PanaCast brings panoramic HD video to conference calls in the palm of your hand for $599 (hands-on)

PanaCast brings panoramic HD video to conference calls in the palm of your hand for $599 handson

Video chats have become quite popular these days, whether you’re using Facetime, Skype or are attending a Google Hangout. One problem with those platforms is that they provide a limited field of view and that view is static for attendees. PanaCast solves that problem with some unique hardware and software that provides a 200 degree FOV and a virtualized camera for each viewer. Its camera has six imagers, an SoC with dual ARM11 cores and a custom-built multi-imaging video processor (MIVP), along with an Ethernet port and a USB 2.0 port.

The MIVP, with an assist from some custom firmware, stitches all of the input images together to form a single 2700 x 540 video stream. That feed has enterprise-grade encryption and can run at up to 60fps over faster connections, but streams lower framerates over 3G as well. It works over the open internet and streams using a high-speed codec developed by Cavium Networks that needs only 350kb of bandwidth to function. After you’re done perusing our gallery below, join us after the break to learn more about how the PanaCast system works.

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Source: Altia Systems

PanaCast Is A Unique Panoramic Video Conferencing Experience

panacast image

Video conferencing, especially in a work setting, can be a real pain in the ass. But PanaCast, unlike other video conferencing platforms, actually seems like something that would be both fun and exceedingly useful.

PanaCast is a crowdfunded panoramic video conferencing platform that Ross Rubin covered back in December in one of his Backed Or Whacked posts. Ross wholeheartedly backed the project, and since then PanaCast’s Kickstarter blew past its original fundraising goal of $15,000, raising nearly three times that amount.

Today PanaCast will be made available for the public to purchase for what they call a “market disrupting price” of $599 with a monthly subscription fee of $19.99.

What PanaCast offers is a unique panoramic video conferencing experience. It utilizes a special webcam that resembles, as Ross noted, an odd-looking UFO on a tripod. When the webcam is attached to the stand, it seems to be about two feet tall, so it’s fairly portable.

Setting up the webcam is easy. Once you have the PanaCast app open on your iOS device and a cellular or wi-fi connection, you scan in the barcode on top of the webcam to connect to it.

The webcam is composed of six different cameras that have had their feeds synchronized for one 200 degree video image that’s 2700 pixels wide and 540 pixels tall. The image itself is crisp and sharp, without any distortion whatsoever, and you can scroll and zoom to any part of the live video feed inside PanaCast’s iOS app.

From the live demos I was shown by Altia Systems, the company behind PanaCast, it’s also extremely responsive. There wasn’t the slightest bit of lag with scrolling and zooming at all. Within the app, you can also switch between multiple feeds pretty easily.

For now, PanaCast is only compatible with iOS devices. They’re planning on releasing desktop and mobile versions of the PanaCast app on Windows, Mac, and Android sometime in the near future.

The PanaCast app is a free download in the iOS App Store, and you can place orders for the PanaCast Camera at Altia’s website here.

Backed Or Whacked: A Smartphone Robot For Playtime And Panorama-Style Mobile HD Video

backed-whacked

Editor’s note: Ross Rubin is principal analyst at Reticle Research and blogs at Techspressive. Each column will look at crowdfunded products that have either met or missed their funding goals. Follow him on Twitter @rossrubin.

High-quality videoconferencing was once the exclusive province of rich institutions with dedicated high-speed connections. These days, a pair of iPod touches can get you started chatting up your remote friends or colleagues. In February, Starii raised nearly $25,000 to create what would be renamed Swivl, a pan-and-tilt mechanism for iPhones that could track you as you moved. And a follow-up called Galileo, launched in March by Motrr, raised over $700,000 in providing remote access for a similar proposition. But two recent Kickstarter projects take iPhone video interaction to places it has never been before.

 

Backed: Romotive Romo. Through its extensive use of sensors, your iPhone may know a lot about where it is, but can’t do much to change where it is without being carried there (even though many seem to seek out the back seats of taxis). The Romo robot by Romotive addresses this by imbuing the iPhone with wheels along with a software-developed personality. 

Speaking to Kickstarter second-timer Romotive reinforces the point that, at this stage, man seems to be doing at least as much to serve robots as vice versa. For example, citing the power of the Kickstarter community, after raising more than triple its goal for the original Romo, Romotive CEO Keller Rinaudo relays how an early backer of the effort based in Germany offered to upgrade the firmware, which involved disassembling the robot for all of the backers in Europe and return them to their original owners.

Romotive, which had its first Romo robot exceed its funding goal in a manner of days, hopes to avoid such issues with its third-generation set of wheels for iPhones that surpassed its $100,000 funding goal a few weeks ago. In addition to checking in on and playing games with kids of all ages, which it can recognize through cloud-based face tagging, and pets, the new Romo charges faster (a way for it to find its own charger a la iRobot vacuums is being looked into), lasts longer on a charge, tilts the iPhone in order to record and view at a range of angles, and smokes its predecessor in a race. But it’s not all fun and games. Rinuado notes that Romo has applications in fields such as real estate — where it could quickly take photos of many rooms — stringing cable through walls for residential installers, and even going into dangerous environments.

Backed: Altia Systems PanaCast. A basic webcam will do if you’re just looking to see grandma’s face, but the UFO-like PanaCast promises to deliver some alien technology to conference rooms across the world. Project owner Altia has more than doubled its modest $15,000 funding goal with 30 days left in the campaign, giving the impression that the startup is using Kickstarter more for publicity than as a material source of funding.

Using a modern iPhone-class ARM processor to stitch together images from its camera array, the Altia PanaCast is described by Altia as an “ultra-low latency panoramic-HD multi-imager video camera and integrated streaming server.”

The device creates a 200-degree video image but packages it in a standard HD frame for compatibility with existing video software. The benefit of the wide-angle is that it can allow a remote viewer to see more of a conference room, concert, or other environment at once; PanaCast achieves this without the fisheye effect common (and getting somewhat played out in) action cameras such as those from GoPro and Contour.

Indeed, PanaCast technology could be applied to a wide range of uses, including capturing extreme sports. The first-generation product, though, with its stand that makes it look like a miniature Space Needle, seems designed for stationary tasks.

Altia has committed to it selling for less than $700 without any microphones. The company says it thinks customers will want flexibility in choosing the best microphone option for their needs; these could include lavaliers or the one on a Polycom station. It should find an audience with businesses that are looking for dedicated video conferencing but are not ready to step up to something from Logitech-owned LifeSize.

PanaCast optimizes its output for mobile networks; the company has demonstrated its IMAX-like experience running over 3G connections. The iOS apps for remote conference viewing that Altia has developed allow you to slickly pan and zoom in on whoever may be talking, but it would be even slicker if that were automated based on who was talking. That is surely in the queue.


PanaCast Camera Offers Amazing 200 Degrees Field-of-View HD Streaming

Panacast CameraPanaCast from Altia is a prototype that could change the HD video conferencing game forever. Although our screens typically use 16:9 or 4:3 ratios, the human field of view is much larger than that (especially if you count the peripheral vision), so the idea of ultra wide screen video conferencing is not new. System have been devised to give the impression that the other part “is here”, but they tend to cost tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of dollars.

PanaCast is a kickstarter project that aims at changing the game by several order of magnitude. The company has the Panacast Camera, a 200 degree wide multi-lenses device that can shoot six streams of video simultaneously and stitch them in real-time into one contiguous ultra-wide HD video stream. (more…)

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