![]() It works great in a browser and also has a VR mode if you have Daydream or something like that. It lets you do guided tours with all your friends where you can all talk via built in audio and see what they are looking at, or unguided walkthroughs for single users. So from earlier- What's SuperViz? Glad you asked! It's awesome new app I discovered for creating virtual tours that I like even better than Google Virtual Tour Creator. So that's why I made this post- hopefully it will help someone in a similar situation! At first I spent a lot of time looking for GIMP batch processors as well, but none of them were quite what I needed or were out of date with the latest version. It took a lot more work than I thought it should to cobble together the right set of batch commands and FOR loops from dozens of ImageMagick forum posts and StackOverflow pages to make this batch process happen cleanly the way I wanted. ![]() ![]() (optional) "%%~i" \ ::File name we're working with -gravity center \ ::Center the image within the new canvas -background black \ ::Set the edge padding / pad to black (optional, you can use any color you want, ImageMagick accepts a lot of options) -extent 0x!width! \ ::Set the canvas size to exactly the width of the current file x the variable 'width' that was calculated earlier "converted\%%~i")) \ ::Output to a folder called 'converted\' with the current filename ![]() monitor \ ::Monitor tells it to output the current progress of the job it's running. Setlocal enabledelayedexpansion ::Lets the 2 two FOR loops not conflict off ::Hides commands in CMD prompt as they are running so it doesn't clutter the window with text we don't want for %%i in (*.JPG) do ( ::For each 'i' File in the folder that ends with *.JPG, do the following: for /f %%a in ('identify -format %%w "%%~i"') do ( ::For the current file, use variable 'a', then identify the width of the current file's dimensions, and store it in 'a' set /A width=%%~a /2 :: Set and calculate the variable 'width' based on variable 'a' divided by 2 echo "%%~i" !width! ::This is just a friendly text output to tell you what file it's working on and what width it will be using ::Now the ImageMagick- convert \ ::Convert is an ImageMagick command. ![]()
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