/
 
 I think it's relatively cheap to buy ($200-$400)
 But it uses a pay as you go model for processing the data. 
 
 From what I've heard the results are okay, and a little bit noisy
 
 What do you want to use it for?
 Could photogrammetry be an option?
 
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On Jun 28, 2014, at 8:08 PM, Ari Rubenstein a...@curvstudios.com wrote:
 
 Has anyone explored any of the burgeoning prosumer Lidar options out there 
 and have positive feedback ?
 
 There was a $1k or less Kickstarter Lidar project I read about last year 
 but can't recall the company name, anyone ?
 
 Thx
 Ari
 Blue Sky
 
 
 Sent from my iPhone___
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