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.
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.
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.
I just watched Pitch Black again, and it's three suns.
For some reason I was thinking there was just two suns in that little model of the solar system. I must have misremembered.
I just went and checked IMDb to make sure my memory wasn't going (post first and ask later, that's my motto), and their blurb says "a planet that has three suns orbiting around it."
So my confidence is shot - if they don't know what orbits what, can they count?