Slashdot Mirror


HD Video From the Edge of Space, On the Cheap

SoundDoc75 links to a page describing the motivations and problem-solving behind "a 10-minute HD video taken on August 24th with a Canon Vixia HF20 HD camera suspended from a 1500g hydrogen balloon and launched near Edmonton, Alberta. This is the first known amateur video taken from this height — 107,145 feet."

8 of 205 comments (clear)

  1. How misleading! by celibate+for+life · · Score: 5, Funny

    The title made me think we had finally reached the outer edge of the Universe, where God lives!

  2. Re:First amateurs? Not quite! by intermodal · · Score: 5, Funny

    No, they're professional astronauts with a hobby. I was a professional fireman for years, and sometimes at night I played Pokemon. That doesn't make me a professional Pokemon Trainer.

    --
    In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  3. Re:Why is slashdot always behind like 2 weeks by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 5, Funny

    editors are cracksmoke

    And I'm glad. You see, this information comes from Edmonton. To get it to Slashdot, brave Canadian Voyageurs and their faithful Eskimo sidekicks must trek through millions of miles of frozen wastelands filled with polar bears, undead elk that thirst for dwarven blood, and the occasional crazed Frenchman. It is only the far and distant beacon of crack smoke billowing from the obsidian tower of Slashdot HQ that prevents them from getting lost in the soul-destroying wilds and eaten by madding tundra, a close cousin to the dread gazebo.

  4. Before the days of HD ... by Skapare · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... and memory cards, ham radio operators did this one in 1989, which was just standard definition, but it went further (from Illinois to nearly Indianapolis) and higher. It just transmitted the signal back via the UHF transmitter on board.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  5. Re:There's a reason this doesn't happen often by joggle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's a shame they didn't put some gyros and a free mount to get better video. If you're going to bother buying a new HD video camera, fly from Japan to Canada and (presumably) help pay for this balloon launch it seems it would have been worth it to put at least one gyro on there. It would have added to the weight (both due to the gyro and due to the extra batteries needed to power it), but it would have dramatically improved the video quality.

    (I'm not referring to expensive professional, bulky gyro mounts like http://www.camerasystems.com/rentals.htm -- any gyro would have been better than nothing -- heck, even a spindle mount with a wind vane on the styrofoam cube would have been a big improvement).

  6. Re:DUP. *NOT* by schon · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yeah, it's the same thing.

    Except that the other story was about different people. And they were from MIT, not Sherwood Park, Canada. And they used a still camera, not a video one.

    So yeah, except for the fact that everything is different, it's completely the same.

  7. Re:First amateurs? Not quite! by V!NCENT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Who cares? What matters is that they did something that was awesome to do. Imagine yourself lifting up a baloon with a camera attached to it, wondering what will happen. Later on you find your camera back. You wait for what seems to be like forever for the 32GB to get transfered onto your computer. You watch the video from when you were standing in a grass field and watch what happened when you were there on the ground. You watch your camera fly into outer fscking space. You feel like "WOW! Dude that's beautifull... we freakin done it! We actually did it! It worked!".

    And then you feel awesome for a complete month, figuring out what to do next, while the world gets to see what you saw.

    You're suppose to like this, given the fact that you are on /. What's wrong with you?

    --
    Here be signatures
  8. Re:First amateurs? Not quite! by the+99th+penguin · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Apollo astronauts were trained by a professional photographer on how to use the custom (Hasselbak or something close to that.) cameras for use on the moon.

    They were modified Hasselblad cameras (a very nice medium format film camera). They brought the film back but left the cameras on the moon.