Getting Synthy with Virtual Tours
Those of you who have kept up with some of Microsoft’s new toys (or who read my Twitter), have undoubtedly heard of a new little Seadragon based photo interface they have been working on in conjunction with theUniversity of Washington called Photosynth. This new spatial photo organization system sent the tech word abuzz when news, video, and a tech demo began passing back and forth across sites like Digg anv Slashdot.
A few days ago on August 20th, Microsoft officially took the technology out of the “look but don’t touch” phase, and began enabling users to log in and create their own “synths.” This amounts to going out, taking a ton of pictures of something, and uploading them. There’s no other user intervention needed aside from naming the synth and tagging it. The system calculates groups, intersections, perspective, placement, etc. Great on the time saving, not so great if you want to adjust something. I noticed in my tests that a couple times it didn’t connect groups that clearly went together, and there’s no way to tell it otherwise yet.
My first instinct is that even though this is a little heavyweight on computing power needs, it’s an awesome idea for virtual tours of campus. I was recently considering doing a bunch of videos around the university – walking around, looking at things, and other tasks. The idea is to give potential students a better feel of “being there.” Instead, I’m considering throwing in some time to build out some of the key areas of campus in PhotoSynth (along with the videos as well). Some colleges are alreadyplaying with this. The reason I see this as a huge opportunity is that it moves out of the passive nature that video has, and creates an active environment they can explore with about as much detail as you make possible.
Furthermore, the ways they are working on improving this technology are simply awesome. It really gets me thinking about how interesting it is that 2D still images could really beat out video as an interactive tool on the internet. In reality, almost everything is more interactive than video, but video is viewed as being more dynamic since it has moving pictures. Just about the time Photosynth went live,this video came out detailing some of the advances they are already making for the photo tourism software.
Examples
I worked up four quick examples just to test run things, which I have linked just below. I found that with anything of any size you should really try to hit with at least fifty shots. I maxed my synths about 120 or so, but could see using way more on other things in the future. I also found that it works much better if the camera is not necessarily the center of the synth. Instead, try to make the camera be outside looking in. In the first example of the Russ Hall stairway, clicking the “Switch to the next 3D Group” button will show you how many different groups it put together, because it seemed to have some problems organizing things in an indoor 3D space. It also probably didn’t help that I was moving all over trying to cover things with different angles. Note that in that video I mentioned in the previous paragraph, it looks like they are working on this very issue though. Outside works much nicer though. Taking a target and moving around it seems to produce nicer results.
You can also see how things work from a single vantage point (JungleTron), and how the orbits come together (statue).
What’s Good
What it Needs
Is it Ready?
Unfortunately, not just yet, at least not as a primary campus marketing tool. But, if you have the time and resources to start playing with it, I think there’s plenty of value in it, even at this early stage. Since the whole process (besides taking the photos) is automated, it doesn’t actually take much to slap a synth together and post it. Imagine groups like your art department and what they could show off with this kind of functionality.
I think the keys to success with this are all in the “What it Needs” section. If Microsoft can bull ahead through those issues, particularly making it OS and browser agnostic, I could see this quickly becoming the tour software de jour. I’ll also be interested in what sites like Flickr will do in response, be it license the softwre, or produce their own. There is always the “Microsoft” variable that can and will keep plenty of people from commiting to it. I don’t entirely blame them, as I am frequently against putting all your eggs in one third party basket. The only reason I differ on that opinion in this case is because, well, there is no alternative yet, and given what I’ve seen in that latest video, I’m not sure there’s much improvement even necessary.
This post was written by Michael Fienen