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Here is one example (screen grab) from your video: Or perhaps the stitch line is too harsh - a clear line - rather than gentle that would meld the two views at the stitch so it is not as noticeable. It is as if the WB is different across the two sensors. I have not noticed this in my Kodak clips. I noticed this also in some other Samsung Gear clips I have seen and downloaded. In watching the video, I did see that the color is different across the two views - that is, where the stitch is there is a clear change in color - sky, sand, whatever. Not a great test of how the camera deals with a bright sun on reflective sand or of dynamic range! But still quite nice. The video does appear to convey a dreary day very well. Ok, send me the original and I will upload to Vimeo tomorrow. Markr041, if you'd like, I can send you the video via dropbox or something so you can upload it to Vimeo.
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I don't have a Vimeo Pro account, and already hit the limit with just one of the clips. Strangely, the weather's been cloudy recently and will remain so for the week. Sorry but the ambient conditions are different. OK so here are some video clips from the Samsung Gear 360. The two Kodak cameras are clamped rigidly in place (there is zero flex or wiggle between them), so that issue of camera shake should also pertain to any two-lens camera, no? That means when you get the situation you show in that other guy's video, produced by the camera tilting, you might be able to do better.
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The software permits very fine adjustments (pan, tilt, etc.) for each of the two views separately for any frame. Here is what it looks like after the adjustment just based on the frame above: If this is a parallax problem, the corrected stitch based on the car when it is far should look bad when the car is relatively near. Now the question is for that same exact corrected stitch based on that frame (the moving video is one long take), what does the stitch look like when the object (same car) is closer to the camera. As you can see, the stitch is much better:
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This is a screen grab of the editing program showing the auto stitched frame, which looks like the one in the video you saw and showed:Īnd here is my manual adjustment of it. So, I went back this morning to the original "moving" clips and using the software adjusted manually from what the auto stitch did on (approximately) the frame you show above. Since then I have learned the auto stitch does not always get it right, and sometimes I have to adjust it in the software. I took and produced that video the first day I received the kit, and relied on auto stitching and did not check the stitch. Of course some parallax stitching errors can be expected but due to the larger distance between the sp360 lenses, it seems that it is a more significant issue for the sp360. i did see some stitching issues due to parallax such as this Whatever you view the video on, be sure to select 4K (the gear icon) to view in the highest quality (you do not need a 4K screen).Ī Samsung Gear 360 beach video will be available in a week or so, to compare. Of course you will miss that if you are "looking " at the other side of the view! This is a screenshot of the flat file version of the 360 video playing on my 4K screen:Īnd here is the link to the 360 panorama video on YouTube, that permits you to scroll around 360 degrees with your mouse (computer) or by turning and moving your device (smartphone), or that permits viewing in VR with a viewer (e.g., Samsung Gear):Ī highlight: a boy walks from the water right up to the camera, waves his plastic green shovel at the lens up close, and then walks right back to the water. In any case, try to view the video in 4K (by selecting the 'HD' icon in the lower corner).
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The advantage of this link is that you can download the original 360 3840x1920 video. This is the link to the flat file version of the beach video on Vimeo: This is a picture of the rig in the field (at the beach): This is Part 1: the 360 beach video shot with the dual Kodak 360 4K kit. 360 4K videos will be shot at (different) beaches on sunny days by two shooters to compare the Samsung Gear 360 and the Kodak 360 4K dual kit.
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