🌊🐋 Sport Optics Product Manager John R. takes the Celestron Hummingbird Mini Spotting Scope to the stunning Oregon Coast! From spotting coastal birds to catching a glimpse of majestic migrating whales, this compact scope delivers unbeatable clarity and portability for every adventure. 🦅🌊 What have you seen through your Celestron spotting scope? 🛤️✨ #CelestronHummingbird #SpottingScope #OregonCoast #BirdWatching #WhaleWatching
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Sora, Lumiere, et al = game-changing speed of evolution. Prompt: Drone view of waves crashing against the rugged cliffs along Big Sur’s garay point beach. The crashing blue waters create white-tipped waves, while the golden light of the setting sun illuminates the rocky shore. A small island with a lighthouse sits in the distance, and green shrubbery covers the cliff’s edge. The steep drop from the road down to the beach is a dramatic feat, with the cliff’s edges jutting out over the sea. This is a view that captures the raw beauty of the coast and the rugged landscape of the Pacific Coast Highway.
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ASMR The Pro Video full car rig setup. Featuring Hollyland Technology 's Lark M2, MARS M1 Enhanced and MARS 4K. What do you guys think? Is it worth investing in a $10k professional car rig setup, or taking car rolling shots hanging out back in the trunk? 😯 #Hollyland #carrig #wireless #videoproduction #camerasetup #contentmarketing #contenttips
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Chartered Engineer with 20 years of experience in Offshore Oil and Gas, Subsea Vehicles and Dredging
Diver navigation system - great video to watch
We are very excited to officially launch our new acoustic Diver Navigation system and present the fantastic video of our divers in action 🤿 🤳 🏊♂️💫 The innovative system allows divers to exchange messages and track positions much like texting on a smartphone: it provides two-way communication among divers and the surface support team, and enables map-based navigation with pre-mission and real-time waypoint setup. The lightweight battery-powered diver tracker is compatible with a wide range of diving gear. The diver console, a compact wrist tablet, provides access to our SiNAPS positioning software interface for tracking and communication. With the new system, we aim to streamline complex underwater tasks such as search and rescue, salvage, and cleanup operations, improving task management, information sharing and the effectiveness of multiple operations under the surface. Catch our team at industry events or get in touch directly to learn more about Diver Navigation: https://lnkd.in/dhnHygMg ---- Video filmed by Submaris, Philipp Mall and EvoLogics, edited by EUNOIA VISIONS #EvoLogics #DiverNavigation #UnderwaterTechnology
EvoLogics debuts the new Diver Navigation system
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Amazing to see the insights technology can generate in the fishing sector.
Underwater footage from a #shrimp trawler in #Norway ⬇️ Recorded by the #CatchCam camera, the footage gives 'eyes on the net' to skippers and their crew during #fishing operations. Below, the underwater camera was used for monitoring catch behaviour around the trawl gear. While doing so, the skipper can also monitor how other species like #cod and #haddock, are interacting with the net. Learn more about this underwater camera here https://hubs.ly/Q02wGm1_0 Ocean Space Acoustics - PingMe™ #FishingTrip
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On winter time satellite imagery as a global layer (or covering all the major mountain ranges): One of the biggest obstacles here is cost of the data acquisition. If the imagery was available low-loud cover, high resolution, then the other problem is that the mass majority of it in places like the Colorado Rockies, the Tien Shan, the Swiss Alps... is rural or uninhabited space. Similar to imagery over the ocean, it's part of the "imaging the whole planet every day/week/month" type of dataset. But the cost per square kilometer will be on par with imagery covering the UK, Miami, Japan, etc. Quite high priced! 5x4 km probably $600 let's say. It seems to me that satellite imagery has this issue where sometimes a vast amount of landscape is imaged, then a tiny % of the individual tiles is able to be sold to recoup costs and aim to be profitable. That or a full dataset is sold, but of course only a minority of it is the most useful. The imagery which is not sold is not often discounted to try to achieve a more attractive price. Price depends on resolution, not value of the "real estate". When "mining" the earth for information and imagery, why not highly value the golden nuggets (areas of strong interest) and discount the dirt and silt that are byproducts? I believe the answer is because value emerges later, you don't want to discount middle of nowhere imagery that doesn't get regularly purchase in case somebody comes up with a suddenly strong interest in it where they are willing to pay a high price today, despite yesterday not being interested.
Winter time satellite imagery! Would anyone find this useful as a paid product? This is a topic that has interested me for some time as a skier and alpine dweller. It's hard to find a high resolution snow covered view of landscapes except by accident. There are few services that show satellite imagery with snow cover by default, though FATMAP (by Strava) has it (with lots of sun glare) and I think onXmaps, Inc. has a "recent conditions" layer. I have had some trouble with finding a lot of good resolution winter imagery on SkyFi but more providers coming online may help--I would hope to clearly be able to see ski pistes, or ploughed roads, other smaller details. I envision this being something cool to share and financially support by making a tile layer that works with an access key subscription. I think the main challenge is perhaps some different issues than normal when making mosaics, especially reducing sun glare or attempting to have consistent snow coverage across tiles. Would you find a working winter satellite imagery layer/endpoint useful in your own apps and workflows? #eochat #satelliteimagery #gis #gischat #geospatial #esri #skiing #aerialimagery #photogrammetry
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Underwater footage from a #shrimp trawler in #Norway ⬇️ Recorded by the #CatchCam camera, the footage gives 'eyes on the net' to skippers and their crew during #fishing operations. Below, the underwater camera was used for monitoring catch behaviour around the trawl gear. While doing so, the skipper can also monitor how other species like #cod and #haddock, are interacting with the net. Learn more about this underwater camera here https://hubs.ly/Q02wGm1_0 Ocean Space Acoustics - PingMe™ #FishingTrip
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🎣 Discover the differences between Traditional Sonar and Garmin LiveScope in this insightful comparison. Unlock the knowledge to elevate your fishing skills. Explore the details here: https://bit.ly/48LAbel _ #FishingTechnology #SonarVsLiveScope #MarkLassagne
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CHRO | CPO | CAO | Best Selling Leadership Author | Keynote Speaker | Talent Acquisition Expert | M&A, IPOs, Hyper-Growth | DEIB | BOD | Career Transition Jedi | Founder of MyJobJump.com
10 Tips for RV Adventures in the National Parks National Parks are an all-access pass to the best of America. Here's how to pick a rig built for the long haul. https://lnkd.in/gvDSNtWR
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These chartplotters offer big, crisp, sunlight-readable touchscreens, putting fishfinding power right at your fingertips. 🌊 With built-in Garmin Navionics+TM mapping and Ultra High-Definition scanning sonar, you're ready to level up your fishing game! #FishingTech #GarminFishing
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🧐🐴Understanding a horse's inner workings is the key to understanding its behavior. 🐴🧐 Did you know that horses can see at 340°? Just so you know, humans can only see at 180°. 👀 With the largest eyes of any land mammal, horses can see at 340°, thanks to their laterally positioned eyes and horizontal pupils. This morphology enables it to cover a very wide panoramic field of vision horizontally. Without moving his head, he can see his left flank, his right flank and ahead. Although very practical, this very wide panoramic vision does leave him with a few blind spots, which are behind his croup and under his nose (which is why he sometimes has trouble grabbing the treats handed to him, for which he is blind and uses a sensory sensor - Vibrissae). Added to this lack of vision under his nose, the horse can't see very well over his head, as his eye doesn't have a very wide vertical field. That's why, as an important safety rule, when moving around a horse, always show him where I am in his space. To give you an idea, our forward-facing eyes, with their round pupils, give us a field of vision of around 180°, both vertically and horizontally. Our only blind spot is our back. Be patient, ride safe & enjoy the view. 🌄
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