![]() |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Excellent. Would you recommend one over the other for a guy just looking
to do some observation planning? Sky Tools is a commercial product and is designed for planning sessions. HNSky is free and fast. I use them both. HNSky is available here... http://hnsky.com/software.htm -Florian |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Del Johnson" delastro@{right star in Orion's belt}.sdsu.edu wrote in
message ... 2. The conference was a ghost town on Sunday. Anybody giving a talk on Sunday was just wasting their time. The RTMC organizers could fix this by simply moving the big Saturday door prize to Sunday, the I guess that that there are too many "I want in now!" whiners to allow for that. The RTMC conference is for all practical purposes a one-day Saturday event. I did not attend any of the talks in the dining hall on Sunday, but Ron Wodaski's presentations in the annex on Sunday were pretty much SRO. |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Can TheSky 6 do that for me? If not TheSky, some other program?
Thanks, Tom Hi Tom: Yes. The Sky 6 will actually allow you to use a 360 degree panorama you can create with a digital camera (or other_ as your "horizon". I'd be remiss, however, if I didn't mention that you can do a simple version of this (filled areas) with Cartes du Ciel, which is free. Peace, Rod Mollise Author of _Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope_ Like SCTs and MCTs? Check-out sct-user, the mailing list for CAT fanciers! Goto http://members.aol.com/RMOLLISE/index.html |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Tom Hole" wrote in message
... Rod, I am looking for a program that will allow me to customize the visible sky for my location. Specifically, I would like to enter the measurements for my specific obstructions from my driveway viewing location (trees, houses, small flying rodents) and have that selectable when I am using the program. This will help me determine when I will be able to view items of interest. Can TheSky 6 do that for me? If not TheSky, some other program? Starry Night Pro claims (although I have not tried it), that you can take a panorama of pictures from your actual observing site and create the horizon based on your photographs. |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I attended one Sunday morning and got the heads up that Ceragoli hadn't
shown up for his talk. Too bad as it would have been an interesting one. -- Bob May Losing weight is easy! If you ever want to lose weight, eat and drink less. Works every time it is tried! |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I peeked in a Chris Schur's Sunday talk and only saw a handful of attendees.
He normally draws a good crowd. The RTMC directors really need to address this "come early, leave early" problem. Moving the merit awards to Saturday night was a step in the wrong direction. Del Johnson "Alson Wong" wrote in message ... I did not attend any of the talks in the dining hall on Sunday, but Ron Wodaski's presentations in the annex on Sunday were pretty much SRO. |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Del Johnson" delastro@{right star in Orion's belt}.sdsu.edu wrote in
message ... I peeked in a Chris Schur's Sunday talk and only saw a handful of attendees. He normally draws a good crowd. The RTMC directors really need to address this "come early, leave early" problem. Moving the merit awards to Saturday night was a step in the wrong direction. Del Johnson There have been frequent requests over a number of years to move the merit awards to Saturday, mainly to allow people to look at the telescopes and use them on Saturday night, and also to allow attendees to vote for the Astronomer's Choice Award. Having the merit awards on Sunday night might keep a few more people around, but then they wouldn't have the opportunity to look at them since most of those scopes are packed up and gone by then. I believe your opinion is in the minority. The major door prizes are presented on Saturday by request of the donors (Meade, Celestron). The "come early" problem was addressed this year by strict enforcement of the Friday morning entry time. In previous years, unauthorized people would come in on Thursday. Chris' talk was at the same time as Wodaski's workshop in the annex, which was filled to capacity. Overall attendance was in the neighborhood of 1,600, which was in line with what we expected, considering the upcoming transit of Venus, waxing gibbous Moon, and increase in fees. |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The annex room isn't very large and most of the 1600 attendees were long
gone by then. Saturday's events filled the telescope areas, vendor booths, and large lecture hall as well as the annex room. If the annex room was full it was because there wasn't anything to see outside. Just about every major vendor was packed up by noon, if they even bothered to open at all that day. You have to decide if the RTMC is about a quick buck and a big door prize, or, if it is about advancing amateur astronomy. I wouldn't let anyone in until Friday afternoon, forbid any vendor activity until Saturday, forbid non-astronomical vendors, and most importantly I would kindly ask Meade to tone down the major door prize to a 10-inch telecope and give it away on Sunday. Yes, there will be a materialistic outcry from some but it will restore the conference to what it once was. Did you know that the race to get in first is so intense that even semi-local (within ~100 miles) people spend Thursday night in Big Bear motels? It's crazy. People are taking Friday off from work and then running home Saturday night on a 3-day weekend. All because of the Friday "feeding frenzies" of the past. This needs to be stopped. Del Johnson "Alson Wong" wrote in message ... "Del Johnson" delastro@{right star in Orion's belt}.sdsu.edu wrote in message ... There have been frequent requests over a number of years to move the merit awards to Saturday, mainly to allow people to look at the telescopes and use them on Saturday night, and also to allow attendees to vote for the Astronomer's Choice Award. Having the merit awards on Sunday night might keep a few more people around, but then they wouldn't have the opportunity to look at them since most of those scopes are packed up and gone by then. I believe your opinion is in the minority. The major door prizes are presented on Saturday by request of the donors (Meade, Celestron). The "come early" problem was addressed this year by strict enforcement of the Friday morning entry time. In previous years, unauthorized people would come in on Thursday. Chris' talk was at the same time as Wodaski's workshop in the annex, which was filled to capacity. Overall attendance was in the neighborhood of 1,600, which was in line with what we expected, considering the upcoming transit of Venus, waxing gibbous Moon, and increase in fees. |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Del Johnson" delastro@{right star in Orion's belt}.sdsu.edu wrote in message ... 2. I had a chance to view through Celestron's new 20-inch corrected Dall-Kirlham cassegrain. [snip] Are you sure? At NEAF I believe Celestron said the prototype they were showing was only an 18", although the production model will be a 20". Clear skies, Alan |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
NASA Releases Near-Earth Object Search Report | Ron Baalke | Astronomy Misc | 0 | September 10th 03 04:39 PM |
NEWS: Investigator Criticizes Shuttle Report | Rusty Barton | Space Shuttle | 0 | August 28th 03 01:36 AM |
Columbia Accident Investigation Board Releases Final Report | Jacques van Oene | Space Shuttle | 0 | August 26th 03 03:30 PM |
Columbia Accident Investigation Board Releases Final Report | Jacques van Oene | Space Station | 0 | August 26th 03 03:30 PM |
DEATH DOES NOT EXIST -- Coal Mine Rescue Proves It | Ed Conrad | Space Shuttle | 4 | August 2nd 03 01:00 AM |