NASA to Digitize its 50 Years of Photos and Films
Lucas123 writes "Putting the images and film online will allow NASA to more easily share and showcase its achievements, including photos from its
Mars rover missions and from its manned and unmanned voyages to the Moon and beyond, according to Computerworld's Todd Weiss. Much of NASA's archived photos and film is currently divided up into more than 20 different imagery categories, making it hard to find specific images or archives unless a user knows exactly where it is. "Much of what is in the collection may be surprising when it is released," according to NASA spokesman Bob Jacobs."
Sounds like a good investment in marketing, an attempt to please the public so there will be more interest in NASA and more funding. Will it work?
Procrastination -- because good things come to those who wait.
It's nice to see something positive about NASA, I expect they're still fighting pretty hard to remain relevant to the US taxpayer. Furthermore, the whole "drunken astronauts" debacle didn't show them off in a good light. NASA is, of course, a huge financial black hole (sorry) in itself, but the spin-off products work their way into consumer sectors, so it's important that funding continues. With enough strains on the US government (sub-prime morgages leading to market damage, the odd war here and there) it will be harder than ever to justify something like this with few immediate results.
The first time NASA scanned a bunch of old chromes they used Kodak's HR-500 scanner. I got in on the end of that, after all the work had been done and (unfortunately for the world) after all the images had been rendered to 8-bit JPG/tiff files.
I'd hope the contacts I put in place could talk to each other and do it right (extended bit depth scanning, custom raw image processing) but since my old group at Kodak has been gutted to 1 person (a supervisor with no direct reports) and the building that housed all the scanning knowledge and equipment is being torn down... I somehow doubt it.
Once again, the world loses out in terms of better images holding more information.
Not that I don't think NASA will do their best- they just didn't have access to the kinds of equipment and the low-level software interface to allow the levels of high precision I'm talking about.
NASA should collect some hilights of its collection and distribute them on DVD to every American. They should mail out a little book with color photos and URLs, with a DVD of what Americans pay NASA to do.
They should hire some people from AOL with the experience in those mass disc mailings. To reduce waste, NASA should include a return envelope with return postage for people who don't want it. And once the DVDs are distributed, NASA should show a TV series on PBS featuring some DVD content along with other material only shown on the TV premiere. Then NASA should sell additional content, including the TV show.
Even if NASA spends as much as AOL spends to spam us with discs, it will be worth every penny. Americans love NASA when we see it on out TVs. It's consistently among the most valued and inspiring government programmes. It's always giving us "free science" that's consistently improving our lives. If NASA just put more of that inspiration in our hands, it wouldn't have to scrape for cash and whore itself to non-science agencies nearly as much.
We deserve NASA. And NASA deserves our appreciation. If it just got sexed up a little more, especially now that shuttle launches are infrequent, winding down, and so often dramas of failure, packaging the science in handy consumer toys would reconnect us with some of our greatest successes.
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make install -not war
You've got it all wrong, man. The Americans went to the moon, right. But they were beaten by the Nazis. They got up there and found Adolf and his third Reich buddies who shot Kennedy from behind the knoll.
bomb the us up set someone
I don't suppose the engineering geeks among us will now get to see and search through online the complete Mercury, Gemini, Saturn V, etc. blueprints hidden away in physical archives? I expect that sort of material doesn't qualify for what they're doing now but it would be really nice to have that information preserved electronically and publicly. Especially the Saturn V - that's probably as close as modern civilization will ever get to something like pyramid building. Right now, if the records are still in reasonable condition, we could preserve the details for posterity. While we're at it, I don't suppose the Russian government still has the blueprints for the N-1 lying around?
:-). If we can't go to the moon for real at least we can try simulating it.
How about a nerd project to take the BRL-CAD system, and try re-creating a Saturn V in it from blueprints?
"I object to doing things that computers can do." -- Olin Shivers, lispers.org
Why aren't they digitalized already? NASA of all people should have the money and technology to digitalized everything they have produced in their lifetime. Computers have been around a while, its what got us up into space (take it we have more powerful calculators than those computers......). I can understand older photographs and films being on film but shouldn't newer photos be all digital anyways?
God Of War ^^
Try these links-
m aging
. html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_dynamic_range_i
A very good one here - the original authority on the matter-
http://www.debevec.org/Research/HDR/
Some technical research (with good examples and clips)
http://www.anyhere.com/gward/hdrenc/hdr_encodings
Does that help? Probably should have included it in my earlier post.
I hope so. I would love it if they put them out on DVD with a commentary track by the director, actors, and the SFX guy.
09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 is the magic number.
Does this mean they will also digitize the lost moon tapes?
"Much of NASA's archived photos and film is currently divided up into more than 20 different imagery categories"
1. Things we know are lost.
.....
2. Things we know we had, but don't realize are lost.
3. Things we forgot we had, and don't realize are lost.
20. Various snapshots of the Blastoff-eve party (redacted).
I eagerly await the arrival of either the Hulk or godzilla.
"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
Because most American homes don't have BitTorrent, or broadband connections, or the savvy to use BitTorrent.
That's tantamount to saying that the Slashdot demographic is wildly out of synch with most of America! ;-)
Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
We're all hypocrites. We all have hidden parts, it's the contrast between them that make us more a hypocrite than others
Digitized into what multi-media format, at what bit depth and resolution, and is it a lossy or non-lossy compression?
Digital media formats are not nearly as "standardized" as you would seem to indicate here, and such multimedia computers have not "been around a while". Certainly not the computers that "got us up into space".
In addition, even those photos which were originally done as digitized data (aka the interplanetary space probes) have all had virtually incompatible file formats from even each other, much less even from traditional web media formats like PNG, GIF, or JPEG.
On top of all of this is the sheer volume of data available that can be digitized and made available. We are not talking just a couple hundred photos here that tend to hit the cover of National Geographic, but literally millions of photos. Earth observation photos bring in tens of thousands of photos each day on just a single satellite.
Even now, I question the ability of digital cameras to capture the saturation, dynamic color depth, resolution, and other optical characteristics found with analog film. Certainly digital cameras are getting better and better, but there is room for improvement well beyond what exists even now. Over time, digital cameras may be even superior to analog photographic techniques in most situations, but it won't get rid of all of the problems.
In short, I think that you have trivialized some very real and tough problems here involved with both cataloging as well as simply dititizing these photos, not to mention other multi-media data like audio and video.
I wonder just how and when NASA is going to digitize the missing Apollo 11 tapes. Should prove interesting, the methodology they plan to use for those!
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This should make it much easier for NASA to lose priceless historical data than having to lose hundreds of physical tapes. Losing all data will be just a reformat away now. They just have to remember to not back up which shouldn't be too hard.
Space Nazis are the most evil conspiracy ever! I blame them directly for the TV show big brother. pure evil!
Kids! Bringing about Armageddon can be dangerous. Do not attempt it in your home!
We've been some 2176 days since a terrorist attack on the mainland.
It's a big, big interconnected world, in which exists asymmetrical warfare and a news media that recruits for the terrorists.
So by not funding the war, we will probably lose money and nobody will care about space flight.
Insurance premiums will rise to cover the direct financial losses, oh and that dead citizens problem, since some people have life insurance. The gubmint will have to rescue incompetent airlines again. Whole companies of people will go out of business too, no matter where the government sticks its visible foot. And so on. Quite aside from the corpse issue, a successful terrorist attack on the United States mainland will economically affect almost everybody on the planet (*) and a few above it.
"Tears don't flow the same in space."
This war may well be less expensive than the alternative, lay-back-and-enjoy it posture.
[* the terrorists are shooting themselves in their shadowy feet. Imagine their ultimate victory. Where then would they get the explosives and refined metal to continue their glorious culture, when there is no civilization left to make them? Terrorism is less sustainable than any greed-driven evil multinational corporate globalist bogeyman ("Halliburton! Squawk! Halliburton! Want a cracker!") could ever be.]