How do you know how many bytes this thing will upload? It's a high resolution telescope, as in large photos. Compressed or uncompressed (and I'm going to assume most astronomers worth their weight in salt would take their images RAW over JPG), high resolution pictures of our cosmos could easily take terrabytes of space. In the future, keep your quite stupid statements to yourself.
How do you know how many bytes this thing will upload? It's a high resolution telescope, as in large photos. Compressed or uncompressed (and I'm going to assume most astronomers worth their weight in salt would take their images RAW over JPG), high resolution pictures of our cosmos could easily take terrabytes of space. In the future, keep your quite stupid statements to yourself.
How do you know how many bytes this thing will upload? It's a high resolution telescope, as in large photos. Compressed or uncompressed (and I'm going to assume most astronomers worth their weight in salt would take their images RAW over JPG), high resolution pictures of our cosmos could easily take terrabytes of space. In the future, keep your quite stupid statements to yourself.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
france.justin @ Jan 6th 2008 4:29AM
If it was truly an internet telescope it'd, uh, compress them Terabytes of data down a bit. Quite a stupid statement, if you stop and think about it.
Andrew @ Jan 6th 2008 10:31AM
How do you know how many bytes this thing will upload? It's a high resolution telescope, as in large photos. Compressed or uncompressed (and I'm going to assume most astronomers worth their weight in salt would take their images RAW over JPG), high resolution pictures of our cosmos could easily take terrabytes of space. In the future, keep your quite stupid statements to yourself.
Andrew @ Jan 6th 2008 10:31AM
How do you know how many bytes this thing will upload? It's a high resolution telescope, as in large photos. Compressed or uncompressed (and I'm going to assume most astronomers worth their weight in salt would take their images RAW over JPG), high resolution pictures of our cosmos could easily take terrabytes of space. In the future, keep your quite stupid statements to yourself.
Andrew @ Jan 6th 2008 10:31AM
How do you know how many bytes this thing will upload? It's a high resolution telescope, as in large photos. Compressed or uncompressed (and I'm going to assume most astronomers worth their weight in salt would take their images RAW over JPG), high resolution pictures of our cosmos could easily take terrabytes of space. In the future, keep your quite stupid statements to yourself.
Andrew @ Jan 6th 2008 10:39AM
Holy triple post Batman! I wish we had the ability to delete.