I also stitch 200+ image panoramas. I had faced same problem and still
finding solution. I have to use AutopanoGiga trial to export PTO file. Legal
but not moral. That is why I posted thread many times here.
In my last topic CP generation problem was solved with Cpfind.
Yuv' message
Let's try
Does anyone know
which control point detector AutoPanoGiga uses? Is the similar
algorithm available in Hugin?
It is far superior (in terms of speed and reliability) to anything in Hugin
as far as I can tell. It does a lot guessing when the dumb automatic
scheme of looking for control
First, I must say that this set of 150 images I have (which was shot
by a friend without a tripod) is not exactly the easiest set of images
to stitch. They were shot using a sort of triangular overlapping
grid, though there is somewhat of a linearity to them over 3-4 images.
Second, kfj, yah, I
Autopano Pro uses autostitch which can be downloaded and used for free.
However iirc, there are some limitations.
http://cvlab.epfl.ch/~brown/autostitch/autostitch.html
On Fri, 2011-01-14 at 05:57 -0800, Jeffrey Martin wrote:
Does anyone know
which control point detector AutoPanoGiga uses?
On a side note.
Autostitch runs in linux using wine. Morever, autostitch is not limited
to AutoPanoPro, but is also available as a free download within Serif
product. The Pro version of Serif is available for 19.99 iirc.
http://www.serif.com/free-panoramic-photo-stiching-software/
Dale
On
as Calico for the Mac.
Dale
Date: Fri, 14 Jan 2011 10:42:18 -0800
From: 360cit...@gmail.com
To: hugin-ptx@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [hugin-ptx] Re: hugin problems with finding control points with
large number of images
uh
autostitch / serif is something totally different from autopano pro