let me know if you'd like to beta test a new version. see my recent comment here.
I'm beta testing a new version, using imagery from the "DESI" survey, which should be a step up. if you're interested in trying it, feedback is appreciated, reply to this comment, or email me directly via the contact…
lol. not a bad idea, but no, that didn't work. encoding latitude as a URL param... could save me from having to make a ui. it'd be something like ../zenith?lat=35.2N
https://smorgasb.org/zenith32/ was quicker to hardcode one, then add the feature
> It would be interesting to allow the user to manually add location coords shouldn't be hard. one difference is moving to a much higher/lower lat. to see the difference in angular speed. Where would you want to see?
yes. the Field of View is the size of a grain of rice at arm's length. the total "movie" you see is like 2500 of those rice-grains, end to end (earlier in the explainer, it mentions the FoV size)
exactly. this takes me back to the low-tech beginnings
I'm the dev. happy to answer questions.
let me know if you'd like to beta test a new version. see my recent comment here.
I'm beta testing a new version, using imagery from the "DESI" survey, which should be a step up. if you're interested in trying it, feedback is appreciated, reply to this comment, or email me directly via the contact…
lol. not a bad idea, but no, that didn't work. encoding latitude as a URL param... could save me from having to make a ui. it'd be something like ../zenith?lat=35.2N
https://smorgasb.org/zenith32/ was quicker to hardcode one, then add the feature
> It would be interesting to allow the user to manually add location coords shouldn't be hard. one difference is moving to a much higher/lower lat. to see the difference in angular speed. Where would you want to see?
yes. the Field of View is the size of a grain of rice at arm's length. the total "movie" you see is like 2500 of those rice-grains, end to end (earlier in the explainer, it mentions the FoV size)
exactly. this takes me back to the low-tech beginnings
I'm the dev. happy to answer questions.