CubicNavigator - 1.0.5browser / presentation program for panoramic VR |
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Feedback Summary:
| Version 1.0.5: | |||||
| Overall Rating: | Not rated (0.0) | Features: | Not rated (0.0) | Support: | Not rated (0.0) |
| Ease of Use: | Not rated (0.0) | Quality / Stability: | Not rated (0.0) | Price: | Not rated (0.0) |
Key to Types of Feedback:
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Featured Reviews
this App Rocks! 



- Version: 1.0.4, 3/10/2005 06:44AM PST
acer4x
Viewing QTVR is awesome and CubicNavigator makes it doubley awesome by taking it to the next level - ultra smooth panning. What a treat to look at all the beautiful VR's the developer has bookmarked for us. Bookmark your own favorites!
This is a real gem and the developer is very responsive and proactive. Try it (even if you think you don't need it) and see for yourself what fun this is.
And yes, if you make 360 vr's this is a must have for testing your equirectangular images prior to assembling.
eg
This is a real gem and the developer is very responsive and proactive. Try it (even if you think you don't need it) and see for yourself what fun this is.
And yes, if you make 360 vr's this is a must have for testing your equirectangular images prior to assembling.
eg
Workflow Enhancer 



- Version: 1.0.3, 2/24/2005 02:10PM PST
hueco
Apart from the incredible OpenGL'ed browser aspects of CubicNavigator, it serves a purpose in the standard VR panorama workflow. Flattened equirectangular images can be drag/dropped to preview as a fullscreen cubic QTVR before committing to final edits and conversion to cube faces (see the developer's CubicConverter app). It also opens up for smooth viewing of truly high resolution VR panoramas. The budding integration with tours produced by CubicConnector, another one of the developer's apps, looks very promising for big wow-factor presentations. The 3D tilting of the map and the angle-of-view cones, all canned effects, already appear impressive. I am frankly amazed at how this small(?) Australian developer showed Apple how VR can be done. Respect. The $20 price redefines the term "bargain."
I'm trying to create a virtual reality enviornment for the Mac for my clients. I'm a speech coach, I work with clients to learn how to control the fear of speaking. I'd like to create a VR experience for them, presenting in front of a group. My firm had created this solution in 1995 on a PC. but that developer is loooong gone, way before I joined the company. Anyone know of a mac solution for this?
thanks
ethan-
ebecker@mac.com