As reported on Engadget.
By Michael Gorman
Video chats have become quite popular these days, whether you’re using Facetime,Skype or are attending a Google Hangout. One problem with those platforms is that they provide a limited field of view and that view is static for attendees. PanaCast solves that problem with some unique hardware and software that provides a 200 degree FOV and a virtualized camera for each viewer. Its camera has six imagers, an SoC with dual ARM11 cores and a custom-built multi-imaging video processor (MIVP), along with an Ethernet port and a USB 2.0 port.
The MIVP, with an assist from some custom firmware, stitches all of the input images together to form a single 2700 x 540 video stream. That feed has enterprise-grade encryption and can run at up to 60fps over faster connections, but streams lower framerates over 3G as well. It works over the open internet and streams using a high-speed codec developed by Cavium Networks that needs only 350kb of bandwidth to function. After you’re done perusing our gallery below, join us after the break to learn more about how the PanaCast system works.
To join a video conference, users need only download the PanaCast app and scan the QR code or tap their phones on the NFC-enabled camera to join. Once you’re in, you can swipe from side to side to see the full 200-degree FOV, and navigate among multiple locations if you’ve joined more than one conference. We briefly got to use PanaCast and found its wide-angle FOV a great improvement over standard video chat experiences. The app’s simple and intuitive to use, but the video froze several times on us and was pixelated at times during our brief experience. However, a second demo we witnessed onstage here at DEMO Mobile in SF went smoothly. Currently the app is iOS only, but it was written in Ubuntu Linux, and Android, OSX and Windows 7 and 8 versions are in the works. The camera can be had for $599, and while it’s compatible with existing video chat services, it’ll cost $19 per month per concurrent user if you want access to PanaCast’s cloud platform.