The Pitch Black planet had only two suns and an ecosystem that made no sense.
Yeah. It's light out 24/7 (except for a brief period every 20 years) but the planet is inhabited by creatures who can't stand light?
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
The Pitch Black planet had only two suns and an ecosystem that made no sense.
Yeah. It's light out 24/7 (except for a brief period every 20 years) but the planet is inhabited by creatures who can't stand light?
Huh, I was sure I remembered three.
This new planet may not conform to any readily available sci-fi nicknames, alas.
Those creatures were like bats, I thought. They were underground, right?
I am hungover and out of it.
eta: I think the phenomenon of multiple stars is named after Tatooine, not necessarily that planet.
A camera question: I have an old Konica SLR that's done me good service for the last twenty years. It has a battery for the onboard light meter, but that's it (low tech, I love it), but that battery's long dead. It's been a long time since I was au courant with photography, but I'm thinking the basic function of a camera should be unaffected by the onboard light meter not working, if I just set the exposure and everything myself. Am I wrong? I was going to get a disposable to take to the concert tomorrow, but a roll of film is cheaper
That should work fine. As you say, you'll just have to estimate the exposure.
Or buy a new battery.
20 years old? How many megapixels did cameras have in 1985?
How many megapixels did cameras have in 1985?
Silly Tom. Cameras didn't have megapixels then. A tiny pterodactyl looks through the lens and then uses its beak to etch the image onto a slab of stone.
1985?
Huh, it's older than that, I bought it in 1979 for college, I'd forgotten.
A tiny pterodactyl looks through the lens and then uses its beak to etch the image onto a slab of stone.
Actually . . . many, many years ago, a tiny bug crawled into the works of the camera body and died, leaving its body inside the mirror-viewfinder mechanism. When you look through the viewfinder, you see a bug corpse in the middle of the picture, but it doesn't show on the pictures. I love lending my camera to people who don't know about Buggie, because they always jump when they look through it.
I just watched Pitch Black again, and it's three suns. They talk a lot about the lighting and film color-correction based on which sun/s are in the sky at what angle. (Commentary track).
Today's fortune cookie:
Good health is a man's best wealth.
Thank you, Count Rugen.