Message from @Etzie
Discord ID: 572963382936993817
What made it disappear bottom first with the naked eye the first time u watched it disappear
???
I guess I'll admit I don't know this for sure, I haven't tried it myself, but I know regardless that it has been proven that ships drop in full camera view resolved and all
It might appear to be the case with a camera, because its resolution is nowhere near that of the eye. The advantage a camera has in this case is zoom.
Go out there and test it with your actual eye, since I assume you're a truth seeker.
I’ve seen a ton of videos of it being done
Funny how you have to see things first hand to actual compare things with "the naked eye"
Have u seen videos of it being done ?
A video or photograph at 1x optical zoom is not comparable to the naked eye.
You don't listen.
It isn't relevant. There is difference between zooming in and out and noting the resolution and zooming in on it and watching it dip in full view.
Ok but have u seen video of this being done
It is relevant, because he's making a comparison to the naked eye... Without using the naked eye.
I hear what ur saying but it’s not even close to being able to see when zoomed all the way out
Ahh, but that's where resolution comes in.
K I gotta go I’ll talk to u guys tomorrow
But I am focusing on the sinking ship effect here. What they are saying doesn't nullify it in any way
No it doesn't
Still if it was a sphere the proof would be there but it isn’t
Bye guys
Byeee
I’ll be back for more tomorrow lol
Last time I looked out on an ocean has been awhile
So I honestly don't know the scale of it in terms of what we can resolve
With my eyes
I need to buy a decent lens or telescope.
There is a limit to what the eye can see, it's such a small lens.
I think I might just buy a P1000
I have no incentive to do so currently
It has ridiculous zoom. I already have a camera with a huge resolution, but the problem is that the sensor is full frame, so in order to get any decent zoom you need a HUGE lense, or telescope.
They're not that expensive tbh
Depends if you'll use it often or not.
I wouldn't
It would be once in a blue moon for me if I got one
Because the only matter of interest I would have is observing distant objects in some locations, if say, I travel.
Where I live, there is trees and hills and various obstructions.
Maybe some astrophotography but I'd get bored of it
It would be good for me to find a hobby tho
I took this with my camera. Unfortunately it's not the full resolution, raw photo which I can't get until I fix my computer.
It's the milky way, with Sag A* in the middle, on the left one of the bright objects is Saturn. Not sure which though.