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Are there panorama viewers out there that are not Flash, Silverlight, Java or Quicktime based? Is anyone on this list working on one of these or using one? :)

I want to be able to program hotspots into the panorama so that it can trigger other media such as audio, video or perhaps another panorama.

We're trying to think of a panorama viewing solution that is not plug-in dependent.

I did some initial search and here's a javascript solution. But the performance is not that good, and I don't know if it support hotspots. Here's a list of pano players, all of them are plugin based...one is actually Shockwave!

milesmeow
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You could use Google Street View with a custom panorama. Another example showing how it can be standalone. Note you can customise what controls are there etc

Julian H
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  • Cool! This gets me really close to what I need. Now I need to figure out how to deal with hotspots and such. Any ideas Julian? – milesmeow Sep 22 '10 at 19:56
  • I didn't take a close look at the code for how the panorama is done, but you might be able to take advantage of image map: http://www.w3schools.com/TAGS/tag_map.asp – Virtuosi Media Sep 22 '10 at 22:09
  • milesmeow yes streetview has an event api that tells you when things change. See for instance Expedia Hotel View http://www.expediahotelview.com for 2D overlays and The Editors for 3D integrated overlay (see the red arrow they add) http://www.editorsofficial.com/ – Julian H Sep 23 '10 at 09:55
  • @Juian - that looks really promising. I can't seem to find the red arrow on editorsofficial.com. – milesmeow Sep 23 '10 at 14:38
  • @Juian - the 2D overlays don't stick to certain objects in the scene. I'm sure one can do it through some calculation of one's own, but does the API do it for you? – milesmeow Sep 23 '10 at 14:45
  • Sorry wrong link here we go http://www.editorsofficial.com/streetview/ – Julian H Sep 23 '10 at 15:46
  • http://code.google.com/apis/maps/faq.html#browsersupport ... browser support for V3 and V2 of the API. We're targeting IE6 so we won't be able to use custom panoramas! Drats! – milesmeow Sep 23 '10 at 16:44
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    IE6? You're kidding. Who does that any more? Not even Microsoft. Try http://www.google.com/chromeframe – Julian H Sep 24 '10 at 07:27
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Microsoft's Seadragon project includes a fairly sweet JavaScript-based viewer.

Unfortunately, Zoom.it, the rebranded "production-ready" version of Seadragon only supports a Silverlight viewer (as far as I can tell). Worse, Microsoft never opened up the Seadragon format and required a web API or a Windows utility to create images.

s4y
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