Carmi Levy
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And so there's only so much bandwidth available.
And a lot of it has to be devoted to, you know, keeping the spacecraft safe, data back and forth, doing the science, supporting the live stream as well.
The engineering cameras on the outside, their GoPros that are on the end of the solar panels looking back.
And so they're not sitting there making FaceTime calls and they're not surfing the Internet on these devices.
And so what they're doing is they're picking and choosing which images get shared back with Earth.
They took 175 gigabytes of imagery just for the lunar flyby.
And I'm sure there's lots more.
for the rest of the mission.
So I'm willing to bet that only a fraction of what was taken has been shared with Earth.
And when they do land afterward, they'll pull all of the SD cards off of the devices and they will copy them all down.
NASA has said...
It's their mission to get all of the imagery processed and shared publicly within six months.
So there's a lot more to come because a lot of it simply couldn't be sent remotely because the pipe from Deep Space isn't as big as the ones that we're using now for our Internet.
You're not the only one.
I don't think I've ever met anyone who likes Outlook.
Certainly, I don't.
I've used it at various points in my life, not because I wanted to, but because of companies that I was working either for or with.
That's what they standardized on.
If you're an Office 365 customer, you're using Outlook and no one likes it.
And so...