On Tue 31-May-2011 at 20:38 -1000, Gnome Nomad wrote:
Yuval Levy wrote:
Unless Hugin on the Mac is completely different than on Linux, there is no "integrated Gui". On Linux, when I hit the "stitch now" button, it starts a different application with its own (simple) GUI. Floating window indeed.

It starts up what looks (to me) like a basic window displaying the text message outputs of whatever CLI programs it's running.

It is a GUI tool called hugin_stitch_project that takes a .pto project, creates a Makefile for stitching it, processes it and displays the text output in a window. It also lets you save a log file when things go wrong.

Is there a difference in priority/performance when running "Stitch Now" vs sending to batch?

They should be equivalent, both use the same Makefile stitching backend. The batch processor also allows reordering the queue, pausing and stopping, the queue should survive a reboot of the machine.

The batch processor can also identify likely projects from lists of photos, and will queue/process the alignment step as well as stitching.

The GUI isn't as clear as it could be and it has some superfluous options, but really it is about time it replaced hugin_stitch_project.

--
Bruno

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