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riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
AndyDufresne wrote:puppydog85 wrote:Andy (or anyone else),
Pardon my ignorance but why black and white? How much did they spend on those things? What about an auto-focus? Or is there some reason that makes that really hard to get on mars (like costing 3B instead of 1B or whatever they spent)?
The images you've been seeing initially aren't from the main color imaging camera and video. They are primarily from 'Hazard Cams' which are more geared for simply keeping the Rover safe and evaluating where it is in the environment. Think of them kind of like the rear view and side mirrors in a car, and not the windshield which gives you a bigger and more detailed view. The main camera I think is (or will be soon) up an running, and at the point color photos with high resolution will be made available by the Rover.
Additionally, the Rover first usually sends small thumbnails (since they are small in data size and can be sent more quickly), and then slightly better resolution, and then full resolution big photos.
I'll post some more photo and video updates perhaps later today after this afternoon's news conference!
--Andy
ender516 wrote:I hope that Curiosity can extend itself beyond its planned two year (668 sols, to be exact, or essentially one Martian solar year) mission as successfully as Spirit did (21.6 times as long as its original 90-sol plan) and Opportunity is doing (over thirty times and counting). [A Sol is a Martian solar day, which is 24 hours, 39 minutes, and 35.244 seconds in length, on average.]
Nola_Lifer wrote:That is actually pretty bad ass.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Where's Martian Marx when you need him?
thegreekdog wrote:Ironically (because I didn't start reading it because of the Mars mission), I'm reading Stranger in a Strange Land. I was skeptical (I liked Starship Troopers, but not that much), but the book is fantastic.
thegreekdog wrote:Ironically (because I didn't start reading it because of the Mars mission), I'm reading Stranger in a Strange Land. I was skeptical (I liked Starship Troopers, but not that much), but the book is fantastic.
BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Ironically (because I didn't start reading it because of the Mars mission), I'm reading Stranger in a Strange Land. I was skeptical (I liked Starship Troopers, but not that much), but the book is fantastic.
That's good to hear. Three pages in, it seemed too prosaic, but maybe I'll give it whirl sometime.
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