70 Billion Pixels Budapest was one of the most successful web projects in 2010. Using only hungarian PR support, we managed to get 1,5 million visitors from 214 countries of the world in the first 2 weeks. We got the most visitors from Facebook, 35.000 people clicked our LIKE button. According to Google Analitycs, the only 9 countries we did not get visitors from are North Korea, Svalbard (North EU), and 7 African countries: Somalia, Eritrea, Chad, Congo, Guinea-Bissau, Equatorial Guinea, Western Sahara. The most interested people came from Montenegro, they were zooming more than 15 minutes on average.
Check out our world record project here: http://70-billion-pixels-budapest.com/index_en.html
XX. District Fire Department (Click on images to view panoramics)
HDR (High Dynamic Range) technology enables us to capture high quality panoramics/virtual tours - despite diverse lighting conditions.
Commissioned by Nemzeti Galéria, we created the first gigapixel images depicting the work of Hungarian artists. On the archived works of Csontváry Kosztka Tivadar, Madarász Viktor and Rippl-Rónai József, each brush stroke is clearly distinguishable. Everything is here, minute surface cracks included - much to the delight of art historians.
The images were viewed ten thousand times during the first week only, as reported by the online news portals below. Within a week of publication, the paintings achieved a page rank of 5.
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Project: Documenting the 'München magyarul' special exhibition online and offline (DVD), creating virtual museum tour. Interactive content: Moving cursor over artworks displays title and author name, clicking on artworks zooms in on them. Information sheets on relevant art styles. Commissioned by: Nemzeti Galéria Number of images: 1 exterior panoramic on gallery, 30 interior 250 megapixel panoramics with all artworks (paintings, sculptures and drawings) on exhibition. Image size: 11000 x 5500 px Equipment: Automatic panorama head, 8mm fisheye lens, 10-22mm wide angle objectives. Photographic technology: HDR panoramics Web display: Multisharpness technology |




The only thing we need to control projected content is a pair of hands.
Images captured by stereoscopic camera may be used to create 3D postcards and invitations. 












