We're sure to see dozens of pictures of tonight's moon, but has anyone ever taken a picture of the EARTH during a solar eclipse (I mean from the moon's point of view, of course)? It would presumably be a brilliant red circle, and I'd love to see it. Of course, such a picture could be taken any time, not just during an eclipse, since the earth's always blocking the sun somewhere.
That doesn't make any sense. If you sue someone and lose, it doesn't constitute wrongdoing on your part. Why the hell shouldn't they defend their patent?
We're sure to see dozens of pictures of tonight's moon, but has anyone ever taken a picture of the EARTH during a solar eclipse (I mean from the moon's point of view, of course)? It would presumably be a brilliant red circle, and I'd love to see it. Of course, such a picture could be taken any time, not just during an eclipse, since the earth's always blocking the sun somewhere.
I don't know if anyone has posted this yet, but the patent explains the process quite well. I'm still trying to get the images to work though.
That doesn't make any sense. If you sue someone and lose, it doesn't constitute wrongdoing on your part. Why the hell shouldn't they defend their patent?