Considering the young age of the company, the breadth of content Jaunt have managed to accumulate in such a short period of time is quite extraordinary. We’ve already covered Jaunt’s Premiere with Paul McCartney’s Live and Let Die, followed subequently by Kaiju Fury, The Mission and Black Mass. All spanning a wide collection of genres, all exploring different aspects of this promising new format.
Now, Jaunt have released a further four experiences and continue the trend of covering as much creative and technical ground as possible. As before, the new videos are all captured with Jaunt’s proprietary camera and audio technology then stitched together and packaged using systems and techniques developed in-house.
All new experiences are now available on the Android OS via Google’s Play Store, designed to be experienced via the seemingly ubiquitous Google Cardboard VR viewer platform. You can also download all of them (bar Jack White’s Third-D) on Windows and Mac, viewable via an Oculus Rift VR headset. All of this content is free to download.
When launched, the ‘viewer’ apps download copies of the videos in question and launch Jaunt’s 360 degree stereoscopic viewer which uses your phone’s onboard accelerometers to present you with a view of the action based on your head movement and direction.
The Hobbit VR Experience
It’s a video that’s probably of most interest to fans of Jackson’s epic series of LOTR movies. If nothing else, having the opportunity to effectively stand ‘on set’ whilst in the shire is an intriguing prospect.
Jack White: Third-D
As with Jaunt’s inaugural release, the two-camera recording of an electric live performance remains enticing, although this recording is disconcertingly focussed on the audience and the rear / side of the band’s performance. This does however allow some of the scale from the venues on show here to be illustrated. As for the music, well it’ll depend on whether you’re a fan or not. I can however report that the positional audio recording itself is very effective.
R5
ELLE
It’s impressive to witness how much content Jaunt has already managed to capture in its short lifespan, largely keeping the lid on what’s to come. At present, we’re only given access to these very short tastes of what Jaunt has in its vaults and it’s not yet clear whether Jaunt will opt for monetising bitesize experiences such as these or if they’ll also distribute full-length recordings too.
Either way, we’re looking forward to finding out what’s to come next from Jaunt’s 360 video vault.