Research
Security News
Quasar RAT Disguised as an npm Package for Detecting Vulnerabilities in Ethereum Smart Contracts
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
photo-sphere-viewer
Advanced tools
Photo Sphere Viewer is a JavaScript library that allows you to display 360×180 degrees panoramas on any web page. Panoramas must use the equirectangular projection and can be taken with the Google Camera, the Ricoh Theta or any 360° camera.
Forked from JeremyHeleine/Photo-Sphere-Viewer.
$ bower install Photo-Sphere-Viewer
$ npm install photo-sphere-viewer
Photo Sphere Viewer is available on jsDelivr and unpkg
apt-get install nodejs-legacy npm
apt-get install ruby-dev
npm install -g grunt-cli
npm install -g bower
gem install sass
Install Node and Bower dependencies npm install & bower install
then run grunt
in the root directory to generate production files inside dist
.
grunt test
to run jshint/jscs/scsslint.grunt serve
to open the example page with automatic build and livereload.grunt jsdoc
to generate the documentation.This library is available under the MIT license.
FAQs
A JavaScript library to display Photo Sphere panoramas
The npm package photo-sphere-viewer receives a total of 1,492 weekly downloads. As such, photo-sphere-viewer popularity was classified as popular.
We found that photo-sphere-viewer demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncover a malicious npm package posing as a tool for detecting vulnerabilities in Etherium smart contracts.
Security News
Research
A supply chain attack on Rspack's npm packages injected cryptomining malware, potentially impacting thousands of developers.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers discovered a malware campaign on npm delivering the Skuld infostealer via typosquatted packages, exposing sensitive data.