An iPad is really light so it has a very low terminal velocity (it is bulky), so I don't think they cheated. They did speed up the video in places though.
I don't know why you didn't mention it in the title, but I would think it's pretty relevant that it wasn't just an iPad. It was "An iPad with a G-Form Extreme Edge case". Doubt the survival is something the iPad should be credited for.
Not accusing you of doing so, it just struck me as relevant. I didn't notice before it was just an exact copy of their title. I would argue that in this case a title edit could've been better.
Pretty awesome video, but it looks like they cheated a little bit by weighing the back of the device, so that it would land on its back rather than screen.
An iPad 2 weighs 1.33 lbs, and has ~0.5 sq. ft of surface area when flat, which according to this NASA applet [1] means its terminal velocity is 12.2 mph (17.8 ft/sec).
A drop at 12 miles per hour onto its back is probably not enough to destroy the iPad whether or not there is a case on it.
I wonder what kind of permissions they had to obtain in order to do that? Surely they'd need to worry about air traffic and the chance of it landing on someone or someone else's property (however unlikely). Or maybe they went to some privately owned bit of desert to do it? I wonder how much that costs?
Also - it kind of reminds me of a geek-version of the "bow and arrow" game from the film "Grown Ups"...
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[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 47.9 ms ] threadPerhaps: iPad [with padding] Survives Fall From Edge of Space in Jaw-Dropping Video
An iPad 2 weighs 1.33 lbs, and has ~0.5 sq. ft of surface area when flat, which according to this NASA applet [1] means its terminal velocity is 12.2 mph (17.8 ft/sec).
A drop at 12 miles per hour onto its back is probably not enough to destroy the iPad whether or not there is a case on it.
[1] http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/k-12/airplane/termv.html
[1] - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUEXKapAVcY
Also - it kind of reminds me of a geek-version of the "bow and arrow" game from the film "Grown Ups"...
They need to stay away from airports and populated areas, also launch during the day and when there isn't cloud cover that would hide the balloon.
See here: http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=ecfr&rgn...