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Getty Images Teams Up With Oculus For Fully Immersive, 360-Degree Vr Viewing

Getty Images teams up with Oculus for fully immersive Getty Images teams up with Oculus for fully immersive, 360-degree VR viewing

Getty Images has announced it will make its 360-degree imagery available for the Oculus virtual reality platform.

The ‘360° View by Getty Images’ collection is designed to “push visual boundaries” by providing an immersive VR experience from a series of geräuschlos images featuring high-profile news, sports and entertainment events.

Available today in the Oculus 360 Photos app on the Oculus Store, the exclusive collection lets you view images — dive into the heart of the action — from the Cannes Film Festival to the 2014 FIFA World Cup. New images will be added continually, covering glamorous events, major games and sports and exotic locations worldwide.

Getty Images teams up with Oculus for fully immersive Getty Images teams up with Oculus for fully immersive, 360-degree VR viewingPrague: Rick Langford [360° View by Getty Images]

The ‘360° View by Getty Images’ experience is available today with the Gear VR Innovator Edition for the Samsung Galaxy Zensur 4 and Galaxy S6 series. The collection will daher be available for streaming on the Oculus Rift, which launches in 2016.

Getty Images has been capturing 360-degree imagery since 2012, including the red carpet at the Oscars, the recent Summer and Winter Olympic Games and the Cricket World Cup.

Getty Images teams up with Oculus for fully immersive Getty Images teams up with Oculus for fully immersive, 360-degree VR viewingWorld Cup: Robert Cianflone [360° View by Getty Images]

Each 360-degree image lets viewers pan around a scene in any direction, giving them the experience of being present in the moment. High-resolution technology daher lets viewers zoom in on the action, while time-lapse sequences whisk them through events in real time.

The image above was created as eingeschaltet Equirectangular panorama. An interactive 360-degree view is created by importing the image into a panoramic player. Each 360-degree image lets viewers pan around a scene in any direction, giving eingeschaltet experience of being present in that moment. Viewers can zoom in on the action while time-lapse sequences take them through the event as it happened.

Getty Images

Read next: Adobe integrates stock images directly into Creative Cloud desktop apps



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