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Microsoft And NASA Team Up For 3-D Space Shuttle Tour

Photosynth
Microsoft has announced a new collaboration with NASA designed to give users a 3D photographic tour of the space shuttle Endeavour before its launch later this week. The new exhibit uses Microsoft’s Photosynth technology to create a three-dimensional environment with “views of shuttle Endeavour on the launch pad, interior and surrounding area of the Vehicle Assembly Building, and the return of previous flight Shuttle Atlantis atop a 747.”

You’ll need to download the Photosynth viewer to see the images (sorry Mac users, for now Photosynth is only available for Windows XP and Vista — running either IE6 or IE7). If you don’t meet the minimum requirements or if you’d just like to see an overview, there’s a nice video preview available on the Microsoft Labs site.

Blaise Aguera y Arcas, an architect at Microsoft Live Labs, also gave a talk at the TED festival a while back that shows off some of the remarkable capabilities of Photosynth and SeaDragon, which you can see here.

NASA says it hopes this joint project will lead to more collaborative initiatives with Microsoft. And Microsoft is no doubt hoping the same, especially since most recent NASA collaborations have been with rival Google, which gets some of its Google Earth data from NASA.

Also worth noting is that, near the end of the promotional video linked above, Blaise Aguera y Arcas says that Photosynth with soon offer features which allow users to stitch their own photos together.

Given that Photosynth relies on image data from a normal SLR camera, it might soon be possible for even you and I to stitch together some impressive 3-D tours, provided you take enough images.

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