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Must See! Microsoft's Photosynth Makes Photos a 3D Experience

Newly live Web site provides users with 20GB of free storage, making it easy to create and share amazing 3D walkthroughs of your favorite places.

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Creating Your Own Synth

Microsoft provides an excellent primer on the best way to shoot photos for use in Photosynth. The basics: Capture JPEG images only (unlimited size); try and overlap shots by about 50 percent; start with a wide panoramic shot before moving in for greater detail; ensure that all photos are oriented correctly; and limit the angles between photos. The more suitable your shots are, the more coordinates Photosynth will have to build a reconstruction with (3D designers will be familiar with this "point cloud" concept). The more points there are, the more "synthy" your collection will be.

A quick note on copyright: Since all synths are public for the moment, it's good to see that you're able to fully--or partially--restrict the reuse of your photos through a full spectrum of Creative Commons license options.

Uploading a simple 10-photo synth takes a matter of minutes. I went a little more extreme and uploaded a 156-photo test shot at San Francisco's well-known Red's Java House by the bay. My collection (214MB of 2048-by-1536-resolution shots) took about 75 minutes to upload and was immediately available as a synth. As an indication of just how far Photosynth has come, the demo shown at the 2007 TED Conference--which took multiple machines two weeks to calculate--can now be created in an hour, on a single laptop.

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