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Along with a lot of little bug fixes, tweaks and general improvements we launched some pretty major visual updates to the website to help improve your experience with us.  Also, with the revamp of the site design we did some work to improve our site search to help you find the great synths you’re looking for.

 

Site Design Update

Our green Photosynth theme has been with our team since the beginning and we didn’t want to lose it completely, but we did realize that as our pages got longer with more useful community content we needed to improve the design to help make that content easier to read.  The darker background and colors also help the great photos in your synths shine the most on the page.  Have a look around the site with the new design and let us know your thoughts.

 

Comments & Geotags on Tradecards

We added the comment count and geotag icon to tradecards across the site to help you see what synths have been located on the map and what synths are being actively discussed... or where you can be the first to leave a comment.

new_tradecards

 

New Homepage with Fresh Content

Our new homepage has a full viewer on it so visitors can directly explore one of our latest favorite synths.  Along with showcasing this one spectacular synth in the viewer we’re also highlighting 6 other great synths.  We’ll be updating these regularly, so check back often to see what’s new and if one of your synths has been featured.

new_home 

 

Improved Search

We improved the search on our site to allow you to sort the results not just by the best keyword match, but also by synth quality, popularity, date and author. Give the new search a try!

improved_search 

 

Initial Synth Visibility Setting

The point cloud gets a lot of love, but sometimes we know you might not want it to show by default when your synth loads... and sometimes that’s all you want to show!  We’ve added a setting to the Synth Editing panel to allow you to set the initial visibility to include the images & points, images only or points only.  You can get to this setting by logging in and viewing any of your own synths.  There is a Edit Synth & Highlights button that will take you to the edit page when clicked.

synth_visibility

 

Happy Synthing!

DariusMonsef

We joined the Virtual Earth team a couple months ago and we’re excited to release the first result of our joint efforts.  Commercial partners can now use the Virtual Earth platform to take advantage of the immersive 3D photo experiences Photosynth can create and share. You can learn more about Virtual Earth and our new commercial offering at the Virtual Earth product site.

 

We just posted the news about this, but we’ve already begun to hear some great feedback: TechCrunch thinks this is Where Awesomeness Meets and ReadWriteWeb notes that Photosynth Goes to Work.

 

NASA’s International Space Station Photosynths

iss_photosynth

View all the Space Station synths here.

 

VisitBrighton’s Royal Pavillion Photosynth

RoyalPavilion_Photosynth

View the synth here.

 

Microsoft Photosynth Integration into Virtual Earth

Watch a video with some more information about the integration.

 

If you’re interested in a Photosynth commercial license, you can obtain one by contacting the Microsoft Virtual Earth Sales Team at maplic@microsoft.com.

 

P.S. Don’t worry, this doesn’t mean we’re taking away the free Photosynth that so many of you love to use.  You can still continue to use Photosynth for your personal projects.  Our new commercial option will allow us to partner with big brands and to help more people discover how great a Photosynth experience can be.

 

-DariusMonsef

We’re really excited about this update to Photosynth.  We’ve added a major new feature to our viewing experience and have improved the viewer to reach even more people.  With our new highlights feature you can point out the “can’t miss” areas of your synths and the new Silverlight viewer will allow you to share your synths with people on more operating systems.

Silverlight-based Cross-Platform Viewer

Our goal has always been to share the Photosynth experience with as many people as possible, but our Direct 3D viewer hasn’t been friendly to our Mac friends.  We’ve been working on our Silverlight experimental viewer and I’m excited to say we’re promoting it to be the main viewer for Photosynth.  This will allow PC and Mac users to not only view synths but join in the rest of the Photosynth community by leaving comments, marking favorite synths and getting to know their fellow synthers.

Our embedding code has also been moved over to Silverlight so now you can embed your synths around the web and reach even more viewers with your fantastic creations.

Updated Viewer Controls

new_controls

We’ve updated the viewer controls in the Silverlight viewer to be more useful when exploring synths.  Based on your feedback and support we’ve consolidated all the navigation buttons in the center bottom of the viewer.  No more hunting around with your mouse to all the corners of the viewer to get around.

 

Synth Highlights

Photosynth does an awesome job taking lots of flat photos and stitching them into immersive 3D experiences… but sometimes it can be hard to find all the best places hidden around a synth.  With our new highlights feature you not only can find some of the best spots in a synth… you can take a smooth journey through the synth from highlight to highlight.

A Couple Great Highlight Rich Examples… (More Coming too!)

 highlights

Nellie Inglerock - Masonic Cemetery by dariusmonsef

artgallery

Art Gallery of New South Wales by David

martello

 Martello Tower: Inside & Out by lostinthetriangle

 

How to Add Highlights to Your Synths

edit_highlights

-Click Edit Synth and Highlights in the right info area for your synth. You’ll need to be logged in.

editingbuddha

-Find A Great Photo (Optional: Give it a Title & Caption) - Click Add Highlight

-Find Another Great Photo… repeat.

-Click Save

Now you can explore your synth with the newly added highlights.

 

One Step Back. Two Leaps Forward.

Moving to the Silverlight viewer might look like a step back in performance because of the lower frame rate and delayed point cloud density… but this move has allowed us to take two leaps forward. We’re now able to allow Mac users to fully participate on our website and we can build editing and highlights features right into the viewer code.  We haven’t written off performance for these two new benefits.  Our team is working hard on improving performance so that the Silverlight viewer can not only be more feature rich than the D3D viewer but be equally high performance if not better. 

If you’re looking for the old D3D viewer you can still get to it from the “View Synth in Direct3D Viewer” link in the bottom left of the viewer area on any synth page.

Where’d My Halos Go?

Probably the saddest thing we’re missing in the Silverlight viewer is the Halos or Donuts that we used to show where there was an object that can be rotated around.  This feature is still there, it just has a different visual icon.  Again, this is something we know some of you will miss and we’ll find a way to keep making the Silverlight viewer better and more donut-y.

You’ll also probably notice a new Unlisted feature.  This lets you upload a synth without making it public.  This will be great for fine tuning your synths before sharing the final version with the public.  This unlisted option comes along with some commercial features for bigger brands to start using Photosynth, but I’ll cover those details in more depth in a future post.

Now go add some great highlights and share them with your friends!

This is a guest post by swami_worldtraveler, a fairly new user who has really jumped in and started producing some great work and finding interesting ways of sharing his new passion with others.  We’re very excited to see people like him take such an interest in Photosynth (and we’re jealous of his profession… he lists it as “world traveler”).
-View the original article here.

Photosynth Primer


I decided to put together some visuals and text to entice you into my latest foto/3D obsession....


Here are a series of screen-grabs. They were chosen to be visual compelling, and to cover a broad range of features, user controls, and user interface particulars. Highlighted ruins include the Temple of the Inscriptions, a grand view of the site, and the skull from the Temple of the Skull. Totally new to most, and hopefully exciting, is the 3D "point cloud" model resulting from the synth. Exactly what this is will be come clear below.


Take a quick visual scan below, then jump right in, if you like!

Go here: Mayan Ruins of Palenque (take 3's the charm!?)" - and yes, it was the charm :)
http://photosynth.net/view.aspx?cid=0c71b1c4-8113-4bc4-bf4d-71ec4d9c6749


For those interested in getting the full experience (or who just get into this stuff), your tour begins now :) ...
(Or for a quicker introduction, consider looking at the "Quick Guide" in my travel blog)

swami_1

This is the basic, COMPLETE INTERFACE running in the Firefox web browser. You can see multiple planes (fotos) making up the panorama. Most of the fotos are concentrated around the temple in the center. And notice the interface icons around the border. Click 'em and see what happens! Hold the mouse cursor over one to get a description.

swami_2

In FULL-SCREEN mode, here's a different angle of the temple. This is certainly the preferred viewing mode.

swami_3

BAM! 3D 'POINT CLOUD' MODEL! The program has used sophisticated robot vision algorithms and relative spatial analysis to create a 3D facsimile of the scene! Clicking and dragging the donut in the middle reveals the various viewpoints shot. Use the 'p' key to enter this mode. Click 'p' multiple times to cycle thru.
Note: this donut only appears under certain conditions.

swami_4

This is another view of the temple point cloud, but no foto was taken from this exact angle! By doing a Ctrl+click-n-drag on the donut you can orbit anywhere and get a better sense of the 3D environment. More fotos of a given area lead to more detail (i.e. points). The sparse points to the upper-right of the temple represent the trees on the ridge.

swami_5

This is a "grand" view taken from the Group of the Crosses. This is the first screen you see for this particular synth. The Temple of the Inscriptions can be seen center-left, just behind some trees, and The Palace is just to its right. To the fore-left is the Temple of the Sun.

swami_6

 

 

And here's the grand view seen full-screen.

swami_7

This is the GRID VIEW. It's a simple layout of all the fotos in the synth. They're grouped into 'clumps.' These fotos are all connected in a 3D space. They all have objects in common with at least one or more other fotos. Click the 'm' key to move from clump to clump. This works in Grid View and 3D view. Fewer clumps mean more connectedness and a greater "% synthy" scene. But "100% synthy" does not necessarily mean better. In this scene I've included maps, and hieroglyphs which aren't meant to connect, but add to the experience.

swami_8

Here's the GRID VIEW in FULL-SCREEN mode. More real estate; easier to navigate!:)

swami_9

This is a CLOSE-UP of a foto in GRID VIEW. Single-click to select and zoom to. Use '+' and '-' to zoom in and out. You can also click-n-drag. And quite useful is to use SPACEBAR/Shift+SPACEBAR to move from foto to foto. This works in 3D view, too. In fact, this is a good way to ensure you see all there is to see. You can also click the PLAY icon.

swami_10

By double-clicking on the foto in grid view you go to 3D view, centered on that foto. Can you find this skull!?

OK. That's it. Have fun :)

Greg Pascale, who was an intern here at Photosynth last summer recently released an app he’s been working that let’s you experience synths on your iPhone.  He was able to take advantage of the good 3D support on the iPhone to allow you to not just browse around a synth's image collection… but to see the point cloud and even the projections of where the cameras were when they took the photos. Get iSynth here or search for it in the iPhone app store.

Here are some screenshots from my “Head of Greg” synth: (Photos / Point Cloud / Camera Projection)

isynth_greg 

Sarah Perez wrote a post about the new iSynth app and gave a very nice introduction…

“One of the best products so far to emerge from Microsoft’s Live Labs has got to be Photosynth, an amazing tool that lets you transform your photos into three-dimensional worlds you can then virtually explore. In the past, we’ve seen Photosynths integrated with Live Maps, turned into slideshows, geotagged, changed into Point Clouds, and even used to document historical events like President Obama’s inauguration. Now you can add one more to that list: Photosynth has come to the iPhone.”

-Read the full post on her Channel 10 blog.

isynth_bear

So far Greg’s app has been well received: 

TechCrunch “iSynth Brings Microsoft’s Powerful 3D Photo Viewer Photosynth To The iPhone”

ArsTechnica “If you're into photography, or just like cool applications, it's probably worth a look.”

@gregdowning “Orbit mode on iSynth is cool! You can see the frustrum of all the cameras. tap the "i" in upper right to get menu then touch "orbit" to spin”

@frogtosser “Checking out isynth for the iPhone/touch. Pretty awesome.”

-iSynth on twitter…

 

Info from Greg’s website:

Quick Menu Buttons

Tip: While using iSynth, for a quick description of what a button does, simply hold it down for a moment and a description will appear (unless you've turned off the "Description Labels" option in the settings menu). If you hold any button for longer than a moment, it will not press when you release it.

Show/hide the full menu
Quit the current synth and go back to the selection screen
Jump to the next 3D group of connected photos
Enter slideshow mode
icon_arcBall_off Enter orbit mode
Exit orbit mode
Toggle point cloud-only view (show/hide photos)
Go to the settings menu
Rotate the screen
Show/hide cameras (in arc ball mode)
Go to the about/help screen

Quick Controls

Normal Mode:
- Tap on any arrow to move to a different photo.
- Drag one finger to reveal other photos that can be visited. Lift your finger to jump to the highlighted photo.
- To rotate first-person-shooter style, drag one finger in the direction you wish to rotate while holding another finger stationary anywhere on the screen
- Use the standard spread/pinch gestures to zoom in and out
Orbit Mode:
- To "orbit" around the synth, simply drag one finger in the direction you wish to rotate.
- To move forwards or backwards, use the spread/pinch gestures.
- To strafe left, right, up or down, drag two fingers in the same direction.
- To leave orbit mode, tap the button in the upper left corner with the red X. This will take you back to normal mode to the image you came from.
- Double tap a camera to jump to the photo taken by that camera (and return to normal mode).
Slideshow Mode:

Not much needs to be said about slideshow mode; the controls are fairly self explanatory. To leave slideshow mode and go back to normal mode, press the stop button.

lilysynth

 

Synth well, dariusmonsef

4 Comments
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Photosynth lets you use your photographs to create a visual experience from your perspective of the world… and sometimes that perspective is from way above. We hoped to get some synths shot from the sky, but are really impressed with how many have been created and from such different methods… Helicopters, Airplanes, Kites, Balloons, etc.

It’s a Bird… It’s a Plane… It’s Photosynth!

Here are some recent synths from above:

(If I missed some great ones, let me know in the comments below)

Remote Controlledsunnyday 

Sunny Day in Franconia by Fry3199

sedona

Aerial Photos of Sedona, Arizona by clipper453

Balloon

nearspace 

Near Space Balloon by dcshrum

jaffa

Jaffa 2007 Port Aerial by AaronBurke1

torquay

Torquay Flyer by ChloroPhil

Airplane

friscotower 

Frisco Water Tower 2 by Ahh-Photography

ribbon

Navo Middle School Red Ribbon Week by Ahh-Photography

Helicopter

empirestate 

Empire State Building Aerial Synth by flyphoto2020

shea 

Shea Stadium Aerial Synth by flyphoto2020

idaocapitol

Aerial: Idaho Capitol Renovation 1/21/09 by Idaho_Airships

bridge

E. Parkcenter Bridge Construction, 1/27/09 by Idaho_Airships

Kite

truck 

Truck - Kite Aerial (KAP) by tbenedict

valley

Waipio Valley - Kite Aerial (KAP) by tbenedict

 

 

eglise

Eglise de Périers sur le Dan by DeltaKap

During a recent out of the box week, Nathan created this Explore Map as a way to see all the synths that have been geotagged… and with some you putting a lot of time into creating great synths of locations around the world, we couldn’t wait to get it up on our site.  We hope you enjoy it and as always your feedback and suggestions are appreciated.

 

Explore the Map

In order to fit the thousands of synths that are geotagged on one map, we needed to do a bit of clumping when you’re looking at the world from a high level.  As you zoom further in on a specific area the clumps will break apart. 

Explore Example: Hawaiian Synthshawaiizoom4hawaiizoom3hawaiizoom2 hawaiizoom1hawaiizoom0

Explore Tips

*Load a mini Photosynth viewer by moving your mouse over any of the single leaf icons.

*Use your mouse wheel to zoom in and out.

 

Go Exploring!  View the New Map.

 

 

How to Geotag Your Synths

Have you created a great synth from somewhere on earth?  Geotag it and see it appear on the new map.

You can do this when viewing your synths.  There is a globe icon below your synth title on the right side of the page.  Click that icon and place your synth on the map by finding your location and then clicking where you want the synth geotagged.  There is a save button at the bottom of that map popup.

 

Synth well,

dariusmonsef

Our small team has been working hard to improve the Photosynth experience and we just launched some new features and improvements to old ones.  We have a lot more features and improvements in the works and should be bringing you even more Photosynth goodness in the coming weeks.  As always we appreciate any feedback you have, don’t hesitate to reach out and share your thoughts. There is a new contact page to make finding us a little easier too :)

And here they are:

Point Clouds in Silverlight!

silverlight_pointcloud

Some great work has been done by Bret Mulvey, Ben Vanik & Mark Dawson to get the point cloud working in the Silverlight viewer and I think this will make the synth viewing experience much more awesome for our Mac & Linux friends. Take a look at the Silverlight Viewer here. (Press P to switch the viewer into point cloud mode)

Along with adding the point cloud to the silverlight viewer, a lot of improvements have been made for things like better object rotation, as well as lots of minor improvements and bug fixes.

Discussion Forum

forum_show

Share your Photosynth ideas, get some photographic inspiration, ask a question or suggest a way to improve our technology… We’ve added the forum to make it easier for you to join in conversation with fellow synthers.  We’ll still keep our Get Satisfaction help & support site online as it provides a great tool for us to organize your technical issues and suggestions, but our on site forums make it easier for you to stay logged in on our site and quickly share your thoughts.  Join in the conversations.

Homepage Updates (New Icons, Links + Latest Post Title)

homepage_newicons

We’ve added two new icons to help you easily get to our Forum and Blog.  You can also now find links to the blog and forum in the main navigation in the upper right corner of the page.

We’ve also made it easier for us to keep you updated on the latest Photosynth news.  The latest blog post title will now show up in the bar below the big icons on the homepage.

Your Activity Area

replies

Now when you’re logged in, you can not only see the latest comments on your synths you can also see what synths you’ve commented on and if there have been any replies to your comments.  As part of an overall effort to improve the community on Photosynth, we’re working hard to make it easier to communicate with your fellow synthers.  See if anyone has replied to your comments!

More Explore Views

exploreoptions

When you’re exploring you can now filter down the most viewed and favorited synths to see what are the most popular synths that have been created in the last 7 days, 30 days or all time.  Explore the latest great synths.

Enjoy & Synth Well.

DariusMonsef

Being a part of capturing the inauguration last week was a very exciting experience for us.  We were up bright and early getting ready to accept all the user generated photos and the efforts paid off when we saw the almost immediate results from our work on live TV.  John King did a great job steering the viewer around, even if Colbert noticed not everything went perfectly.  The exposure was awesome and the synths created were really great, we’ve organized some of the best on our inauguration synth map.

And below is a little summary of some of the great responses we got:

The Moment

Shooting enough photos from different angles to produce a great synth is a bit of a challenge for one photographer, but when you have thousands of photographers all contributing to the same synth it gets even more challenging… With that being said we’re very pleased with how this turned out.

themoment

View the synth

Watching From Home

I encouraged readers to create synths from wherever they were watching the inauguration as we thought it would be great to create lots of synth portals to this one event… We got a few of those synths, but what we got a lot of were people emailing in a photo of how they watched the inauguration.  Some were fun, sweet, a little… unique.

watchinghome

View the synth

Lincoln Memorial Concert

Along with synths of the moment Obama was sworn in, some really great synths were created of the events around the inauguration.  MSNBC, capture some of these and the one below of the Lincoln memorial concert from a couple days before the inauguration.  The synth has some great coverage of the national mall.

lincolnconcert

View the synth

What the Blogosphere Thought

We enjoyed coverage in a lot of blogs last week.  Here are just a few. (If I missed your post please leave a comment with your url below)

Slate: All I Wanna Do Is Zoom Zoom Zoom Zoom

“Microsoft's Photosynth, the best thing to happen to photography since the digital camera.”

Lifehacker: Relive the Inauguration in 3D Photo Style

GigaOM: The Inauguration: Most User-generated Content Ever?

“In other words, the inauguration may represent the greatest influx of user-generated content onto the Internet, in one day, ever.”

CrunchGear: CNN’s Inauguration Photosynth will blow your mind

GIZMODO: CNN's Inauguration Day Photosynth Compiles Crowdsourced Photos in 3D (But It's No Hologram!)

“Wolf has been somewhat confusedly hyping CNN's "Photosynth moment," much to Anderson Cooper's chagrin, and behold, here it is, presented by CNN's intrepid multitouch whiz John King. Wait, there's Oprah!”

ReadWriteWeb: Photosynth to Crowdsource Synth of the 44th Presidential Inauguration

Mashable: Photosynth Comes of Age in CNN’s Inauguration Coverage

“The results are stunning – a 3D view of the Inauguration, allowing you to zoom in and out and see the moment from various vantage points.”

Peeps and their Tweets

I watched the stream posts on twitter about Photosynth and more than 2,000 came in over the course of the inauguration… it was a pretty entertaining thing to watch.  Lots of nice things were said… and a few not so nice things.  Some of my favorite are listed below.

Nice

 

 

 

waynemcfetridge: photosynth is pretty cool and silverlight on my mac didn't tear a hole in the fabric of space and time

hritchie: Has anybody played with Photosynth? It sounds like something from the so-crazy-it-might-just-work basket

tonyvia: I hate to say it, but I'll give M$ credit on the photosynth technology

michaelrose: LOVING what Microsoft Photosynth people have done with everyones 'Inauguration moment' photos - a Minority Report moment –

100ftzombie: WOw photosynth rocks when you have an event like this, first time I'm not sick of hearing about it

NickSeguin: photosynth FOR THE WIN

jackthewhack: CNN's Photosynth was absolutely orgasmic! Loved it!

ChrisLAS: Love'em or hate'em CNN is rockin Microsoft Photosynth, and it looks awesome.

ims: I doubted the epicness of CNN's Photosynth until they just showed the working synth of "The Moment." Epic.

valdezign: Wow. Amazing Photosynth of the Inauguration. I don't say this often, but way to go Microsoft!

pelf: first time i see Photosynth applied to a real scenario. it is indeed amazing technology!

jpstephens: Photosynth is pretty badass....

Frustrated

(Including these so you all know we’re listening and working hard to improve Photosynth… will make sure to be… less LAME too)

calinative: Annoyed by PhotoSynth. Cool technology but these demos make it look like it's hard to navigate.

decodergrizzly: CNN's 'photosynth' = L.A.M.E.

seldo: Hugely underwhelmed by Microsoft's photosynth. Thought they were going to glue it all together into a 3D model of the scene. Pfft.

chrisbrowntv: "The Moment" photosynth is leaving me underwhelmed. The awesome 360° technology covers about 15 percent of the scene; coulda been very cool.

P.S. Want to stay updated with Photosynth on twitter? Follow us @photosynther

Don’t worry if you won’t be one of the possible million people in attendance… you can still participate by taking photos from the events wherever you are.   We'll be collecting your synths  from the D.C. area on a Live Search Map that we'll put online during the inauguration: photosynth.com/inauguration.aspx After the inauguration we'll be creating a similar map collection to show your celebrations from around the world.

How to Participate

If you’ll be somewhere around the capitol, capture a Photosynth of where you are and upload it to Photosynth.com. When viewing your synth page, click the icon to Geotag your synth (Mark it on the map). We’ll be watching for inauguration synths and will be collecting the best on a special inauguration map. (Letting me know you created an inauguration synth will help us find all the good ones for the map: darius.monsef@microsoft.com)

If you’ll be anywhere else in the world, capture a synth of where you are and include your television when the oath is on the TV… there is a chance the television could become a portal directly into the main inauguration synth we’re creating.  This portal idea is something we’ve talked about before and some of our users have even experimented with: Synth in Synth: Germany – Sydney.  Some updates in the future to the Photosynth site will make it easier for these kinds of portals to be shared and explored. Create your synth and upload it to Photosynth.com. When viewing your synth page, click the icon to Geotag your synth (Mark it on the map).

Geotagging Your Synths

 

In order for us to locate your synth on our special inauguration map, or on any of our Live Search Maps we need you to geotag your synths.  You can do this when viewing your synth pages.  There is a globe icon below your synth title on the right side of the page.  Click that icon and place your synth on the map by finding your location and then clicking where you want the synth geotagged.  There is a save button at the bottom of that map popup.

 

P.S. This is a great resource for shooting good synths: Photosynth Photography Guide: Tips and Tricks

 

We’re excited about the synth collaborations that will capture this historic event and we thank you for helping us.  Celebrate safe and well.

The buzz is building around the idea of using Photosynth to capture events and real world environments and the Inauguration will be a huge moment for Obama and his family, our country, the world… and for Photosynth.  We’re expecting a big surge of synths being created to capture this historic event, but we’re already seeing some great pre-inauguration synths too.

Some of the Pre-Inauguration Synths


Obama addresses the crowd at the Wilmington, Delaware train station. (David Friedman / msnbc.com)

The Capitol by msnbc.com

Scale Model for Presidential Inauguration by David

US Capital, Mall, Union Station from 799 ft by curtw


Inauguration Prep1 by CapPhotographer

 

What the Blogs and Tweets Are Saying

Overall it looks like Photosynth is being really well received.  This is an exciting moment for our small team.  We’ll be working super hard in the coming week to make sure all the inauguration synths are created and shared as best possible.

Obama in 3D: Photosynth to Crowdsource Synth of the 44th Presidential Inauguration - ReadWriteWeb

Contribute to CNN's PhotoSynth 3D Collage of the Inauguration - Gizmodo

Photosynth’ing the Obama Moment … - Republic Of Internets

How about Microsofts Photosynth... truly amazing. I can't wait to see it in action to it's fullest!@noturavergeprep

Microsoft Photosynth & Silverlight playing big roles online for Obama celebrations. Have you seen photosynth?” @darenBBC

oh, and I'm definitely contributing to that #inaug09 photosynth thing. I'm going to take at least 600 HiRes picks while I'm down there.” @esamek

 

Have you created a pre-inauguration synth?  Did we miss your blog post or tweet about synthing the inauguration?  Let us know in the comments.

The world will change on January 20th when Barack Obama, the President-elect takes the oath of office and becomes the 44th President of the United States.

"I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of the President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States."

If you are going to be among the millions attending, you can be part of history by helping create the most immersive and detailed experience of a single moment ever created. 

 

Capturing the Moment of Transition

We’re partnering with CNN to gather thousands of your photographs to create an immersive experience of the moment when President Obama takes the Oath of Office. From the vast sweep of the crowd to a close-up on the President’s hand on the Bible, every part of this historic scene will be frozen in time and presented in 3-D as only Photosynth can.

Well placed CNN photographers will capture lots of detailed shots for this synth, and if you’re there you can help make this an even more amazing experience by adding your perspective with your digital camera or camera phone.

Check out CNN’s page dedicated to this collaboration: http://cnn.com/themoment.

 

How it Will Work

We’ll take your photos from every angle, combine them with CNN’s professional shots, and produce what we hope will be an amazing experience that will be shown live on CNN. And you thought the Jessica Yellin hologram was cool! The synth will also be available for everyone to see on CNN.com.

 

How to Participate

When you make a Photosynth on your own, you shoot tens or hundreds of photos from different positions. Since we hope to have thousands of people participating, we’re asking to just capture the view from one position.

If you have a…

Camera Phone. Take one photo of the moment when the President Elect raises his hand to take the Oath, and email it as soon as you can  to cnnmoment@live.com. Don’t worry if he’s too small to see clearly in your photo. As long as you get the Capitol building in your shot it will synth in and help reconstruct the environment.

Digital Camera. Take three photos (wide-angle, mid-zoom, full-zoom) of the President Elect while he is being sworn in. As soon as you can get to an Internet connection, email them to us at cnnmoment@live.com. Make sure your email message is less than 10MB in size. Break it into a couple of messages if your three photos combine to more than 10MB.

We’d love to give you credit in the synth, so include your name in the email if you’d like it to appear in the list of contributors.

 

Don’t worry if you won’t be one of the possible million people in attendance... we're working on some ways to showcase your inauguration synths from around the D.C. area... and the world. Stay tuned for more information on synthing your inauguration celebrations and events.

What the twittersphere is calling Snowmageddon has blanketed the Pacific NW in snow and ice. I woke last week to find everything covered in snow and excitedly (I grew up in Hawaii... any amount of snow is awesome.) created a synth off my deck and out my front door...  and when I got to work Scott and I visited the top floor observation deck to get a full cityscape synth of Seattle in the snow. 

 
Smith Tower Snow Day (Joint Synth)
by Scott & Darius

I wasn't the only one synthing the new snow covered world though, a lot of people have been creating winter / snow synths. Here are just a few of them from the last few days. (Click the images and links below to explore the synths)


08.12.22 Winter Wonderland Back Yard
by Earnett


White Christmas Microsoft 16
by Adinelichleam

Snow Day 12/18/08 by Nivlek
snowed in from my balcony by anlee
Bainbridge Snow by Jonathan
Let it Snow by zhenyoung
Snowy House by RobertClarke
snow day by diane
Dec 2008 Snow Storm by iamdaryllmc
December 22 08 - Morning Snow in the backyard by KenIngle
EricRi by Snow on the BBall Court
Snow in Bellevue by fierval
Dec Snow by westcourt

Have you created a  winter /snow synth? Share the link in the comments below. 

 

And snow hasn't just been falling in the Pacific NW, even Vegas got a bit of an early white Christmas too... and lucky for us somebody was there and captured some of the scenery on a beautiful DSLR video camera.



We've been very busy in the last few months working hard on squashing bugs, improving our synther technology, evolving our viewer and building some community features for our website.  We're able to share some of that hard work with you today and promise to have more great features launching in the coming weeks. Some of the improvements affect things that happen in the background, so you might not notice them at first... but probably the biggest update we're releasing today is an experimental cross-platform Silverlight viewer. The details on the new viewer and some of the other major new features can be found below. Happy synthing and thanks for supporting our efforts to create a truly useful, innovative and interactive photo experience.

New Experimental Cross-Platform Viewer

Our current Photosynth viewing experience uses a technology called Direct 3D, and makes sophisticated use of the graphics hardware on your computer. This approach has its advantages and disadvantages. If you have a recent Windows PC with up to date graphics drivers you’ll have a great experience, and you’ll be able to view synths with buttery smoothness. But lots of people have older machines, and many people have Macs, and none of these folks could view synths before now. Silverlight is cross-platform (PC and Mac) and works on most old machines as well as all new ones. This generality comes at a price though, and for now Photosynth’s Silverlight experience is a couple of steps behind our Direct 3D one.

Try It: Explore Synths in Silverlight

Most of the features in the Direct 3D viewer are implemented in the Silverlight viewer. In particular, the incredible zooming that Photosynth achieves via the Seadragon technology is now a major feature in Silverlight, and is known to the world as Deep Zoom. This means that even if you are viewing a synth of 300 10-megapixel images, every pixel in every photo is available to you at the flick of your mouse wheel. Very cool! Not so cool is the fact that Silverlight doesn’t currently have direct support for point clouds. Because we couldn’t achieve reasonable point cloud performance in Silverlight we decided to leave them out of this viewer until we can do them well, or replace them with some other way of visualizing the geometry.

More information about our Experimental Silverlight Viewer is here.

Site Feature Updates

Recent Activity on Profile Page
Login and view your profile area and you'll see a new tab with the latest comments on your synths. This is the first step in helping you keep track of the activity on your synths and the ones you find interesting. You'll soon be able to see updates on who favorites your synths and keep track of comments you've left on other members synths.

Find Related Synths on View Pages
People from around the world have been creating and uploading some pretty awesome synths and we want to make it easier for you to explore and find these great synths. On the view page of all synths you'll now see a "Related" area in the bottom right corner that will display synths related to the one you're viewing. Try it out here. (The more of your synths you tag, the better this feature will get)

View in True Full Screen
Because Photosynths are immersive experiences, we thought it was important to give you a true full-screen viewing option... and now you can. Once in in the synth world with your viewer in full screen, you might want tp use the viewer Keyboard Shortcuts to help you navigate around.

Improved Comment Flow
Synths can be quite interesting and we want to encourage conversation around the ideas and content shared in a synth. We've made some adjustments to the comments area to make it easier for you to participate in the flow of conversation around synths on the site. We already have some plans to improve the comments area even more... but don't let that stop you from sharing your thoughts and comments right now..

Multi-word Search
We've added in the ability to wrap multiple words in quotes to get better search results for multi-word queries. For example, a search for "Smith Tower" will now give you better results of where Photosynth was born.

Fresh Featured Synths
There is a whole new collection of great synths on our homepage. Too many interesting, fun, creative and detailed synths have been created lately and we had the tough task of selecting only a handful to share on the homepage. We look forward to highlighting your next great synth on the homepage soon! View the new featured synths here.

Synther Updates

The brains behind the synthing technology have made some great improvements that I technically would do a very poor job of trying to explain... but the basics are that you should notice faster crunching of your images and better matching and synthy-ness percentage in your finished synth. You'll really notice the improved speed if you have a multi-core machine... (The upload process can still take a while depending on your internet connection speed.)

 

As always, we welcome your thoughts and suggestions.

Happy Synthing!
-DariusMonsef

Creating the best synth starts with the right photos. This guide will help you understand how to take the best photos for Photosynth. Reading it could save you from taking a few hundred pictures only to find out later that Photosynth won't put them together the way you imagined.

You can also download this guide as a pdf: The Photosynth Photography Guide (1MB)

Quick tips

  • Start small. Pick a simple subject first, such as a piece of furniture or a single painting. You should be able to make a great 10-photo synth in just a few minutes if you follow the tips below. Then move on to something more ambitious.
  • Remember the “Rule of 3”. Each part of the scene you're shooting should appear in at least three separate photos taken from different locations. This rule means that you are going to shoot a lot more photos for a synth than you would for any other purpose.
  • Panorama first, then move around. Start by taking a panorama of your scene, then move around and take more photos from different angles and positions. If you just do a panorama you won't end up with a good 3-D experience.
  • Have lots of overlap when shooting panoramas. Try for at least 50% overlap between photos.
  • Limit the angles between photos. When moving around objects, try to get one photo every 25 degrees or so. That will make the synth work better. Larger angle differences on a subject won't match up.
  • Shoot scenes with lots of detail and texture. The visual texture in the photos is what ties them together. A blank wall won't synth. One with lots of art or posters will work well.
  • Don’t crop images. It confuses Photosynth.
  • Shoot wide shots. Wide angle shots (photos taken from farther away, or with your camera's lens zoomed all the way out) reconstruct more reliably than closer shots. It's good to have close-ups, too, but you'll want to have good coverage of your subject with lots of nice overlapping wide shots.
  • Orientation. Make sure your photos are all right-side-up before you start synthing.

Got more time?

  • Read the rest of this guide. You'll find detailed advice about how to shoot all the common situations.
  • Study the masters. Take the time to examine the photos that were used to create any synth that catches your eye. To see all the photos at once, switch to grid view: Grid View
  • Learn the keyboard commands. Check out the Viewer Keyboard Shortcuts Guide for tips on exploring synths, including the powerful control key.

Shooting interiors

Start by standing in the center of the room with your camera zoomed wide. Spin around, taking overlapping shots as you go. Make sure successive photos are overlapped by at least 50%. Depending on how wide your lens goes, you'll probably need to take 15-30 photos to go all the way around.

Shooting interiors

To give the room a good 3D model, you should next shoot overlapped shots from each of the corners. For saturation coverage and the most reliable reconstructions, shoot from the centers of each wall as well.

good 3D model

Finally, walk around the room shooting the interesting details. Make sure that all your close-ups have ―approach shots‖ providing intermediate sizes of the object you're closing in on. For example, if you're photographing a wall of paintings, and you want to zoom in on a single painting, you'll need to have a few intermediate images to help Photosynth put the whole thing together. See the photos below.

A good rule of thumb is to never move more than half the distance to your subject without taking an additional shot. Similarly, never increase your focal length by more than a factor of 2 without taking an additional shot.

Move in on the subjects that interest you, but make sure you don't move more than 50% of the way in without taking an additional shot.

Interest Shots
Copyright Christine Gedye 2008. Used with permission of the artist.

So, remember to:

  • Start by standing in the center of the room and turning in a circle, creating a panorama with lots of overlap in each shot.
  • Then shoot from the corners.
  • Shoot a mix of wide, medium and closer shots—more variety is better.
  • Remember the 'rule of 3': each part of your scene should appear in at least three separate photos.

2D Synths

If you take overlapping shots of a 2D surface at different scales, Photosynth will create a detailed synth of the result. Move the camera so that it's always facing the subject head on. You don't need to shoot it from different angles, although it doesn't hurt if you do.

2D Synths

Shooting a 3-D Object

It's important to get lots of overlap around an object and to walk around it. To get a great synth around a convex object (such as a vase), you'll want to take a photo approximately every 15 degrees, so it takes at least 24 photos to get around a vase perfectly. If your object is not completely convex, you'll need even more.

Shooting a 3-D Object

Make sure that the center of the object is in the middle of the picture, and that the picture frames the entire object. Be sure to include close-ups. This technique can be used for a full circle around an object, a small arc or anything in between.

Want to Use a Turntable?

If you have an object that is small enough to be rotated in front of the camera on a turntable, you should be able to make a fantastic synth with a beautiful navigational 'halo'. If you don't have a photographic turntable, get creative – a plastic kitchen turntable (also known as a 'Lazy Susan') works just fine. Here are the rules for using a turntable:

  1. Put your camera on a tripod.
  2. Put the object as close to the exact middle of the turntable as possible.
  3. Position your camera so that the object is in the center of the viewfinder, and rotate the turntable to check whether the object stays in frame as you spin the table.
  4. Very important – make sure that there is little or no visible texture behind the object as seen from the camera. Visible texture that doesn't move when the object rotates on the turntable will confuse Photosynth. Best to use a plain drop cloth or piece of cardboard behind your turntable.
  5. Don't be afraid to use lights or a flash if you want to. Photosynth is fairly tolerant of different lighting conditions so you don't need to worry that different parts of the object will be illuminated differently as the object turns.

Now comes the easy part. Take a photo, then rotate the object no more than 15 degrees, then take another photo. Repeat until you have rotated the object through 360 degrees. There is no need to be exact in the amount of rotation between shots, but you should be aware that the 15 degree rule assumes fairly convex shapes. If you have an object with lots of deep narrow cavities, or has lots of complex overlaps, you'll want to shoot with less than 15 degrees of separation.

Going Around Corners

To be safe, you need at least 9 images to go around an exterior corner. In the example below there are solid matches between adjacent images (e.g.: Images 1/2), average matches between pairs that are 2 apart (e.g.: 4/6) and not many between images that are 3 apart (e.g.: 4/7).

Going Around Corners

Like to process your photos?

If you're the kind of photographer who likes to adjust color or contrast before you share your work, go for it. Photosynth is remarkably resilient to different color casts, and dynamic ranges. If you want to remove red-eye or fix other imperfections in a part of a photo, don't hesitate.

On the other hand, the following operations will confuse Photosynth, and should be avoided if you want a decent reconstruction.

  • Don't crop your photos
  • Don't do any geometric transforms on your photos except rotation. (E.g. flips and perspective transforms will cause strange results.)
  • Don't mess with the visual texture of the image with filters. De-noising may be reasonably safe, but blurring or any of the artistic filters will almost certainly affect your results.
  • Be very careful with watermarks, or any other action that adds the same overlay to all your photos. If you want to make sure that your copyright is displayed use the type-in fields in the Photosynth application, or search our support site for the FAQ.

What NOT to do

What NOT to do

Avoid drastic angle and scale changes – a close-up of a sign may not stitch in if the only other photo of it is 100 feet away.

What NOT to shoot

There are some subjects that Photosynth just doesn't like. Here are some examples of what works well ('Synthy') and what doesn't:

Synthy - Not Synthy

Ready to get going?

Now that you know what works and what doesn't, you're ready to get started. Don't be discouraged if your first synth doesn't come out as well as you'd hoped. Before long you'll get a feel for the variety of photos that will make the best synth. The most important thing to remember is: have fun!

 

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