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Even with the ISS travelling in orbit, it doesn't affect the movement of the shadow moving across the surface of the Earth. Amazing how swiftly it moved.While the Moon's shadow was over Houlton, Maine, NASA cut into it's live video the feed from the International Space Station.
Check out the Solar Eclipse seen from above.
Even with the ISS travelling in orbit, it doesn't affect the movement of the shadow moving across the surface of the Earth. Amazing how swiftly it moved.
Thanks for the post.
Looked like Marjorie Taylor Greene posting a Tweet!Looked like a scene from a sci-fi horror movie - The Spreading Menace!
I saw the national news last night, and they showed 350 couples getting married in Russellville, Arkansas (where several members of my immediate family live). I have a terrible feeling that the music that followed included Bad Moon Rising.The local news just showed people getting married under the eclipse.![]()
The glasses we had were so dark you couldn't see anything besides the sun. We were in our back yard looking over the roof and I could not see the roofline. I did see a crescent of the sun getting smaller and disappear to black, but didn't notice a corona or anything else. Everything was completely black through the glasses until a crescent of sun started to appear again. I did see what they were calling a diamond ring. When I removed the glasses to look about during the eclipse, it did get dark as night but I could see everything around as if it was a starlit night. I thought it would be darker like being in a closet with the door closed and no light. I didn't notice the temperature change, but I may just have not noticed. After all of the hoopla and fuss about the eclipse, I was underwhelmed.
I saw the national news last night, and they showed 350 couples getting married in Russellville, Arkansas (where several members of my immediate family live). I have a terrible feeling that the music that followed included Bad Moon Rising.
On a separate note, the news anchor and numerous reporters commented on the moment of totality (as it happened) making them speechless. They quite literally never stopped talking.
The glasses we had were so dark you couldn't see anything besides the sun. We were in our back yard looking over the roof and I could not see the roofline. I did see a crescent of the sun getting smaller and disappear to black, but didn't notice a corona or anything else. Everything was completely black through the glasses until a crescent of sun started to appear again. I did see what they were calling a diamond ring. When I removed the glasses to look about during the eclipse, it did get dark as night but I could see everything around as if it was a starlit night. I thought it would be darker like being in a closet with the door closed and no light. I didn't notice the temperature change, but I may just have not noticed. After all of the hoopla and fuss about the eclipse, I was underwhelmed.
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Don't care what anyone says, the best seat in the house was at my computer.
I find this kind of thinking troublesome.I think that's true about a lot of things/events. LOL
My mother and little brother used to watch videos of train rides prepared by travel agencies until I pointed out that the views they were drawn in by were filmed from a helicopter -- the passengers on the trains were seeing rocks and trees and the ugly backsides of buildings whizzing past their windows. LOL
Concerts are also a good example. YouTube puts you on the stage.![]()
), the number of rolls of file that ran through the processors that showed an almost black print with just a little 1/4 inch white streak in the middle. That was the picture fans took of their idol. And, enevitably, they would send us the negative for an enlarged reprint so they could see "Elvis's face"
A 35mm photographic negative only has so much emulsion; and, can only be enlarged so much before the resulting image blurs beyond all recognitionOn another site I'm on, people said the streetlights did infact come on during that short period of totality.Kahaih said:It doesn't have to be very dark to trigger daylight sensors on yard lights, streetlights, and car headlights. During a total eclipse, I'd expect a city to light up like it would at midnight.
What you are finding "troublesome" there is simply "humanity".I find this kind of thinking troublesome.
Would you really want to trade the intimacy and immediacy of a live performance from one of your favorite performers for sitting sedentary, bathed in the blue light of a digital image? It's like the people who go see the Pope when he comes to their city, their phones at arms length, recording, blocking their line of view. Then they go home and tell everyone they "saw" the Pope when all they saw was a tiny digital image.
Next thing you know they'll have computers that think, talk, make art and write novels.
We're moving further and further away from the things that make up the essence of what it is to be a living, sentient lifeform and I find that distasteful.
