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Check out this awesome panorama we assembled. It has some small defects, but on the all, looks really amazing!
If you zoom in on the photo (warning 12MB file), you’ll see how much detail these panoramas have, and this is just panorama 615 out of 900 we shot that Thursday. We still have yet to start processing the ones from Wednesday, which may have as many as 1000 usable panoramas.
This is so exciting to see come together! If you have any questions you can comment or contact me directly at tomlong@gmail.com.

The OpenView Project is going to be at Where 2.0 this year as part of the Where Faire. If you come to the conference you’ll get to see our Trike up close, as well as learn more about how we go about collecting photographs and putting them together!
DIY StreetView – The OpenView Project
If you can’t afford the tickets, we’ll also be at WhereCamp the following weekend. Hope to see you there!

Jeff Johnson (@ortelius) and I (Tom Longson @nym) are doing some work on the Burning Man dataset we captured last year, and I wanted to show off what our “Test Strip” looks like.
This is basically a very simple view to make sure that all our images came out correctly. I like this one (shot “615″ from Thursday) because it shows the base of the man, as well as this girl who I met while I was on the trike who was really interested in the project. As a frame of reference to show how high the resolution on these photos are, I uploaded the third picture in this set from camera “D” to flickr.
It’s so amazing looking through these photos again. Even without the stitching, it makes me feel like I’m back there!
Tonight we’re going to try to start a job on Amazon Web Services using Hadoop to process all of these and make proper panoramas. After that, the big goal will be to geotag em! Ranger Judas is dropping us a new trigger next week that I’m excited to try out.

We took over 2000 panoramas at Burning Man 2009! We’re busy trying to process them, but stay tuned!
Myself (nym) and Jeffrey Johnson are working on the image processing. Dealing with this volume of data is no joke. Also, the triggering system is being rewired to use an Arduino instead of the Cannon’s CHDK by Ranger Judas.
Here are a few sample QTVR panoramas from Burning Man 2008. We have over 40 GB of panoramas to go through, and we have not built the flash panorama software to accomidate OpenViews yet so please be patient.
The Temple
Burning Man Earth Secret HQ
Center Camp
I am surrounded by camera equipment, which include the following:
I’ve spent at least $4,000 trying to get this right, and with all this equipment, I’m not sure what the magic bullet is. The Canon G9 can’t do the CHDK, but it can become an intervalometer with the Urbi. The only problem with the Urbi is that you can’t manually adjust the zoom because it restarts the camera, and takes it over like a computer might. We can control the zoom with some R/C equipment, but that remains to be seen. I’ve been trying to contact the maker of the Urbi, blip.com.au, but they are unresponsive. I don’t think they care about their customers. Anyways, this is what leads me to the Canon G7…
This week, I ordered a G7 from a nice guy off Ebay because of the Urbi’s shortcomings. The G7 does have CHDK support! This means I can (and have) taken pictures with all the settings set, and can get it to do it as often as I want, for as long as I want. Essentially, I have exactly what I want. Only thing is, it’s been hacked to be Infrared. This is weird, and cool at the same time. It means shots don’t have a natural color, but they also can be taken in times that I wouldn’t otherwise be able to, like dusk. Neat huh?
So why two 360 lenses? As I posted earlier, I originally got the GoPano. It’s a very nice mirror, but it’s mounted on a very flimsy piece of Plexiglas. When I start riding the trike, the mirror starts to shake back and forth, much more than the camera does. I bought the EGG because it’s built with a plastic housing, and mounts directly to the camera. It seems like a better solution, but the viewing angle is much lower, so I may well end up in the shot.
It all seems like the optimal solution is still far away, but my deadline is here. I’m packing for Burning Man, and there’s no time like the present. My hope is between myself and my brother, we’ll figure it out. We’ll figure it out, one way or the other.
Another major milestone reached! We have turned the tricycle (our three wheeled polycycle) into a tripod. All the credit on this one goes to Brent, who did some welding to make this happen. The top of the “mast” has a regular camera mounting point with a level, which can hold any camera, as well as the GoPano and the SLR mounting bracket we bought. In the future, we can also use this three wheelin’ tripod to attach other panoramic cameras or even a gigpan to stop and take gigapixel photos of special spots.
In the interest of getting something playa-ready in the short amount of time before Burning Man, I purchased a Kaidan GoPano lens and a special mounting bracket that is designed for SLRs. This means instead of multiple cameras which have the problem of parallax, we have a single camera, which takes a picture of a mirror. This approach is far simpler, and costs approximately the same amount as multiple cameras. I still want to do multiple cameras in the future as it will yield far better resolution, but a single lens means we have the ability to take photographs of subjects that are extremely close to the lens without too much distortion.
So now, I am trying to decide between the Canon G7 which supports the CHDK (cannon hack development kit), and the Canon G9, which does not, and doesn’t easily support remote triggers (what was Canon thinking?). I am attempting to get a trigger built by an R/C company called Blip, but they haven’t responded to my emails yet. It’s frustrating because I really would prefer the G9, which would allow us 12.1 megapixel photos instead of 10 megapixels.
Only 22 more days until I need to be on the road to the Black Rock Desert. I hope it all works out!
This is the base of our soon-to-be mobile tripod. With 24-speeds, this sun ez-tad recumbent is perfect for taking panoramas from. Right now, my friend Brent from ToyShoppePro (BoomToysLabs) is working on the camera mount. I’m leaving for Yosemite for five days, so I’m curious to see what he’s come up with when I get back.


More pictures soon…
I am waiting to finish off the bottom of my mounting box to test out the setup and see if I can make 3/8th of a panorama. I am aware of the problems with parallax, which is when objects are viewed at different angles. This is an advantage to us humans as it allows us to determine the relative closeness of things because we have two eyes. With the pano-cam I’m building though, it will potentially be a big problem due to the artifacts created in the stitching process.
Panoguide says this on the subject of panoramas and parallax:
If everything in the scene is approximately the same distance from the lens, or very far away, the parallax effect will be elminated or at least minimized. This is why hand-held panoramas from a mountain top tend to work quite well – everything is far away from the camera, and because the distances are very large compared to the tiny distance between the nodal point and the point of rotation, parallax is negligible.
So, as people get closer the the cameras, the more parallax will be apparent in the resulting panoramas. This is unfortunately the trade off of taking higher resolution photos with off the shelf equipment. Instead of 10-12MP panoramas with a 360 lens, I expect to be getting 40+ megapixel panoramas, which will give more of the experience of being there by being able to zoom in on parts of the photo. I absolutely love the gigapan project for this reason, and I’m hoping users will appreciate the higher resolution too.
So that being said, I won’t really know what it will look like until I run tests, which should be very soon. My hope is that it will be “good enough”, because it’s going to be awhile until I’ll be able to afford going the other one-camera-with-a-360-lense route.