You can use Coram's dewarping feature to correct fisheye camera distortion. To learn more about fisheye dewarping, refer to Dewarping for Fisheye Cameras.
Start by configuring the default dewarping setting for a camera in the camera's settings menu. To learn more, refer to Configuring Default Dewarping Settings for your Cameras.
You can then access the dewarped view from the camera's Timeline view, where you can also quickly switch between different dewarping settings.
Note: Selecting a dewarping setting from a camera's Timeline view does not permanently change the camera's default dewarping setting. When you navigate away from a camera's timeline view, the default dewarping setting is restored automatically.
Default View
Allows you to view the camera without any dewarping, showing the full 360-degree field of view in its native circular format. Useful for quickly assessing the entire area captured by the camera, and allows you to see the unaltered image for full context or when dewarping is not necessary.
Perspective View
Allows you to interactively navigate the 360-degree view using your mouse or touchscreen, similar to a virtual pan-tilt-zoom (PTZ) camera. Ideal for focusing on specific areas within the wide field of view.
Tip: Click and drag within the video frame to look around the scene, and use scroll or pinch gestures to zoom in and out.
Four Cut View
Displays four distinct views in a 2x2 grid, each showing a different angle or section of the overall scene. Useful for monitoring multiple areas simultaneously from a single view.
Tip: Each quadrant displays a different angle; click on any quadrant to enlarge it.
Panoramic View
Provides a flattened, 180-degree panoramic image of the scene. Best for getting an overall, uninterrupted view of the environment.
Tip: Click and drag within the video frame to look around the scene, and use scroll or pinch gestures to zoom in and out.
Video Demonstration of Dewarping in the Timeline Page
A short video that shows how to enable and interact with different dewarping settings: