Nowadays the ever increasing bandwidth and high speed of internet connections allow much larger images to be published online.

These larger file sizes allow VR Photographers to create higher resolution full-screen images with much more detail that helps to immerse the viewer into the scene. 


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VR photography is the art of capturing or creating a complete scene as a single image, as viewed when rotating about a single central position. Normally created by stitching together a number of photographs taken in a multi-row 360 degree rotation; the complete image can also be a totally computer generated effect, or a composite of real word photography and computer generated objects.

The final digital image, known as a VR Panorama, is viewed through an interactive software interface. The viewer is at the centre of a virtual cylinder or sphere onto which is projected a wrap-around image, within which the viewer can rotate horizontally and vertically, as if they were immersed within the real world scene.

VR Panoramas are viewed through movie players such as
 
  • Apple's QuickTime VR software which may be installed as part of a Web browser plug-in, or as a stand-alone player on a computers desktop or CD Rom. Whilst QuickTimeVR (QTVR) was the original player program there are now a growing number of different players and plug-ins, each with their own features, all helping to make VR Photography more popular than ever.
  • Some viewers make use of Java
  • Another common method of viewing 360 degree panoramas is using the Adobe Flash Player
Nowadays the ever increasing bandwidth and speed of internet connections allow much larger images to be published online, as such these larger file sizes allow VR Photographers to create higher resolution full-screen images with much more detail that helps to immerse the viewer into the scene.