28/08/08
Microsoft Photosynth LaunchesFirst there was the snapshot, and then came
video. Now there is Microsoft Photosynth, a new service from Microsoft Live Labs
that goes far beyond how you now view, experience and share photos.
You can share or relive a vacation destination or explore a distant museum or
landmark; with a digital camera and your own creativity and inspiration, you can
use Photosynth to transform regular digital photos into a three-dimensional,
360-degree experience. Anybody who sees your “synth” is put right in your shoes,
sharing in the same sense of exhilaration and wonder that you did at the time,
with detail, clarity and scope impossible to achieve in conventional photos or
videos.
Imagine yourself beneath the Eiffel Tower or in the heart of Times Square. Now
imagine being able to see that exact scene in an amazing new way. With
Photosynth, you can look up or down, pan from left to right, zoom in, or pull
back to reveal the full sense of where you were. Photosynth provides incredibly
realistic close-up detail of a place as seen in the collaboration with National
Geographic. Exclusive synths of some of the world’s most renowned locations,
such as Machu Picchu and the Parthenon, were created using photographs taken by
National Geographic.
An Entirely New Medium
Synths constitute an entirely new visual medium. Photosynth analyzes each photo
for similarities to the others, and uses that data to estimate where a photo was
taken. It then re-creates the environment and uses that as a canvas on which to
display the photos. The potential uses of Photosynth can range from sharing
experiences to storytelling and documentation:
-- Share experiences. Think about the times you have been in the midst`of a
beautiful location or having a once-in-a-lifetime experience and wished you
could share it with more immediacy and sense of place than still photos or video
can capture. Photosynth puts viewers in the center of the moment and in control
of how they experience it.
-- Tell a story. If a picture is worth a thousand words, then a synth composed
of 20 or 50 photos makes visual storytelling as rich and compelling as a short
story. Synths capture the totality of important
moments in time, such as the anticipation and joy of an entire wedding party and
guests at the moment vows are exchanged, or the elation of a child scoring a
winning soccer goal as the fans cheer.
-- Form a community. Synths can bring the best of your digital photos together
with the best of everybody else’s. Imagine if you took a trip to Rome with your
friends and each of you took photos of the Trevi Fountain. Later, you can tag
and upload all of the photos from each person’s camera to create a synth of it.
In addition, you can share that experience and your favorite places with others
by embedding the synth in your profile on a social networking site.
-- Educate or archive. If you want to re-create how you decorated your home for
the holidays or how you planted your garden last season, the ability of
Photosynth to provide intricate detail allows documentation impossible to
achieve with conventional photos.
Using Photosynth
Getting started with Photosynth is easy:
-- To begin, just take a few dozen digital photos—20 to 300 photos are required,
depending on the size of the place or object—with overlap between each shot,
from a number of locations and angles.
-- Next, download a small, free software application to your computer from
http://photosynth.com. This software works in concert with the Photosynth Web
site, which is also a free service.
-- Build your synth in just two easy steps: First, from the Photosynth Web site,
click on Create and select the pictures you want to use. Then, give your
creation a name and click on Synth, and Photosynth automatically creates and
uploads your synth. In about the same amount of time it would take to upload the
pictures to a photo-sharing site, you can enjoy your pictures in dramatic and
detailed 3-D.
-- The finished synth can be accessed from any Windows XP- or Windows
Vista-powered computer with a broadband connection. If you want to comment on
other people’s synths or create your own, you’ll also need a free Windows Live
ID.
-- Once created, synths can also be embedded on Web sites, blogs and social
networking sites or virtually any Web site where HTML can be edited.
Following this release, the Photosynth team will join MSN—an important step in
continuing to improve Photosynth and share the experience with an even wider
audience. In addition to letting users create and share synths at http://photosynth.com,
over the next year Photosynth will begin to become a key part of the experience
for MSN’s 550 million monthly visitors worldwide. Synths will be prominently
featured on MSN.com. To create a more absorbing experience for its visitors, MSN
will use synths of popular destinations and notable events in many of the places
where static images are used on the site today.
About Microsoft Live Labs
Microsoft Live Labs is an applied research organization focused on the
incubation of innovative, Internet-centric technologies to improve and
accelerate the next evolution of Microsoft’s Internet products and services.
Through rapid prototyping of emerging technologies and incubation of entirely
new inventions, Live Labs aims to advance the state of the art of Internet
technologies and enable new scenarios for its users. Live Labs believes that
collaboration with other groups at Microsoft, government and academic research
labs, and industry labs and pioneers, is key to fulfilling its mission, and
works to build strong relationships with these groups.
Photo Quote: Think about the photo before and after, never during. The secret is to take your time. You mustn't go too fast. The subject must forget about you. Then, however, you must be very quick. - Henri Cartier-Bresson