Thanks a lot Bruno.

As per online search , at the moment gigapixel images are created this way

1. Capturing
2. stitching and making a PSB file or APG raw file format
3. Split into tiles
4. convert and merge back to one single file
5. Viewer again splits it into tiles as per user zoomed in area.

Tiles > one image> tiles.....:)) Look there is repetition of work which in
unnecesary hardwork and requires lots of resources.

But why not this workflow

1. Capturing
2. Stitching into tiles
3. Viewer does not have to split it into tiles. Images are already in
tiles.

This way we can make gigapixel images even on an normal C2D system.

Bruno, I will try it.

Regards,

Emaad


On Thu, Nov 17, 2011 at 2:00 AM, Bruno Postle <br...@postle.net> wrote:

> On Wed 16-Nov-2011 at 11:47 +0500, Emad ud din Bhatt wrote:
>
>>
>> I am not able to gigapixel images with hugin. But I have an innovative
>> idea of doing it with hugin. Idea is all about tiles and than making a
>> Mosaic.
>>
>> 1.If we are able to get gigapixel image rendered by hugin in Tiles.
>>
>> Lets say hugin renders a gigapixel image in 8000x4000 tiles TIFF parts.
>>
>> I have a 89361 x 22554 file and hugin splits image into small tiles and
>> stitches it in 8kx4k tiles.
>>
>
> Panotools::Script has a tool called gigatile that does exactly this.  It
> mostly works and scales very well, you can stitch unlimited size panoramas
> on a low memory machine.  It doesn't join the tiles together so you need to
> use something like Google maps to present it.
>
> The major (and unfixable) drawback is that you can see some of the edges
> between tiles because of the way enblend works.
>
>       "gigatile - stitch a Hugin project as multi-resolution tiles
>
>       gigatile -o project.pto.mk -p prefix project.pto
>
>        Options:
>         -o | --output name    Filename of created Makefile.
>         -p | --prefix         prefix for output files, can be a directory
> name.
>         --apikey              a Google Maps API key (required to use
> online).
>         -h | --help           Outputs help documentation.
>
>       gigatile is a tool with the same CLI as pto2mk.  Instead of
>  creating rules for stitching a single panorama, the project        is
> split into 4096x4096 tiles which are rendered        independently, these
> tiles are then split to a pyramid of        256x256 JPEG tiles."
>
> The zoomable results of my only test with this tool (a gigapixel of
> Sheffield) are linked from here:
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/36383814@N00/5510783736/
>
> --
> Bruno
>
>
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-- 


*Emaad*
www.flickr.com/emaad

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