Really just hoping to see them with the naked eye and didn’t want to use the phoneDid you take pictures? That’s how I could see them from my in-town backyard. We’re surrounded by trees with a street light out front.
View attachment 129026
Really just hoping to see them with the naked eye and didn’t want to use the phoneDid you take pictures? That’s how I could see them from my in-town backyard. We’re surrounded by trees with a street light out front.
View attachment 129026
I believe most ag hands-off-steering is GPS based, which will have problems for a bit yet. Automotive lane centering is all camera based so shouldn't be impacted. (Automotive automated driving uses a suite of sensors including some GPS depending on the function - camera, RADAR, LIDAR, ultrasonic for sure).Read on an Ag site I follow that this guys hands free steering was not very straight today. Was the steering system messed up or was it the atmospheric issues? Would cars with hands free steering have problems today?
Incredible.Photos from my wife and kids, from 11:00 - 12:30, between Mount Vernon and Sedro-Woolley, WA.
We were headed home going East on the road from Polk City and the line of cars going North on Ankeny Blvd was huge also.I was heading back into town just after 10, and there was a giant line of cars leaving Ankeny on Irvinedale. Everyone had the same idea to hit the gravel roads outside of town.
Could you see those colors with the naked eye? I was disappointed with the faintness of them with my eyes but through my phone camera it looked beautiful.Photos from my wife and kids, from 11:00 - 12:30, between Mount Vernon and Sedro-Woolley, WA.
For me it looked like streaks of fog until you got the camera out.Could you see those colors with the naked eye? I was disappointed with the faintness of them with my eyes but through my phone camera it looked beautiful.
Too much light pollutionFor me it looked like streaks of fog until you got the camera out.
I woke at 3:30 and took a peak out the northern window. I also thought it was much better than at midnight. I never dreamed we'd have something like this in Iowa visible from the 'burbs.The key with these that are a bit faint is to have the exposure time on your camera/phone to around 5-10 seconds. I put my iPhone 15PM on a stand and set the exposure time to 10 seconds and got some amazing shots. Went out at 11:30 and there was some, but it was a bit more gray/blue. Went out around 3:45 and it was amazing.
This is probably the worst shot I got because I was under the deck. I moved up top later and got some amazing shots (not yet uploaded). Parkinson's shakes be damned, a stand and long exposure FTW.
View attachment 129044