Comments by "" (@TheTopMostDog) on "AT&T Tech Channel" channel.

  1. 35
  2. 25
  3. 18
  4. 16
  5. 14
  6. 14
  7. 12
  8. 11
  9. 11
  10. 10
  11. 10
  12. 10
  13. 8
  14. 8
  15. 8
  16. 8
  17. 6
  18. 6
  19. ​ @ghettoninja82  Yeah, they make perfect sense to me after researching just a little about each thing. Firstly, we didn't "lose the technology". The publication that originally posted that ludicrous headline had an interview with someone from NASA where they were forced to clarify that they only couldn't 'reproduce' the things they used back then because moulds and things were sold off or destroyed - meaning anything new would have to be made from scratch, and ultimately be different. They can't recreate what they used to get to the moon, but they absolutely still can go to the moon. There's a new space race starting to go to the moon right now, in fact. Several countries are interested in mining it for precious metals, and articles about it said they are looking to begin next few years. "In 2018, NASA announced plans to return astronauts to the Moon by 2024 to pave the way for eventual journeys to Mars in conjunction with private companies." The reason Hubble's photos are artificially coloured are because the photos generated are comprised of colours that we cannot physically see. Infrared and ultraviolet lenses let the telescope perceive things that are not visible to the naked eye - and we don't know what those colours actually look like, hence the artificial colouring. The telescope CAN take coloured photos in the same way that a modern DSLR can, in R G and B spectrums, then combine them to generate the image in 'normal' colour - but they're often showing us things that aren't visible with the RGB filters alone.
    6
  20. 5
  21. 5
  22. 5
  23. 5
  24. 4
  25. 3
  26. 3
  27. 3
  28. 3
  29. 3
  30. 3
  31. 2
  32. 2
  33. 2
  34. 2
  35. 2
  36. 2
  37. 1
  38. 1
  39. 1
  40. 1
  41. 1
  42. 1
  43. 1
  44. 1
  45. 1
  46. 1
  47. 1
  48. 1
  49. 1
  50. 1