johnWeeGo[2]We’re in the process of building a new house here in Brisbane. It will serve as our new home upstairs and as a much larger home office downstairs. Since we’re working with clients around the world we do spend much of our time working from home.

To remember the “experience” we have been taking a tonne of photos, I have been taking a panorama (about 8 photos across) from each of the four corners of the property every time something interesting happens. They are about 25 Megapixels each and capture all the detail.

Although we are only a few days into the build I thought I would see how well things would line up, here is a small taste:

southtestjoin

(Animated Gif – 1MB, I’m swamped with work at the moment to do any more)

The end goal is to make a full resolution DeepZoom with a temporal aspect, allowing you to zoom into the detail and then wind through the calendar to see the construction.

I’m still not sure on the interface but since I will have 4 different angles all synced I should be able to do some sort of a cube with perspective 3D, need some time to make a POC.

Let me know what you think and any ideas.

johnWeeGo[1]At TechEd Australia this year I sat down with the Delicate Genius to talk about all the software Microsoft makes for those that love taking photos. You can see the video here:

http://www.msteched.com/online/view.aspx?tid=2a425f94-3718-46fe-8269-4c4bcfad7c61

It runs for 20min, we don’t get through everything and get way too side tracked with Multi touch in Windows7.

These are the products we covered with links to download and play for yourself:

Windows Live Photo Gallery windowslivephotogallery

http://download.live.com/photogallery

Part of Windows Live Essentials this photo viewer is aimed for all windows users. It offers many ways to sort and tag your photos including people tagging. If you have a multi touch Windows7 device then pinch-zoom, rotate and flick through your photos.

Pro Photo Tools 2 prophoto2...

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johnWeeGo[1]BronwenWeeGo[1]Here at Tech Ed Australia 2009 we are presenting on the Bing Maps Silverlight control, it’s session WEB302. If you’re in the crowd or simply reading this after the event you can follow along with our demos here.

about

http://about.soulsolutions.com.au/

First up is a little visualisation of where we work and play. This data is hard coded into the application and took less then an hour to put together. The minimap, custom navigation and custom image pin are part of the open source DeepEarth project.

 

updates

http://bingmapsupdates.cloudapp.net/

...

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johnWeeGo[1]Sarah Vaughan, the Windows 7 Group Lead in Australia, today demonstrated our Silverlight 3 / Windows 7 Multi touch application in the keynote of the Australian Partner Conference.

SarahAPCKeynote

The Silverlight application is built on top of Bing Maps and uses our open source controls called DeepEarth. This particular application allows you to annotate the map, drawing polygons and lines and adding points. All of this data can be captured and stored into a SQL 2008 database. We added a custom tile layer of the exhibition venue itself.

In order to support multi touch you need to be running Windows7 and have a multi touch enabled screen and drivers. HP, the hardware sponsors of the event supplied the nice screen Sarah is using and also lent us a TouchSmart Tx2 tablet for the development.



If you have such a device you can see the application here (works with just a mouse as well):

http://multitouch.soulsolutions.com.au/

The gestures are:

pinch zoom in / out 2 finger swipe left / right to show / hide the drawing panel 2 finger hold 1/2 sec for AerialwithLabels, 3 finger hold for road, 4 for plain aerial. Drag the map with one finger. One thing to note is that multi touch doesn’t currently work in full screen mode.

Commercially we are working with a Mining Company here...

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