Space Station To Get HD Streaming Video Camera 50
superglaze writes "A high-definition streaming video camera is to be installed on the International Space Station within a year. Built in the UK, the camera will hopefully provide a Google Earth-quality view on our planet, and the stream will be viewable — complete with zooming and panning capabilities — on the web."
Zooming and panning? (Score:1)
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Float a Trojan coffee pot [wikipedia.org] outside the station and watch as astronauts play snap dragon with the icy cold of space... all for a fresh cup of piping hot Java.
The advertisements will just roll in.
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"So how do you actually make the money needed to make it viable in the long term?"
There will be plenty of repeat views, I'd think. Any time there's a flood/tsunami/volcanic ash cloud/other large-scale natural phenomenon, their problem is more likely to be keeping up with demand than anything else. Plenty of ad revenue.
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I think there may be a couple large companies that provide Internet satellite views and maps that may be willing to compete for paying for the output of such a device.
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donations?
Al Gore proposed a satellite to do this in 1990s (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Al Gore proposed a satellite to do this in 1990 (Score:5, Interesting)
Too expensive said NASA.
But they built it anyway, and it sits in storage because no one has a launch plan.
Aka the Triana although the official marketing name was the DSCOVR
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_Space_Climate_Observatory [wikipedia.org]
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I remember talk of this in my section/branch at Goddard. Do you know which group actually designed/built it? I left in '97, but I remember grumbled comments about Gore's satellite with an HD feed, intended to sit at the L1 point. We built many small explorer satellites for expendable rockets and payload groups for shuttle flights.
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That thing might never see space. Your tax dollars at work, folks.
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because no one has a launch plan.
Here it is: give it to Space-X. They need to prove their mettle at high altitudes and storing the satellite is costing money.
Charge whatever an IMAX-3D movie costs at the time for 15 seconds of satellite time (manage the details ahead of time in a queue set up on a website). Give the JPEG as a novelty birthday gift, merchandise the pictures with Zazzle, etc.
Space-X and NASA can split the revenue. Break-even in about 3-5 years, depending on how big a team is needed to mana
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They must of priced it using those monster HD cables rated for space.
Cool (Score:2)
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Is that spacing out?
panning and zooming (Score:5, Interesting)
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I'm on record for calling 'shotgun'.
so, after me, you guys can all fight over the controls.
Re:panning and zooming (Score:5, Funny)
I'm on record for calling 'shotgun'.
Excellent. You can sit next to me [wikipedia.org] while I drive the controls.
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And how are they going to handle multiple viewers wanting to operate the camera at the same time?
I'd say they mean we can manipulate the image down here, but the camera is static. Kinda like digital zoom and optical zoom. If we can actually control the camera through the web, I'd guess they draw a few people a day from a pool of registered users and allow them to control the camera for 30 seconds or something of the sort.
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I didn't RTFA but the solution is simple: Use a high-res camera (4K maybe?), put a wide angle lens on it, and have a server listen in on the signal and send only the small chunk the user is requesting.
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No Worries. Google already figured it out.
I mean, Im already able to zoom in the satellite cameras for Google Earth.
Whats that? software? digital image?
Enough with your crazy techno babel!
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More Space Cameras! (Score:1)
just... (Score:2)
point it right at the sun. Easy way to break what will turn out to be a multi-million dollar venture. Just don't send me the bill.
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I wonder how many "Prohibited" areas will be input into the cameras control software.
Zero. This is for orbital views, it doesn't have a super zoom lens.
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I read that too, but it isn't qualified as 'extreme zoom' anywhere. If they're saying 'Google Earth-like' instead of saying "meters per pixel", they're saying it's not that exciting.
I would rather see (Score:2)
Resolution (Score:1)
Hidden cost... (Score:1)
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