ISS in Real Time

Dagli stessi autori di Apollo in Real Time, Ben Feist e David Charney, ecco ISS in Real Time.

Un lavoro straordinario.

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Stupendo!
Vai a risentire gli S/G il 17 Dicembre 2015 dalle 19:37 in poi, vedi se riconosci la voce di qualcuno :sweat_smile:

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Per i pigri il link al minuto esatto :wink:

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Intervista ai due creatori del progetto.

:newspaper: Above us, always: Chronicling humanity’s home in space, in real time

Carney: Given the sheer scale of the ISS program, how did you decide what content to include and what to leave out?

Feist: Basically, we didn’t leave anything out. If we could determine that something was authentic mission material, and we could determine where it occurred in time, and it was public, it was included.

I’m in the process of coming up with more elaborate ways to determine when things occurred, which will allow for the inclusion of even more material. For example, now that we have transcripts of communications for over 5,000 days onboard, if we find a video somewhere with no timing metadata, but we can clearly see that it took place onboard, we can match what people are saying in the video with the comm transcripts and reverse engineer when that video happened. It’s tricks like this that really show the value of disparate, contextual data being pulled together to make something that wasn’t there before. It’s also a lesson in the value of storing good metadata with mission material. You never know how someone might want to use that material later.

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