Tom wrote:
The file extension is .mov after it runs the panorama. Wouldn't that make it a movie.
Alas, no. QuickTime uses .mov for its files...which include movies (sequences of frames) and VR panoramas (a single, specially generated image).
When you complete the rendering of your VR, the image that you see on your screen (scroll around to see it all) is what QT reads to allow you to look around inside a space. You'll notice that the ends would line up with one another if wrapped.
Single image = use jpeg. The other compressors are animations. But, as several over the years have suggested here as a tip: you might be better saving even an animation as a sequence of uncompressed stills, and then use QT Pro to generate the movie from the stills. That allows you to render only once, and then experiment with compression schemes to get one that is satisfactory in terms of space/quality, and/or to render once and from the same images produce one animation for web viewing and another for higher quality viewing from a CD, e.g..
Have fun,
Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 28 USA and earlier • macOS Sonoma 14.7.1, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB