Universe Sandbox
Universe Sandbox Legacy => Universe Sandbox 2008 | Discussion => Topic started by: Dan Dixon on April 15, 2009, 10:47:49 PM
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This is awesome:
http://www.hulu.com/watch/14906/spacerip-black-holes-the-other-side-of-infinity
23 minutes well spent. (The best part starts at 15:00)
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you must make the center of the galaxies black!
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there's a problem... the video can't be seen from outside the USA :P
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I'll have to check that out, but it's probably stuff I already know :P.
I'm glad I live in the U.S, I keep in touch with a lot of shows through Hulu. There are supposed to be ways around it.
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Awesome!
;D :P
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How about in the next update?
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Damned video won't play in Canada..
>:/
Stupid hulu.
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This clip is from SpaceRip and is called:
Black Holes: The Other Side of Infinity
Here's the link on Joost:
http://www.joost.com/2460008/t/Black-Holes-The-Other-Side-of-Infinity?channel=246000i
Check out one of these other options:
http://www.spacerip.com/watch.html
While I'm not an expert, the 5 minute fly through from the edge of the Milky Way to its center is one of the best, most seemingly accurate visualizations I've ever seen.
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Yay it works on joost.
And it's narrated by Liiam Neeson too. :P
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and howstuffworks video: http://videos.howstuffworks.com/hsw/6349-the-center-of-the-milky-way-galaxy-video.htm
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While I'm not an expert, the 5 minute fly through from the edge of the Milky Way to its center is one of the best, most seemingly accurate visualizations I've ever seen.
If you've never seen National Geographic: Journey To The Edge Of The Universe in 720p HD, you MUST do so at once! ;D
About an hour in, there is a flyby of the pillars of creation, its by far the best, most natural and beautiful cgi i've ever seen in my life :o
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While I'm not an expert, the 5 minute fly through from the edge of the Milky Way to its center is one of the best, most seemingly accurate visualizations I've ever seen.
If you've never seen National Geographic: Journey To The Edge Of The Universe in 720p HD, you MUST do so at once! ;D
About an hour in, there is a flyby of the pillars of creation, its by far the best, most natural and beautiful cgi i've ever seen in my life :o
Umm... isn't 720p normal? 1080i and 1080p is HD.
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Umm... isn't 720p normal? 1080i and 1080p is HD.
HD can mean all of those: 720p, 1080i, and 1080p
The number is the vertical resolution (the number of pixels high).
720 means 1280x720 | 1080 means 1920x1080
The letter indicates if it's progressive or interlaced. Progressive (p) means all the pixels change every time the screen is updated. Interlaced (i) means that every other row changes with every screen update. (Progressive is better).
a better description:
"The lower-case "i" appended to the numbers denotes interlaced; the lower-case "p" denotes progressive. With the interlaced scanning method, the 1,080 lines of resolution are divided into pairs. The first 540 alternate lines are painted on a frame and then the second 540 lines are painted on a second frame. The progressive scanning method simultaneously displays all 1,080 lines on every frame, requiring a greater bandwidth."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-definition_television#Advantages_of_HDTV_expressed_in_non-technical_terms
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Oh, ok thanks.