I agree, I think it is the coolest thing I made so far. It is the whole reason I got in the hobby, the sense of exploring the unknown. Other people will make better stretching tools, denoisers, deblurrer, etc etc but I think this one is different and no matter how you process your image you can explore the cosmos in that image. With it out of PI now too, to your point educators are free to use it, no PI required!!
The exploration and the discovery! Exactly! I hope one night to be reviewing one of my images and find something that does not come up after a What's In My Image search, and learn I have found something new. And even if not, to be able to look at an image and realize there is an invisible galaxy, and there is a black hole candidate, and there is a pulsar . . . that only makes the images so much more wondrous.
Good morning, what an interesting video! Seti Astro is fabulous, how is it possible he does it gratis? What a fine man. Thank you for your knowledge and the science behind it all. I wish I had a few more neurons that were connected through education to fully comprehend it all. But it's enough for me to know there are people like you who do. It's like when I was reading On the Shoulders of Giants: The Great Works of Physics and Astronomy edited and with commentary by Stephen Hawking. It was way above my head but fascinating nonetheless. Thanks again, I will be investigating it.
Hawking was a great man. He and Carl Sagan are two of the people I admire most in this world. And Frank has done a wonderful thing for all of us, bringing us tools like What's In My Sky.
Indeed, Frank is so generous! People like him and you compensate for those that are selfish and mean spirited, thank you for what you do for us in explaining the universe as you do,!😊
Just what I needed! I caught a asteroid (508 Princetonia) unplanned while imaging tadpole nebula the other night and now I'm hooked on finding more things in my images!
I agree, I think it is the coolest thing I made so far. It is the whole reason I got in the hobby, the sense of exploring the unknown. Other people will make better stretching tools, denoisers, deblurrer, etc etc but I think this one is different and no matter how you process your image you can explore the cosmos in that image. With it out of PI now too, to your point educators are free to use it, no PI required!!
Thanks for the amazing tools Frank!!!
Exactly the same reason I am in this hobby. Thank you for this amazing tool once again!
The exploration and the discovery! Exactly! I hope one night to be reviewing one of my images and find something that does not come up after a What's In My Image search, and learn I have found something new. And even if not, to be able to look at an image and realize there is an invisible galaxy, and there is a black hole candidate, and there is a pulsar . . . that only makes the images so much more wondrous.
Good morning, what an interesting video! Seti Astro is fabulous, how is it possible he does it gratis? What a fine man. Thank you for your knowledge and the science behind it all. I wish I had a few more neurons that were connected through education to fully comprehend it all. But it's enough for me to know there are people like you who do. It's like when I was reading On the Shoulders of Giants: The Great Works of Physics and Astronomy edited and with commentary by Stephen Hawking. It was way above my head but fascinating nonetheless. Thanks again, I will be investigating it.
Hawking was a great man. He and Carl Sagan are two of the people I admire most in this world. And Frank has done a wonderful thing for all of us, bringing us tools like What's In My Sky.
Indeed, Frank is so generous! People like him and you compensate for those that are selfish and mean spirited, thank you for what you do for us in explaining the universe as you do,!😊
Just what I needed! I caught a asteroid (508 Princetonia) unplanned while imaging tadpole nebula the other night and now I'm hooked on finding more things in my images!
Tools like this turn the joy of imaging into the thrill of discovery.
I’d just be happy to search for PGC objects but sadly that does not seem to be a setting option 😩
Ask Frank at Seti Astro about it. He's very responsive and often quick to update things.