Reg Hardware

Comments on: Olympus creates 360° camera lens

The point is obvious. 

Posted Wednesday 2nd July 2008 11:37 GMT

Thumb Up

Stick this on the top of a robot and then project the feed on the inside of a sphere. If you in the middle of the sphere you can see whats up, down, left, right, behind by just looking in that direction!

I should imagine with a little bit of software manipulation you could use two of them to generate 3D all around views.

Estate agents already use this type of thing to make those tours of houses where you can pan all the way around the room but they are limited by the up down field of view atm. Looks like this removes that limitation.

MS would also be able to stick this on top of their round table camera instead of using 5 CCD's.

I could go on.

I feel queeeeeezy 

Posted Wednesday 2nd July 2008 12:03 GMT

Unhappy

errrrr

The point is obvious... 

Posted Wednesday 2nd July 2008 19:25 GMT

Black Helicopters

No where is the software to make it a 360* whatsit?

Why not get a real 360 camera 

Posted Wednesday 2nd July 2008 23:11 GMT

Happy

how about a D3 from roundshot 470megpix or move

http://www.roundshot.ch/xml_1/internet/de/application/d438/d925/f933.cfm

You Just need £20k+

It's not new 

Posted Thursday 3rd July 2008 08:57 GMT

Happy

I have one of these in the loft designed for SLR cameras. It was at least 10 years old when I bought it a decade ago...

Not new 

Posted Thursday 3rd July 2008 10:20 GMT

There's a few manufacturers in the CCTV and IP Surveillance field with similar (better) products and software to de-warp the image for easier viewing. Been around for quite some time...

360 camera 

Posted Thursday 3rd July 2008 10:30 GMT

This has been done before but not with an integral camera. Usually, the camera points at the 360 mirror from below. The image is "corrected" using software. There is always a single point where there is no image.

See also http://www.0-360.com/