5/24/2023 0 Comments Red blue 3d![]() You can fine-tune the anaglyph image separation by clicking and dragging left or right in the top image, aligning the red-blue pair so that they match up when viewed through the red-blue glasses. Or, with the mouse cursor in the top half of the program window, click on “S” to bring up a search window that lets you zoom to a desired location, like the Grand Canyon: Moving the mouse cursor to either bottom view, you can then use standard Google Earth plugin keyboard/mouse commands to zoom to your desired location. ![]() The bottom two views are Google Earth plugins showing the left and right view the top view is the blended anaglyph. ![]() Open up the app, and you’ll see three globe views: Horst Blaesig pointed me to a stand-alone app called Stereo GE Browser that goes one step further – it also can create a 3D anaglyph, a blending of the two views that can be seen in 3D using standard red-blue 3D glasses. By crossing your eyes sufficiently to get the two images to blend together, you get a 3D view, possibly accompanied by a headache. Last week, as part of a post on sample Google Earth plugins apps, I linked to an application called Stereo that generates a stereo image pair of Google Earth views.
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