18-Gigapixel Panorama Offers Breathtaking View of Prague

praguepanoramicphoto

Exploring a new city is always fun. But if you can’t get there, a gorgeous, zoomable 360-degree view photo can be an acceptable substitute.

360 Cities, a Dutch company, has created a stunning panoramic photo of Prague in the Czech Republic.

“The creation of this image represents my previous five years’ obsession with all things panoramic,” says Jeffrey Martin, founder and CEO of 360 Cities. “If you’re stuck at home over Christmas, feeling humbuggy and don’t feel like hanging out with your family, you can explore Prague instead.”

What makes this panoramic photo interesting to viewers is that you can zoom in and out, move up or down or change your view–much like with Google Street View maps.

The photo has been assembled from 600 shots clicked by a 21-megapixel Canon 5D Mark II camera and a 70-200mm lens, set to 200mm. The camera was mounted on a special robotic device that turned it tiny increments every few hours. The resulting data from the camera was about 40-gigabytes.

The finished Photoshop file is 120 GB. Loading the raw files into a computer and stitching the photo took about a week. Martin used a four year-old Windows PC with two single-core 3 GHz Xeon processors and 8 GB of RAM. He also bought a solid state drive to speed up some tasks.

“The final image exists as a 120 Gigabyte Photoshop large (PSB) file,” says Martin on his blog. It cannot exist as a TIFF or JPEG file because of their size constraints.”

The photo measures 192,000 x 96,000 pixels, or 18.4 billion pixels altogether.

So start exploring Prague. If you zoom in enough, you can even see laundry hanging out to dry in some of the buildings.

Photo: 360 Cities


Wet Workouts Get Extreme with the XtreamP3

XtreamP3.jpg

Last-minute shoppers, Finis has a last-minute announcement: The aquatic-tech company has just announced the Finis XtreamP3, a waterproof, sweat-proof MP3 player. Take it in the pool, take it surfing–anywhere that’s extreme.

You might already be familiar with the company’s SwiMP3 player, which was updated in September. The idea here is the same, but the XtreamP3 has an armband, where the SwiMP3 fits onto a goggle strap. That makes it appealing to surfers or swimmers who don’t wear goggles.

The XtreamP3 holds 1GB of music and is submersible to a depth of 15 feet. It comes with waterproof earbuds for clear listening above or below the waterline, and it even floats, so you don’t need to worry about losing it while riding the waves.

Japanese robot helps out with grocery shopping

A prototype robot called Robovie II is deployed to a supermarket in Kyoto to help seniors with their groceries. The machine can make food recommendations.

10 Strange Gadget Situations Caught on Camera

It’s Friday. You’ve got the weekend and, chances are, a short week coming up. Life is good. Let’s celebrate by kicking back and enjoying some gadget hilarity.

World’s Greatest iPhone: The image of the iPhone above is obviously a shop, but YouTube, Weather and Safari still have me laughing months later. [igmur via Link]
Beta Version of BigDog Quadrupled Robot: Needless to say, the beta version of Boston Dynamics’ BigDog was rather primitive. You have Peter Furia, David Fine and Beau Lewis of Seedwell Marketing to thank for this hilarious spoof. [Link]

Road Sign Hacking: It’s illegal to hack a road sign, but the control boxes are rarely protected. Unfortunately, that makes pranking easy, which will lead people to ignore warnings when there is an actual zombie outbreak. [Link]


What Happens When You Bring a 22-Year Old Mac to a Genius Bar? Our own Adam Frucci finds out.

Squirrel Photo Crasher: Surely you recall seeing this image when it hit big a few months back. Many thought it was a fake, but it turns out that all the couple needed to score their 15-minutes was a Gorillapod, a camera and some luck. [Link]

HSN Wiimote Mishap: There have been plenty of videos of Wiimote-related incidents over the years, but it’s even funnier when it happens on live television. [Kotaku]

Fart Machine Grinds Government to a Halt: A kid brings down city council meeting with mechanical farts. Amusing, but I bet this could be a serious weapon in a fillibuster. [Link]

Gold Medal BSOD: The dreaded Blue Screen of Death can strike anywhere—even at the opening ceremonies of the Olympics. [Link]

Office Camouflage: I’m not sure what the hell they are saying, but the funny still gets across. [Link]

Forklift Catastrophe: It’s only funny now because no one got hurt, but damn. Destroying $250,000 worth of vodka with a little fender bender is a sign that you need to update the shelving system in the warehouse. [Link]

Ford to give Sync some App Store flavor, opening API to devs in 2010

Ford has already shown it can tie the controls of Sync-enabled vehicles to the music and contacts databases of drivers phones and PMPs and though it may take time before our emotions can be detected, the next step is extending that connectivity to downloadable apps on those devices. Since Sync first debuted, the explosion of the App Store concept has meant nearly every smartphone owner is packing plenty of ways to access and use information from the internet, but without an easy way to interact with it while driving. Extending access to vehicle controls could lead to programs like Pandora or Google’s turn by turn navigation letting users change stations with their existing stereo knobs, or listen to directions via the in-car system by simply updating their existing software. The first ones to get a crack at it? A few university students, check after the break to see what they came up with given just a few weeks to test system out.

Continue reading Ford to give Sync some App Store flavor, opening API to devs in 2010

Ford to give Sync some App Store flavor, opening API to devs in 2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 14:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nine fun things to do with your GPS device

CNET Car Tech gathers together nine ways you can have fun with your GPS device. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-10418582-48.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Car Tech blog/a/p

2010 Bentley Continental Supersports First Take

CNET Car Tech drives the 2010 Bentley Continental Supersports, testing out the performance and tech. pOriginally posted at a href=”http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13746_7-10418505-48.html” class=”origPostedBlog”The Car Tech blog/a/p

RIM’s optical trackpads: they weren’t joking about the ‘optical’ part

Thinking about how your phone’s touchscreen operates, you might assume that the so-called optical pads that have been making appearances on recent BlackBerrys (among other devices) operate in a similar fashion — but you’d be wrong. RIM’s official BlackBerry blog is chiming in today to drop some knowledge on us dullards, and it turns out that “optical” isn’t just a cute nickname — the pads do actually operate in much the same way as modern desktop mice, using a low-res infrared camera to capture movement across the surface and translate it into movement. In practical terms, what this means is that you don’t need a conductive surface to operate the pad — you can use pretty much anything that the sensor can see, so a gloved hand (for instance) is theoretically good to go. That being said, don’t expect to be snapping photos with your “camera” any time soon — we’re literally talking about a handful of grayscale pixels here, which should make it only marginally better than the Droid’s cam.

RIM’s optical trackpads: they weren’t joking about the ‘optical’ part originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 13:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Insurgents Tap Into Predator Drone Feeds With $26 Software

predator drone.jpg

Iraqi insurgents were able to tap into raw satellite feeds of live video shot by U.S. Predator drones using $26 Russian software. Drones are unmanned planes controlled from afar by U.S. military officials.

The software, called SkyGrabber, is intended for downloading music, photos and video, but the insurgents used it to watch drone videos that were unencrypted, according to the Los Angeles Times. Officials told the paper that feeds were intercepted in Iraq, but there is no evidence that they were accessed in Afghanistan or Pakistan.

The Pentagon has now encrypted those feeds, and the military said that there is no evidence that the insurgents saw footage that would be of much use to them.

Sean Carroll, our managing editor for software, spoke with John Knowles, editor of the Journal of Electronic Defense, and Knowles said the hack was not a hack at all.

Chromium OS lands on the Archos 9, doesn’t do much

Trying to satisfy that browser-only touchscreen tablet urge? Well, you’re sort of in luck. Those Atom-powered Archos 9 tablets are out and about, and the fine folks at UMPCPortal have slung a copy of Google’s Chromium OS onto one. Unfortunately, since there’s no touchscreen keyboard in the OS (yet), and the touchscreen input isn’t even recognized, this is more of a “proof of concept” than a killer app. Still, we like where this is headed.

Chromium OS lands on the Archos 9, doesn’t do much originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Dec 2009 13:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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