panoramas.dk— Experience the moon just as the astronauts did - almost as you were there. View interactive QuickTime VR Panoramas in full-screen from the 6 Apollo Missions who landed on moon.
Feb 5, 2007View in Crawl 4
Apple only killed their own stitching software QTVR authoring studio. Quicktime VR is more alive than ever. Even if we have a lot of other viewers available today Quicktime is still the best for high resolution VR Photography. Have a look around panoramas.dk and you will see that we do much more today than real estate. VR Photography is now a photographic media used in many areas in a quality we could never do with the Apple software.Check the Arounder Magazine <a class="user" href="http://aroundermagazine.com">http://aroundermagazine.com</a> for example.
@legendxx: the landers' platforms, being only a few meters across, are too small to be seen from this distance. besides, most landers came down just barely in view of the Earth. AFAIK, none landed where we'd actually be able to see them, even if we could.
datastorageguyFeb 6, 2007
All you are doing is giving your lame search engine a bad name by spamming it on Digg. Your marketing strategy is not very well thought out.
thesurferFeb 6, 2007
Apple only killed their own stitching software QTVR authoring studio. Quicktime VR is more alive than ever. Even if we have a lot of other viewers available today Quicktime is still the best for high resolution VR Photography. Have a look around panoramas.dk and you will see that we do much more today than real estate. VR Photography is now a photographic media used in many areas in a quality we could never do with the Apple software.Check the Arounder Magazine <a class="user" href="http://aroundermagazine.com">http://aroundermagazine.com</a> for example.
spetzFeb 6, 2007
If you hate quicktime disable it from your startup options in run->msconfg.
greyfadeFeb 6, 2007
@legendxx: the landers' platforms, being only a few meters across, are too small to be seen from this distance. besides, most landers came down just barely in view of the Earth. AFAIK, none landed where we'd actually be able to see them, even if we could.
raid517Feb 6, 2007
Lol here's one for you conpiracy people.<a class="user" href="http://video.google.co.uk/videoplay?docid=3288261061829859642&q=Dark+side+of+the+moon+duration%3Along">http://video.google.co.uk/videoplay?docid=3288261061829859642&q=Dark+side+of+the+moon+duration%3Along</a>