OpenStreetMap 로고 OpenStreetMap

I shot and added as an experiment the aerial sphere 360 panorama to the OpenStreetMap for the lake Lac de Tseuzier: https://www.openstreetmap.org/relation/1642268

The sphere panorama itself is located on the DJI’s website: https://www.skypixel.com/photo360s/spark-78d50747-504a-4a84-90c9-6a02357eb70e .

Here is the link to the same panorama on Google maps: https://goo.gl/maps/GZjbKr1J7hy3WgYU7 , and in the Street-View mode it is shown on the map as a small blue circle.

The area of this lake is about one square kilometer. The size of the panorama file is 1.8 MB. It is created with the Spark quad-copter, which weighs less that 500 grams. Spark creates and publishes the aerial sphere 360 panoramas to the Skypixel website automatically from the DJI Go 4 app.

I added it with the “image” tag. In my opinion, it is time to introduce a new OSM tag for the aerial sphere panoramas.

위치: Armeillon, Ayent, Hérens, Wallis, 1966, Switzerland
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토론

2019년 7월 25일 10:16PanierAvide님의 의견

Hello,

Thanks for your article. If you are not aware of it, you might be interested in reading this wiki page : osm.wiki/Photo_linking

Note that, as it is defined now, image=* tag is better for linking to direct image file. For a new tag for 360° pictures, could have sense to make it easier to reuse (no need to check if image=* link is a 360° picture or not). But that also mean that we add yet another tag, and we already have image + wikimedia_commons + flickr + mapillary tags… I’m interested to discuss this however ;-)

Best regards,

Adrien.

2019년 7월 25일 12:22aharvey님의 의견

By including the wikidata id on each object (like in this case), you’re then able to upload many photos to wikimedia commons and link to a selection of photos.

2019년 7월 25일 12:34Alex-7님의 의견

As far as I know, a sphere panorama cannot be viewed as an usual JPG or PNG image file, because it should be viewed in a special viewer.

Spark & DJI GO 4 app stitch a sphere panorama from 42 images, and only after uploading it to the Skypixel website it could be actually viewed as a panorama.

It seems to me that it is more natural to have a look around, up and down, than to look at a still image in one direction. It is what we are doing when we come to a place, we look around.

I am not sure that an aerial sphere 360 panorama should be treated as an usual still JPG photo. It seems to be a new technology, which gives a better impression and understanding of a geographical place.

2019년 7월 25일 12:36Alex-7님의 의견

Unfortunately, I could not find a way to upload and view a sphere panorama at the Wikimedia Commons.

2019년 7월 25일 12:48PanierAvide님의 의견

Depends of camera/software, but most of the time a classical image is produced (with a size ratio of 2:1) which can be seen as a usual (example : https://images.mapillary.com/wqKTtmjKqoXTXk_Q6vNJeA/thumb-2048.jpg ). In that case, you must tell the rendering software to interpret it as a 360° image, and this picture is projected on a sphere.

2019년 7월 25일 12:51PanierAvide님의 의견

If you can produce such image, you can host it on WIkimedia Commons, see https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:360%C2%B0_panoramas_with_equirectangular_projection

2019년 7월 25일 13:00Alex-7님의 의견

OK, I understand about an image with 2:1 ratio. But how a user of a map can view it as an interactive 360 panorama?

I am interested in the aerial sphere panoramas. They cover much more ground, up to a square kilometer, give an idea of the 3D relief of a place. It is easy to automate shooting from the air.

2019년 7월 25일 13:09Alex-7님의 의견

And if I add such an 2:1 image to the Wikimedia category, the visitors of the category will not understand why this image looks so strangely.

It would be different, if there were an option to view an image as a panorama at the Wikimedia Commons’s image viewer. I think it will come to this before long, since sphere panoramas become more common.

2019년 7월 25일 13:31PanierAvide님의 의견

That’s the whole issue as now : we can’t distinguish in OSM data whether if image is 360° or not. So having a specific tag could help, or the data consumers should check the picture size or metadata (if I remember correctly, 360° images have special EXIF tags). This is not really convenient, but checking picture itself is the only way for an app/data consumer to be sure if it’s a 360° one or not.

2019년 7월 25일 13:42zarl님의 의견

Alex, you also need to add a template to your uploaded image to enable the panorama viewer for that image.

I.e. one of my panoramas contains a link (just have a look at the “edit” tab of that page to see how it works) so that you can see it in the viewer.

2019년 7월 25일 14:15Alex-7님의 의견

zarl, Thank you. This is what I need. Now I can publish the panorama images at the Wikimedia Commons.

I just have to add the template {{Pano360}}. I hope that they would move this Panorama Viewer functionality to the standard category image viewer.

PanierAvide, I think a new OSM tag is needed. Something like panorama=some-panorama-file.jpg then there would be no mistake if it is a usual JPG photo or a panorama.

But even now, if a file is published like this: https://tools.wmflabs.org/panoviewer/#some-panorama-file.jpg it could be considered as a link to a file itself, since at the Commons the file names are unique.

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