Brent's Pseudo Live Picture is pretty impressive. I used the Panaview app in
a menu bar on my personal page (see sig for URL) leaving a fair bit of room
between hotspots to hopefully avoid accidental clicks.


Dr. Steve, Official Optometrist of the Summerfolk Festival

Office web site:   http://www.log.on.ca/briggs
Summerfolk Online: http://www.summerfolk.org
Stan Rogers Page: http://www.summerfolk.org/srmain.htm
Personal web page:  http://log.on.ca/users/stevebriggs/

-----Original Message-----
From: Brent Eades <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Friday, June 12, 1998 1:20 PM
Subject: WC:>: More on virtual tours


In light of the enthusiastic response from several of you to the "PanaView"
Java
applet I mentioned yesterday, I decided to do a little more tinkering with
it.

What I've done is cobble together my own "VR panorama" using nothing but
shareware and low-tech camera work, just to see how feasible it was; the
short
answer is, "fairly".

Here's what I did:

(1) borrowed my pal's el-cheapo digital camera (an older Epson), then hiked
to a
nearby railway trestle that affords a good view of part of my town.

(2) snapped a dozen photos, *very* quickly and without benefit of a tripod
of any
sort.  (The "quickly" part is because I was (a) about 60 feet above a set of
nasty
rapids, on (b) a very narrow trestle, while (c) fighting a cyclone-like
headwind, and
(d) anxiously awaiting the arrival of the west-bound freight, which was due
any
minute.  Yikes.  So the photos were not of, shall we say, the sharpest or
most rock-
steady quality :)

(3) copied the photos to the PC, then fired up Paint Shop.  Stitched all the
photos
together manually, then set about cleaning up shaky focus, inconsistent
exposures,
etc.  (I quickly discovered that as you shoot pictures around 360 degrees on
a
bright sunny day, the exposure varies greatly from frame to frame.)

(4)  used PanaView to enable the "scrolling panorama" effect, also embedding
a link
(to a "zoomed" image) in it.

So what I ended up with was a sort of "poor man's LivePicture" effect, but
without
any investment in server software, authoring programs, etc.  Just stuff I
had on
hand already.  The image quality isn't great by any means, but OK under the
circumstances.  The embedded link is also a little dicey, because it's too
easy to
accidentally click on it (thus jumping to a new page) while dragging the
mouse
through the panorama.  Still, an interesting effect for no investment.  (The
link is
on the image of the tall stone building about half-way through the panorama,
BTW)

    http://www.almonte.com/pana/index.html



-----------
Brent Eades, Almonte, Ontario
   E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   Town of Almonte: http://www.almonte.com/
   Business Web site: http://www.almonte.com/brent/

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