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Posted

I took the shots to make this panorama this morning. But when I Preview it, I see a noticeable jerk at the completion of the transition from slide 1 to slide 2 and again at the completion of the transition from slide 2 to slide 3.

Am I the only one to see it?

regards,

Peter

P.S. Had to use MediaFire as the file, SnowPano.zip, is 2.47MB in size. The sequence is just three slides: Black, Pano, Black built at 16:9 AR

Guest Yachtsman1
Posted

Hi Peter

Looks ok on my 17" laptop screen, pity about the power lines. Did you tick the mipmapping box?

Regards Eric

Yachtsman1

Posted

Hi Peter!

For me it is too much snow... :rolleyes:

Run smooth, no problem.

/Lennart

Posted

Peter:

Beautiful countryside, the snow makes me feel right at home :rolleyes::D

It was smooth as silk for me

Posted

first run there was a very slight quiver from #1 to #2 slides

2nd run was smooth all the way start to finish

Ken,

I have noticed with other shows that they sometimes run smoother on the second pass than on the first. I can only assume that the Graphics Card memory is still loaded with image data and thus the resource demand is lower the second time around.

Did you tick the mipmapping box?

Eric,

My first reaction to your comment was: Why would I want to? I associate mip-mapping as a mechanism for reducing or eliminating Moire flicker in a pan or zoom. That wasn't what I was seeing. I was seeing a noticeable "jerk" or "stutter" rather than a persistent flicker. But then I thought: What harm can it do? So I ticked it and the problem has been eliminated on my system! Marvellous!

regards,

Peter

Posted

It was smooth as silk for me

Jim,

See my reply to Ken and Eric above.

Now, not wishing to re-open old scar tissue but... when you, I and Ed were trying to resolve those problems with your club's projector, did we try turning mip-mapping on? I'm not suggesting it's a "magic bullet" but it seems it can work wonders in certain situations. Perhaps worth a try for you both?

regards,

Peter

Posted

No problems on my screen - and the powerlines seem fine too.

Den,

Thanks. I'm not sure whether Eric's comment about the lines was to do with apparent shimmer in them or more to do with them being visually intrusive in the landscape. My own view on this latter aspect is that they are there and so I have to work with them. I'm prepared to bet that they helped Photoshop do the panorama merge!

regards,

Peter

Guest Yachtsman1
Posted

Ken,

I have noticed with other shows that they sometimes run smoother on the second pass than on the first. I can only assume that the Graphics Card memory is still loaded with image data and thus the resource demand is lower the second time around.

Eric,

My first reaction to your comment was: Why would I want to? I associate mip-mapping as a mechanism for reducing or eliminating Moire flicker in a pan or zoom. That wasn't what I was seeing. I was seeing a noticeable "jerk" or "stutter" rather than a persistent flicker. But then I thought: What harm can it do? So I ticked it and the problem has been eliminated on my system! Marvellous!

regards,

Peter

The reason I suggested it was, I have a 30 second pan in my charity DVD as the credits scroll, ticking mipmapping cured jerky text & pan with no noticeable degredation of picture.

Regards Eric.

Yachtsman1.

Posted

Jim,

See my reply to Ken and Eric above.

Now, not wishing to re-open old scar tissue but... when you, I and Ed were trying to resolve those problems with your club's projector, did we try turning mip-mapping on? I'm not suggesting it's a "magic bullet" but it seems it can work wonders in certain situations. Perhaps worth a try for you both?

regards,

Peter

Yes old scars........

When this thread started I was thinking about what Ed and I had been through....

Yes it might be worthwhile trying mip-mapping on the tests again with the problematic projector.

Posted

Considering my graphic card (Nvidia Geforce 9600 GS with latest driver) and my processor (Intel Core2 Quad CPU Q9300 @ 2.5Ghz), I am very surprised but it is jerky for me between slide #1 and #2... :huh::blink:

Posted

Hi Peter, the time to worry about power lines is when they are down on the ground, and our heat and computers aren't working.

Best regards, Gayland

Den,

Thanks. I'm not sure whether Eric's comment about the lines was to do with apparent shimmer in them or more to do with them being visually intrusive in the landscape. My own view on this latter aspect is that they are there and so I have to work with them. I'm prepared to bet that they helped Photoshop do the panorama merge!

regards,

Peter

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