A colleage of mine bought a wideangle lens to put on a Nikon coolpix. He used just two 180 degree shots, noting more. Some software put it together and there was a royalty for each click on the net - for real estate use. I have inherited the hardware, but never really learned to use it. The internet company went belly up. Privately I use IseeMedia PhotoVista 3.5 for telephoto panaramas like this: http://asp.fotobasen.dk/?page=16&category=7&id=23548&photopage=1 Shot handheld with a 50 USD Sigma 3.5-5.6/18-o50mm at 50mm F9 and 1/800sec x 4.
I posted this before, and as you may recall, I had do do a little photoshopping to get rid of some "floating bodyparts" in the first attempts. This one was done totally automatically in PhotoVista. Quite amazing, since people are not standing still. In my work (city planner) I use this technique all the time. It's not art, just very usefull photographs. I have even used it for this: http://www.koegekom.dk/data/1080488/2-43%20Web%20versionmindre.pdf Look at paeg 20 Regards Jens Bladt Arkitekt MAA http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt -----Oprindelig meddelelse----- Fra: Kevin Waterson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sendt: 13. september 2005 02:14 Til: [email protected] Emne: 360 degree software I have been looking at iPix ( www.ipix.com ) but it is majorly geared up for the canon G6. I there something more generic to make 360 degree panoramas, then have them mashed into a little 360 degree image that is able to be panned? What are folks using for tripod mounts for 360 degree images. What other equipment could be recommended? Kind regards Kevin -- "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote."

