The second one with the stills clearly has more detail and is sharper, and was a lot less work! Here is an enlargement of the tennis court on each, with the stills only version first.- UPDATE -
Had a break in the weather here so based on suggestions from this thread I went up again and did a "redo" using only stills snapped with the camera instead of taking video and extracting the frames. I went a little crazy taking a couple hundred photos but was easy.
New version using 4,000 x 3,000 pixel camera shots
http://theitalianpalace.com/tipv2/tip360v2.htm
I am not going to give my opinion on which one I think looks better - want to see what everyone thinks. I am convinced however we need an "app for that" via the API to do this automatically.
Original version using 3840 x 2160 extracted movie frames
http://theitalianpalace.com/tip360.htm
Interesting observation - the final jpg for the new version is roughly the same size as the original despite the fact that the camera only pics are higher resolution each.
Was just thinking - isn't there an obvious SDK opportunity here? Does anyone know if with the new SDK a "script" could be written to move the P3 to a particular spot & altitude, position the gimbal, take a series or burst of pictures while rotating, move the gimbal, down, repeat, etc. That would be exactly what I did but would use the higher res stills and be precisely controlled for an exact overlap of pics. Also would be incredibly efficient in terms of time and number of shots. Heck I could see with such automation the shots necessary to do what I did but better be performed in less than a minute.
Heck, people would PAY for an app that did this....
When you view it in the iPad in Chrome, it pans and tilts with the tablet!! I think it shows what you would see through a window facing in that direction. I was so surprised!!!
So how many total still pictures did you use? Did you follow the same procedure slowly turning at the same camera angle all the way around while taking pictures and then turn down the camera a little more and keep going? How many total pictures did you come up with? How did you put them all together at the end?
I've actually written an app that does exactly this but it's unlikely that I'm going to release it - at least for now. The current state of the SDK makes it not worth it.
Thanks for the validation!agree, 24 photos can do it. i used 26...
Shooting with the sun directly overhead also keeps it out of all the images!I took about 230 for the second one. But just did a third @ 1,600ft using only 160 pictures. Its MUCH easier just snapping pictures and not fooling with the video and extracting. I also agree that the quality is better with the regular photos.
http://theitalianpalace.com/tip1600/TIP1600.htm
So how do "applets" like this work with the SDK? How is it implemented / run from a user perspective? Outside of the app? In parallel somehow?
If you are working on such an app obviously it would be a tremendous contribution.
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