
- #UPLOAD GOOGLE PHOTOSPHERE ON FACEBOOK PC#
- #UPLOAD GOOGLE PHOTOSPHERE ON FACEBOOK TV#
- #UPLOAD GOOGLE PHOTOSPHERE ON FACEBOOK DOWNLOAD#
I hunted online and found the following information.Īny photosphere you take on your own phone should work and just automatically show up. In preparation for our hackerspace getting some cardboard vr kits from Instructables I started dabbling with how it loaded photospheres.
#UPLOAD GOOGLE PHOTOSPHERE ON FACEBOOK DOWNLOAD#
Then once you have the panoramas, you need to get them to your phone, you can transfer them to a folder via usb, you can email them to yourself and save them on the phone, you can find them via apps like sphereshare app, and download them (may require paid version)

You are welcome to snag some I've collected, only about 1/3 are my own photos, so if you own the rights to any of them and want me to take them down, just let me know. Some of them are as easy as right clicking and downloading, some are trickier, (not the time or place to go into stealing images if you can't find it out in the open to download, consider finding/writing the creator to ask for a copy.) you can find them on websites like, Some of of my favorites were of a panorama stitched from one of the moon landings, and a selfie done by the mars rover (with an edited in amazing sky. you can find them on google+ you can find them on google image searches. It would be nice if Oculus had native support for MPOs, but this appears not to be the case.There are lots of ways to get 360 degree panoramic images.
#UPLOAD GOOGLE PHOTOSPHERE ON FACEBOOK PC#
Note that there is also a free StereoPhoto Maker (stphmkre) application for PC by the same company that can be used to edit your 3D photos or create 3D photos from individual side-by-side photos. The 3D AVI files can be edited and exported as side-by-side video files with the free StereoMovie Maker app for PC (stvmkre), and these side-by-side files can be viewed on Pigusus. The Pigusus app will not directly play the 3D AVI Video files created by the Fujifilm camera, however, there is a workaround. The Pigusus app is not free, but it is inexpensive (currently under $10). It will also view any side-by-side images you may have. The Pigusus VR Media Player app for the Oculus will view these photos in the native MPO format without having to convert them to side-by-side images, and is very convenient for going through a file of 3D MPO images and viewing them as you would work through a file of 2D images on a PC. I have a Fujifilm Finepix Real 3D camera which takes pictures as MPO files (as does the iPhone 3D Photo app). Choose the 360 or 180 option, and you should get a decent VR effect on your photos. It may just say "2D", or it may show a list of options. If the image does not start in "VR mode", click the "A" button to open the overlay menu, and find the option to change how the photo is rendered. It may take a few moments, but your downloaded photos should appear there shortly.ħ.
#UPLOAD GOOGLE PHOTOSPHERE ON FACEBOOK TV#
Hit the Oculus button and switch from the browser to the built-in TV app.Ħ. Repeat step 3 for any/all images you want to view in VR.ĥ.

Find a Photosphere or panorama image. Click "download".Ĥ. Fire up the built-in browser on the Quest 2, and go to (you will have to sign in)ģ. Set your phone up to automatically back up your photos to Google Photos (other online photo services should also work, in theory)Ģ. I tested this approach with 360 "Photosphere" images from my Pixel phone, as well as "3x3 Panorama" images from my Osmo pocket. As of firmware version 23, I was able to get this working well enough to have fun with it.
