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About This GigaPan
Toggle- Taken by
-
David Engle
- Explore score
- 97
- Size
- 0.46 Gigapixels
- Views
- 7551
- Date added
- October 19, 2008
- Date taken
- October 18, 2008
- Gear
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Leica D-Lux 3
- Categories
- Galleries
- Competitions
- Tags
- rice, natalie, linguistics, brochstein, herring, 18x8, riceu, ricew
- Description
-
My goal was to take a panorama encompassing Herring Hall, Brochstein Pavilion and Fondren Library; however, as I was setting up the robot, Natalie walked by and asked me a few questions as to what I was doing and after answering those questions, I asked her if she wanted to participate and this wonderful panorama is the result of her answer.
Play the game: how many versions of Natalie are there in this panorama?
If you answer correctly, then how many trees?
If you answer correctly, then advance to GO :)
Stitcher Notes
ToggleMinimizeGigaPan Stitcher version 0.4.3509 (Macintosh)
Panorama size: 463 megapixels (38359 x 12082 pixels)
Input images: 144 (18 columns by 8 rows)
Field of view: 177.2 degrees wide by 55.8 degrees high (top=43.3, bottom=-12.5)
Settings:
All default settings
Original image properties:
Camera make: LEICA
Camera model: D-LUX 3
Image size: 4224x2376 (10.0 megapixels)
Capture time: 2008-10-18 10:24:29 - 2008-10-18 10:41:05
Aperture: f/8
Exposure time: 0.00625
ISO: 100
Focal length (35mm equiv.): 112.0 mm
Digital zoom: off
White balance: Automatic
Exposure mode: Automatic
Horizontal overlap: 52.5 to 63.7 percent
Vertical overlap: 39.9 to 42.6 percent
Computer stats: 2048 MB RAM, 2 CPUs
Total time 3:28:05 (1:26 per picture)
Alignment: 5:54, Projection: 12:14, Blending: 3:09:56

fetching snapshots...
David Engle (October 20, 2008, 02:03AM )
Herring Hall is a part of the Humanities Studies Complex. And the Brochstein Pavillion, a "coffee shop" is much more than that as explained by President David Lebroon on the day that the Pavillion was dedicated: "Brochstein Pavilion provides a place where graduate and undergraduate students, faculty, staff and visitors can meet, chat and come together as a community -- the interaction that makes a university an extraordinary place."
David Engle (October 19, 2008, 10:04AM )
As I was taking this panorama, two sets of Vietnamese from some High School came by and were going to a science fair of some sort or another: www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id= 11021Let me simply say how astonished I was upon seeing their excitement as they walked by and then I remembered sort of the excitement I had when I too was in High School and attended a science fair, but what I attended was nothing like what they were to see and experience while they were on campus for the Sally Ride Science Festival.