Comments on: Microsoft pictures a 10-gigapixel photo
Not getting the detail you want on your digital photographs? Maybe 10 billion pixels would help.
Not getting the detail you want on your digital photographs? Maybe 10 billion pixels would help.
January 3, 2010 3:10 PM PST
January 3, 2010 12:20 PM PST
January 3, 2010 12:10 PM PST
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http://www.ptgui.com/info/stiching.html
Kieran Mullen
http://www.ptgui.com/info/stiching.html
Kieran Mullen
Has anyone pointed out that your Operating Sytems struggle with 10-MEGApixels photos?
You've practically handed over the entire high-end photobusiness to Apple, with Windows poor support for large size files.
Has anyone pointed out that your Operating Sytems struggle with 10-MEGApixels photos?
You've practically handed over the entire high-end photobusiness to Apple, with Windows poor support for large size files.
I have always wanted to know how to balance the exposure on the multiple pics so that you can't tell the lighting differences. Is there an easy way to do this? Anyone know??? Please post advice for balancing exposure on stitched images.
Apple's Aperture and Adobe's Photoshop do a good job, try searching for panoramic photo software.
I have always wanted to know how to balance the exposure on the multiple pics so that you can't tell the lighting differences. Is there an easy way to do this? Anyone know??? Please post advice for balancing exposure on stitched images.
Apple's Aperture and Adobe's Photoshop do a good job, try searching for panoramic photo software.
I have always wanted to know how to balance the exposure on the multiple pics so that you can't tell the lighting differences. Is there an easy way to do this? Anyone know??? Please post advice for balancing exposure on stitched images.
I have always wanted to know how to balance the exposure on the multiple pics so that you can't tell the lighting differences. Is there an easy way to do this? Anyone know??? Please post advice for balancing exposure on stitched images.
processing large image files but Macintosh OSX and software
designed to work on it is not phased by large files so long as
there is sufficient RAM to handle it. A professional level machine
capable of 4 gig of RAM can handle image files in the
multigigabyte range with a combination of hard drive paging
and RAM so that such images can be manipulated in a normal
manner. It is slow of course compared to more reasonable sized
image files but it is not an impossible feat. Smaller ram
footprints simply slow down the process but OSX is quite
capable of keeping order in the process as is the ubiguitous
Photoshop that no doubt would be the professonal's choice to
do this. What would be great for consumers would be digital
cameras at reasonable prices that gave us even 50 megabyte file
sizes, never mind giga-anything files. Just realise, an 8
megabyte file is already equal to or superior to a 35mm image
negative or positive taken with standard ISO films and thus, a
higher resolution file could be quite stupendous in terms of
sharpness and detail. A gigabyte image would be mindboggling
in its wealth of detail all things being equal.
Microsoft's old FAT file systems do have problems with large files; but NTFS has supported multigigabyte files well since at least NT 4.0 - which was probably the first OS I actually used GB clips on.
Problems with large file support under Windows is usually the application's fault. Else it's the customer's fault for insisting on installing the OS on an ancient legacy file system that was designed 25+ years ago.
- Joel
processing large image files but Macintosh OSX and software
designed to work on it is not phased by large files so long as
there is sufficient RAM to handle it. A professional level machine
capable of 4 gig of RAM can handle image files in the
multigigabyte range with a combination of hard drive paging
and RAM so that such images can be manipulated in a normal
manner. It is slow of course compared to more reasonable sized
image files but it is not an impossible feat. Smaller ram
footprints simply slow down the process but OSX is quite
capable of keeping order in the process as is the ubiguitous
Photoshop that no doubt would be the professonal's choice to
do this. What would be great for consumers would be digital
cameras at reasonable prices that gave us even 50 megabyte file
sizes, never mind giga-anything files. Just realise, an 8
megabyte file is already equal to or superior to a 35mm image
negative or positive taken with standard ISO films and thus, a
higher resolution file could be quite stupendous in terms of
sharpness and detail. A gigabyte image would be mindboggling
in its wealth of detail all things being equal.
Microsoft's old FAT file systems do have problems with large files; but NTFS has supported multigigabyte files well since at least NT 4.0 - which was probably the first OS I actually used GB clips on.
Problems with large file support under Windows is usually the application's fault. Else it's the customer's fault for insisting on installing the OS on an ancient legacy file system that was designed 25+ years ago.
- Joel
I tried it several times:
http://www.aguntherphotography.com/machupicchu_222mp.html
But I never saw a reason to go beyond 300 Megapixels.
- Too much
- by andre75 June 25, 2006 5:06 PM PDT
- I have had trouble printing anything beyond 80 Megapixels. The other photos mentioned here would have a lot of stitching errors (half a car, half a body ...). I think it is very challenging to make a very high resolution image with no flaws.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(18 Comments)I tried it several times:
http://www.aguntherphotography.com/machupicchu_222mp.html
But I never saw a reason to go beyond 300 Megapixels.