Hugin panorama maker
What I haven't yet tried is what the second screenshot shows: instead of running Bomostitch on "full automatics", you also can have it show you a preview where you can adjust things. Free: as in "free beer" – but not as in "free speach".īimostitch (source: Playstore click images for larger variants).
#Hugin panorama maker android
Requires Android 4.0 or higher – which should be easy to match. Not too many dependencies: a single app with ~6 MB.When done, the panorama is stored on the internal SD card in the Pictures/Panoramas/ folder, and shown on the app's initial page. A progress bar in the notification area lets you see how far it already got. Easy to use: Select the photos from the gallery, tap OK, done.Not an exact match, but a substitute that does the job for photos I've created with my Android smartphone anyway:īimostitch Panorama Stitcher matches all my requirements (except for the OS). Note: When I say "panorama" I don't mean 360° but rather 2-5 images to be joined ("wide shot").
#Hugin panorama maker free
Should be free (as in "free speach" and "free beer"). Being in the standard repositories (or even a PPA) would be a big plus. I'm currently using Linux Mint Cinnamon, so please no KDE apps (I don't want to draw in half of the KDE desktop just for this task). Took a look at fotoxx – but that wanted to first index all my images, which I do not want (what for, if I only want to create one panorama? I don't want the stitcher to manage my entire collection). The one built-in to Gimp (formerly distributed separately as " Pandora") can only be used for real simple things, and otherwise fails e.g. Photos taken with a smartphone often lack the lens information Hugin wants to know before loading, and I've got no idea where to get those details from (guess that's the main issue here for me, which then cuases the "bad results"). I've tried Hugin, but it failed me: often didn't even match the images – and even if I added a bunch of control points manually, generating a useful result image was a mess and much too complicated.
I'm looking for an easy to use panorama stitcher for Linux that doesn't have too many dependencies.