Next time I write a CV it’s going to have a line like “I relish learning new datasets and working to make sense of them” but it’s going to be a lie because here we see longitude stored in radians:
To my great though trivial annoyance, their processing pipeline cuts off the limb. It does look great, though, as expected. This is from the 4/20 eclipse, which @dscovr_epic also got an excellent frame of. Link to a 30 megabyte 1 km/pixel version: https://xoc.s3.amazonaws.com/also/gk2a-2023-04-20-0400.jpeg
Just for my own sick amusement, here’s what happens if you white-balance off a cloud near totality and crop: https://xoc.s3.amazonaws.com/also/gk2a-2023-04-20-0400-crop.jpeg
@vruba shudders
@vruba Pirates kept one of their sensors covered with an eye patch for these situations.
@vruba GeoJSON 2.0 will use radians
@vruba maybe radians for longitude and degrees for latitude is what a curious mind like yours needs.
@sgillies Oh, they can be stored as complex numbers! Wait, I know, what if everything’s quaternions?
@vruba misread that as “writing a CSV”
@burritojustice Posting my CSV on LinkedIn, etc.
Someone’s going to be like “Ah, but this is more theoretically pure, because—” Oh, all right, hot shot, it is theoretically pure to use -100000000000000 to mean undefined? Is that what a physicist would do? No, please, let us know.