Consumer ready 360° cameras are becoming ever more accessible and many people are experimenting with a variety of 360° content. Out of the many cameras on the market the Ricoh Theta S is one of the most user-friendly, turn-key solutions with lots of built-in features. However, the camera's videos are limited 1920x960 resolution and the Theta+ app only lets you create a timelapse with up to 300 or 400 images. The workaround is to use interval shooting to capture as many images as you'd like at the 5376x2688 to full resolution and then stitch them together manually into an HD video. There are few GUI solutions (especially open-source/free) which let you do this with ease. Here's how you do it:
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#!/bin/bash | |
# LibreOffice headless server script | |
# | |
# chkconfig: 2345 80 30 | |
# description: headless openoffice server script | |
# processname: libreoffice | |
# | |
# Author: Vic Vijayakumar | |
# Modified by Federico Ch. Tomasczik | |
# and then by Mark Pavlichuk |
If you created your key pair using AWS, you can use the OpenSSL tools to generate a fingerprint as follows:
$ openssl pkcs8 -in path_to_private_key -inform PEM -outform DER -topk8 -nocrypt | openssl sha1 -c
If you created a key pair using a third-party tool and uploaded the public key to AWS, you can use the OpenSSL tools to generate the fingerprint as follows:
$ openssl rsa -in path_to_private_key -pubout -outform DER | openssl md5 -c