360x180 degrees, equirectangular projection, so you see the entire sky. The other two have about 200 degrees horizontally.
Yes, these are for the meteor network, and anything else that might happen in the sky. Four 5 megapixel cameras cover the entire sky.
Watched the video 5 times. The play of light and glare soothes and bewitches. And while the whole earth is covered in snow. Just like a picture from a fairy tale. Upload more of these videos - time-lapses are always very interesting to watch.Yesterday's timelapse from one of our meteor stations in the forests north of Oslo. Winter has come with lots of snow and temperatures around -10C.
[youtube]HtN5UiMzpuQ[/youtube]
Glad you liked it. Here's another one that I made a few years ago. Maybe I've posted it before, though.Watched the video 5 times. The play of light and glare soothes and bewitches. And while the whole earth is covered in snow. Just like a picture from a fairy tale. Upload more of these videos - time-lapses are always very interesting to watch.
Skagit Valley to the south of me is full of marshes and farmland which make for a bird-watchers' paradise. It's not hard to get good shots out there, and it's common to see a lot of other bird watchers as well, often with very impressive equipment. I just use my old DSLR and telephoto lens, sometimes using autofocus and sometimes manually.
wow sounds like a place I'd want to see.... was that with a 300mm lens?Skagit Valley to the south of me is full of marshes and farmland which make for a bird-watchers' paradise. It's not hard to get good shots out there, and it's common to see a lot of other bird watchers as well, often with very impressive equipment. I just use my old DSLR and telephoto lens, sometimes using autofocus and sometimes manually.