Correct. I don't want them to be distorted by the plugin. They are narrow vertical field of view panos in most cases, where sphere and cylinder are not that different, and they have already been projected by the pano stitcher the way I want people to view them. I want them to be able to see the full 360 at once if they zoom out (as they do on my web site already, and on gigapan and other sites.) I want them to be able to zoom in, and pan around in a complete circle, and even if they have a widescreen window, I don't want the left and right sides massively stretched and distorted as they are by default in krpano when the window is wide.
If you shoot a pano with a high vertical field, ie. a sphere (which is the most complete form of a spherically projected pano, but you can still have a spherically projected pano which is only 20 degrees high) then you need to do some projection in the viewer. Otherwise, I don't believe you want it. At least I don't want it.
So far I have been playing around and don't see how to get the program to show my 360 degree (by 20 to 50 degrees in height) panos the way I am looking for. No projection, but able to zoom and pan around with the two ends joined so you can keep going in circles. And zooming out to see the full 360 degrees -- krpano seems to only show at most 180 degrees of the pano, and it either turns the sides into something uselessly stretched when it does this, or in fisheye mode looks better but still not good.
I have been able to make it work with hfov=1 and a few other settings, but then the two ends don't join for circular panning. If you zoom in so that the pano fits the height of the screen, the distortions become tolerable and you can spin around, but why distort at all?
For example if you look at the first pano on
http://pic.templetons.com/brad/pano/alberta.html you see one of my sphericals. In the thumbnail it looks just fine and if you click on it you see the large jpg I am using until I make krpano live. This is a partial pano, spherical, but 195 degrees wide and 81 degrees high (40 up and 40 down.) It looks great in the form you see, but put it into krpano in spherical mode, and it looks like crap. This one is not a 360 but there is no reason it could not be. It's a spherical, but unlike a sphere, it's 81 degrees high, not 180.