So here, I'm going to full screen this, and then you can see how this Panorama looks prior to actually going into editing. And this is going to give you a, an interactive viewer, right? - Correct. So I'm going to hit Preview, and then hit 'Open in PT Gui Viewer'. Okay, so it's not so down- It's not so down sampled. Just so when the preview comes out, it's actually a higher resolution. But a good way to test out how the Panorama looks, is I go in here, I click Preview, and I'm just going to change the height to 2,500. And these numbers really tell you which photo is which. So go in here, and there's our flat image right there. So once this is done, you should have a flat image of the whole 360 panorama. So now, I don't really have to change anything here. Yeah, and that EXIF data is going to have information about the manufacturer, as well as potentially things like GPS and other data, but software can use that to help customize its approach to how it adjusts things. So once they're all loaded up, the EXIF data for all of these photos actually already automatically tell PT Gui what camera it is, and what type of panorama it's going to be. So I'm going to select all of these, and then I'm going to open up PT Gui, and just simply going to come in here and drag and drop all these images. So what I want to do is, I'm going to come in here, into our images, back here in the core and auto states 360. So why don't we go ahead and first merge the panorama together, and then we're going to see that there's one giant hole that we have to fill. It's very popular in the panoramic community. And PT Gui has been around for a long time. So we're going to tackle this with another application called PT Gui. Because you got the factors of, up and being there, not really being stable, even though it's in GPS mode, but wind can give it a little bumps to make everything mess up a little bit. Now it sometimes can handle things shot on a tripod, where it's very predictable from image to image, but shooting a, a spherical panorama or a 360 on a drone is a little less predictable, right? - Yeah. So when we try to merge the spherical panorama in Photoshop or Lightroom, it didn't quite handle the really complex image. Well, let's take a look at building a 360 degree panoramic photo. And it does some 360s interactive content pretty well. It's both for Mac and PC, and for a pro-license, it's actually really inexpensive. Yeah, for 360 panoramas, I like to use a program called PT Gui. Francis, you have one that you really like. But there are dedicated apps just for fixing and making panoramic photos. Now we've been talking about Adobe tools, and later on, we'll look at some other tools for HDR.
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