I think it is more appropiate to consider what your specific application is when considering the one shot. RuddersUK is correct. Most "proffessionals" consider this kind of pano in the "amature" do it your self catagory and delivers low quality images.. There is simply no way any one shot is going to perform up to the standards of a Nikkon/Canon DSLR or coolpix/fisheye set up.
Ajay is correct also. There are certain situations where a one shot can be of use. Its more of a right tool for the job situation. Although this tool is very limited in its use. I have seen one shot panos of good quality but only in comparison to other one shot solutions. Anything can be done if you have enough time an money to throw at it.
In my area all I have to do is show a one shot tour and then my work and I have the job. If it werent for so many of the one shot operators out there I wouldn't have any business LOL. Not really but it seems that way.
To put this in some perspective consider this:
Richard Eimers is a top producer and has a "team". He uses EGG solutions which is a one shot solution. He does all his tours in house. Although he "gets the job done" the results are some what lacking. Quality is severly lacking but he is able to get the tours done on his schedul at a price he wants. This is as simple as it gets. No post processing and limited knowledge about pnotographing panos.
This is a link to one of his tours http://www.destinrealestate.com/tours/4728serendipity/
My client Roebuck Auctions was contacted to bring this property to auction after it had been on the market for over a year. I was assighned to create a new tour of the same property due to the quality level of the EGG tour.
This is a link to the tour I did. http://www.northwestflorida.com/roebuck/destiny_east/index.html
The propery was marketed for 4 weeks and the tour was viewd many times. Tour was displayed at the auction on a 52 inch plasma screen during the bidding. The property was immeditaly bid on and sold in just 5 minutes for about 1.5 million.
Did the my tour contribute to the selling of the house. Not sure. But one thing for sure is the house was on the market for a year with a one shot tour and did not sell. The new tour was done and marketed heavily on there web site and in the print marketing.
I look at the one shot solution like using a consumer pocket camera. Under the right conditions and depending on the creativity of the shooter a nice picture can be made. It is fun to see what you can do with such a simple camera. The one shot is just like this. It has very limited quality and suffers from inferior optic solutions.
In my opinion a series of still shots put together in a logical way would be better than a one shot.
The bottom line is a one shot solution is for the amature or real estate agent who can not afford a higher quality tour. There is no comparing a one shot with anything other than another one shot.
For about the same money you can get a 3 shot solution like a coolpix and the FC-E9 and use Panoweaver and you will get awsome panos. There is a little learning curve but it will be well worth it. The one shot solutions cost about $600 for the lens/bracket(its not really a lens. Its a parabolic mirror) and then you have to pay per image for some of them and you are stuck with their software becuase each mirror/lens has its own geometrics that must be sorted out with software specifically for that mirror. Its basically a racket to get you to use only there stuff. Sound a lot like Ipox. And it is. Just in a different set fo sheeps clothing.
General Lee
|
Thomas |
|
Gold Member
|
|
May-18-2002
157 Posts |
|
|
|
One shoot solutions are ok if you have to shoot a large amount of pics in short time with moving objects. Target: cylindrical pano in small windows.
The 360 One from eyesee360.com has a high quality glass mirror, and the software Photowarp is excellent to produce (unwarp) the panos in batch for Quicktime with fallback to PTViewer and flash panos with FlashVR.de.
The best camera should be a prosumer cam. With a DSLR you will get in trouble to focus the whole mirror, or you have to close the frame up to f16.
Another point: You can shoot in crowds, and almost nobody realizes which pictures you are taking with this strange kind of object.
|
|
|
|
|
VT360 |
|
Platinum Member
|
|
January-04-2003
751 Posts |
|
|
|
rare to see the kitchen on the second floor...but must be a cool view to have while eating your eggs and bacon! lol
|
|
|
|
|