Well, Photosphere is supposed to handle some camera motion, but if you're 
shooting from your bicycle....

> From: Rob Guglielmetti <[email protected]>
> Date: August 23, 2012 10:34:49 AM PDT
> 
> Haha Greg,  isn't another likely problem camera movement between exposures?
> 
> - Rob
> 
> 
> On Aug 23, 2012, at 11:25 AM, Gregory J. Ward wrote:
> 
>> Hi Peony,
>> 
>> The likely problem is that your smart phone is too smart!  Most phone 
>> cameras play tricks with the response curve, white balance, and other 
>> capture characteristics that undermine any attempt to get a consistent HDR 
>> result.  No phone cameras I know allow you a true "manual mode" that 
>> disables such behavior, so they aren't really suited to HDR capture.
>> 
>> Best,
>> -Greg
>> 
>>> From: "Peony Au" <[email protected]>
>>> Date: August 23, 2012 1:50:24 AM PDT
>>> 
>>> Dear all,
>>> 
>>> I am trying to create HDRIs using an Android Smartphone. I have taken six 
>>> photos ranging from –3 to +3 and have tried to fuse these in Photosphere, 
>>> however I am getting a “cannot solve for response function” message. Does 
>>> anyone  know how I can create a response curve or what I am missing to 
>>> create the response curve? I can create a HDR image using the generic 
>>> response curve, but for my thesis I would need all the HDRIs to be as 
>>> accurate as possible.
>>> 
>>> Thank you for your time.
>>> 
>>> Kind regards,
>>> Peony
>> 
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