The point was that by panning, you get more info by being able to interpolate in between pixels and such. You would also be able to reduce noise etc. Major number crunching, of course.

On 3/25/2010 3:02 PM, David Parsons wrote:
Well, if you use Windows Movie Maker, you can create jpeg files from
whichever frame you like.  It won't pull every nth frame, but it is
pretty easy to simply pause and save the frames that have enough
overlap.  I don't think you'd really want an app pulling frames
arbitrarily.

On Thu, Mar 25, 2010 at 5:24 PM, Rob Studdert<[email protected]>  wrote:
On 26/03/2010, Toine<[email protected]>  wrote:
Yes that's possible and I think one of the Sony P&S does this in camera.
For seamless stitching you don't need a panning video, overlapping
stills is even better. You do need to rotate the camera as close to
the nodal point of the lens as possible and you do need software.

You would really really only need a utility that pulled the nth frame
as a still from a video file as a jpg then you could throw the jpg set
at any conventional pano application. Is there such a beast?

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