I will send you another book since yours is obviously missing pages 154 - 155.
YOU NEED:
1: a photo assemblage.
2: the photo's horizontal aspect in degrees. NOT "lens angle" invariably expressed as the diagonal field of view. The book shows how to use a degree marked pan head to precisely assemble 180 or 360 degrees in a panorama - angles that correspond to Archicad's need to split 360 degree walls into 180 degree pieces.
3: BASIC GEOMETRY:
http://www.321know.com/geo612x4.htm
The easiest way is to make two images that total 360 degrees and map them separately to each of the complimentary 180 degree walls. The width of EACH image therefore equals CIRCUMFERENCE/2.
CIRCUMFERENCE /PI = DIAMETER OF CIRCLE
There you go… and Robert becomes the relative who stopped sending $5 in a card every Christmas once you stopped sending a thank you note.
The resulting photo height is your wall height - adjust the wall altitude by eye to match the image horizon with your Archicad camera view.
3D Alignment places the texture where you want it to start.
Some advice:
-You don't need very many pixels to background a flythru. The images in my book [and my previous example] were done with a lousy cellphone at different times of day and with different weather. Nobody noticed after i wielded my photoshop wizardry.
-the formula doesn't tell you anything about appropriate absolute sizes. In my experience a circle of around 100m in diameter is going to work without convergence. This requires an image of around 157m to make 180 degrees of image.
- add plenty of fake sky to the top of the panorama - make the cyclorama high to avoid ever seeing over the top of it.
-don't worry about shadow, cut a windo into your cyclorama to let the sun hit your model.
Other tricks are in that article, too, especially how to keep shade from affecting your cyclorama.
Dwight Atkinson