Hello everyone!
I am currently trying to brainstorm other ideas for re-creating a VR Tour assignment. For the last couple years, some professors at the college I work at do VR Tour assignments that involve 360 images, creating some type of walking route, and then annotating the images. If you want to see an example of the assignment and instructions - this StoryMap has the full instructions with an example.
It doesn't have to be super fancy - just a walking effect and adding a marker that contains 1-3 sentences at the most - but it's a really nice assignment for beginner users. The most common use for it is the language courses who use it as a sightseeing tour presentation.
We use Street View Download 360 to obtain the photos from Google Maps (that's the easy part) and then uploaded them to Thinglink for annotation. Except in April, Thinglink finally changed their free account to be a trial account. It used to be that you could use it as long as you were okay with everything being public only, but they finally decided to end that for the free account, which has put us in a bit of a bind.
In a nutshell, this is what I'm trying to replicate:
My initial thought is as long as I can create the VR photos, I can embed them into StoryMaps (maybe into a sidecar) and as users scroll they can see text content and still have the interactive 360 photo.
Any advice is welcome, or if someone does a similar assignment I would love to hear about it!
Hi @SaraJL, I'm interested in exploring how my firm's 360 photo tools for ArcGIS could support your students. You can find more information about our tools here: Nodeology Site Viewer 360 for ArcGIS and on the Esri Marketplace.
Nodeology specializes in developing 360° photo and video ArcGIS Experience Builder widgets. These are designed for seamless integration of extensive imagery into ArcGIS Enterprise and Online. Our solutions are user-friendly and highly customizable, enabling ArcGIS users to incorporate immersive 360° imagery effectively with their ArcGIS data.
I have looked into Nodeology, but unfortunately it is a paid service! It would be too expensive for us to have to purchase any more programs on top of our current ESRI education license. I'm specifically looking for a tool that has a free account version (probably very limited for tools, but as long as we can upload and embed photos, that's all I care about) that doesn't have a trial cut-off date.
It does look like a cool program though!