![]() To capture the very best Photo Spheres of any type, the key is to keep the Pixel camera at a fixed location. With a few tips, it's possible to get great quality horizontal and vertical panoramas, wide-angle shots, and fisheye effects. After processing, the Photo Sphere will be ready to view. ![]() The Pixel display will show a rough preview until the last dot is centered, completing the capture. The phone should then be moved to center the next dot and so on to fill in a complete 360 image. Multiple gray dots will be overlaid in an AR display and the viewfinder should be centered on a dot until it turns blue and then held steady until the circle is outlined. Tapping Photo Sphere and then the shutter button will start the process. To capture a Photo Sphere with a Pixel phone, the Modes tab should be selected in the Camera app to see additional options. It's even possible to view 360-degree images with a VR headset, such as Oculus Quest. Rotating and tilting in place while looking at the phone changes the view as if standing where the photo was taken. The amazing thing about Google's Photo Sphere images is that they can be displayed on the phone in a VR-like view that matches the image movement to a smartphone's accelerometer. Related: The 5 Best Camera Apps For Google Pixel 6 & Pixel 6 Pro The latest Pixel 6 series smartphones handle the complex process of stitching multiple 12-megapixel photos together into a 40-megapixel Photo Sphere relatively quickly and reliably. Over the years, processor technology has improved dramatically with greater than ten times the performance boost. In those early days of smartphones, it took an incredible amount of dedication and patience to capture enough photos for a usable Photo Sphere while waiting and hoping the phone wouldn't crash under the burden of the task. Google introduced its 360-degree Photo Sphere technology in 2012 but it was far ahead of its time. ![]()
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