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Microsoft Image Composite Editor 2 released

Microsoft's Image Composite Editor received great reviews when the company released it back in 2008.

It was released as a Microsoft Research project back then allowing users to create panoramic images by stitching together multiple photos of the same scene.

All of that was handled automatically by the program which made it very comfortable to use especially since results looked great most of the time.

Almost seven years later, Image Composite Editor 2 has been released. The program is available for supported 32-bit or 64-bit versions of the Microsoft Windows operating system.

Its basic purpose remained the same: combine overlapping photos from a single camera location into a single image that combines the original images seamlessly.

Image Composite Editor 2 ships with several new features that improve the process further. The top feature of the release is without doubt auto-completion which you can use to fill in missing pixels when creating panoramas.

Your only option before was to crop the image so that these missing pixels would not show up in the end result. With auto-complete, you can have ICE fill these spots so that you don't have to crop as much from the photo as before.

The process itself is still straightforward.

1. Select at least two images depicting the same scene.

microsoft image composite editor

2. Wait for the program to analyze the photos that you have added and compose a resulting image.

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3. Crop the resulting image in the third step. You can use the auto-complete feature here to have ICE fill out blank spots automatically. Other options are to auto-crop the image and to manually crop it.

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4. Export the created panoramic image to the local disc or to the Photosynth online service.

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Image Composite Editor supports videos as well and can create panoramas from video files that you load into the program. The feature has been available for some time though and is not new in version 2 of the application.

The latest version of the editor supports new projections. The stereographic projection allows you to turn a 360 degree panorama into a little planet image which also supports auto-completion and cropping.

Take a look at the demo video that Microsoft created for the release.

As far as features are concerned, there are more to explore. ICE supports RAW images for example and has no size limitations according to Microsoft which means that you can use it to create Gigapixel panoramas.Image Composite Editor is an excellent program for Windows that is easy to use and very powerful at the same time.

This article was first seen on ComTek's "TekBits" Technology News

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