![]() Once you save the tour and publish it, you can share a link or embed it on your blog, social media feed, or website, just like you would a YouTube video. Or if you're doing a virtual tour of your hotel, a swimming pool could be a point of interest, and the pop-up info tab could tell visitors what hours the pool is open. This would be useful for, say, adding descriptions to museum exhibits. One feature I did appreciate was one called "Points of Interest." You just click the button to add one, select its location, and type its label and description. ![]() If you don't have a 360-degree camera and want an image that's not in Google Street View, and you can't find one with the license terms you need online, Google also has a free app that lets you take 360-degree photos with just your regular phone, called Cardboard Camera, available for both Android and iPhones. ![]() Or - and this is the cool part - any Google Street View location.įor example, here is a 360-degree Google Street View image of the Quabbin Reservoir in Western Massachusetts, where I live. That could be photos that you take with your own phone or 360-degree camera or find online. You start with collecting some 360-degree content. Now, Google has released its own take on virtual tours, Google's Tour Creator, and it's completely free, ridiculously easy to use, and works on all platforms - regular web browsers, all mobile phones and tablets and any of the major virtual reality headsets as long as they can open a web page.Ĭreating a virtual tour is free and works on mobile devices and web browsers GearBrain
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