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originally posted by: More1ThanAny1
I listed all the issues with finding global shutter video cameras. They are old. They are rare. Require film. The ones available now, modern or not, are very expensive and require large rolls of film.
They are almost never digital.
Global shutters are made possible with film because the light can be saved onto the film instantly all at once through a chemical process. Doing this at a high enough rate to create a video is easy. However, most are limited to lower frame rates because the film needs to move quickly through the camera, and a physical shutter needs to open and close each frame.
Global shutters become very difficult to create with digital cameras because every single pixel of the photodetector array needs to be read by a microprocessor and written to memory (this is a bottleneck).
For example my smartphone has a 12 megapixel camera. That means its 4000 pixels wide and 3000 pixels tall for a total of 12,000,000 little tiny light sensors that need to write at least 3 bytes of RGB data each to memory which is 36,000,000 bytes. It needs to do this 30 times a second for 30 FPS video which would be 1,080,000,000 bytes per second or 1080 MB/s. That would require a very fast processor or multiple processors. It also requires very fast memory. To put things in perspective some of the fastest flash memory available is limited to 380 MB/s.
To make digital video possible with the processor and memory technology we have today they normally don't read all the pixel sensors at once into memory, they read row by row which reduces the amount of data passing through at any given time. They call that a rolling shutter, even though there is no real physical shutter.
Captain Disillusion's evidence of the lack of rolling shutter distortion is not proof of a hoax by itself. It simply increases the probability of it being a hoax because it rules out the usage of the most common video cameras available, and points towards either a rare camera being used, or a virtual camera via software.
In digital effects software there must always be a virtual camera, with a virtual position, virtual rotation, and virtual field of view, and if you want also virtual lens simulation. Simulated cameras are not limited by physical movement of film, or physical limitations of processing power and memory speed. They are not trying to capture real light from real events either. So they are capable of acting like a "global shutter" because they have a complete picture every frame of the video.
If you mix all the other evidence we have together with the lack of camera distortion it proves the video is CGI.
It obviously happens in this test, but it's more obvious at lower frame rates:
originally posted by: ArMaP
Can anyone else try it to see what happens? We could be basing our opinions on something that doesn't really happen in reality.
60p does show less skew than 60i, 30p and 24p. This is NOT a scientific test. I tried to pan at the same speed for all frame rates. 60i did in fact surprise me. I figured it would be exactly like 30p, but its not. I didn't convert 24p to 30 for this test so it's motion does look messed up in this clip but you'll get the idea.
originally posted by: ArMaP
a reply to: StallionDuck
The fact is that it's easy for a faker to do a good job, even using only free tools.
There are 3D models of the Moon available, including height information (some have been posted on ATS) and there free 3D modelling tools. The rest is human work, and that's where things usually fail, as most hoaxers are not interested in investing a lot of time in their hoaxes. If they do then we cannot really know if it's true or not, as there's nor way of telling if something is true or fake if the fake was made with some care.
PS: many years ago I made a test here on ATS to see if people could identify which of two photos was faked. Some pointed to the right photo as being fake, but they pointed to areas that were not altered, so nobody was able to spot what was faked.
originally posted by: SeaWorthy
originally posted by: ArMaP
a reply to: StallionDuck
The fact is that it's easy for a faker to do a good job, even using only free tools.
There are 3D models of the Moon available, including height information (some have been posted on ATS) and there free 3D modelling tools. The rest is human work, and that's where things usually fail, as most hoaxers are not interested in investing a lot of time in their hoaxes. If they do then we cannot really know if it's true or not, as there's nor way of telling if something is true or fake if the fake was made with some care.
PS: many years ago I made a test here on ATS to see if people could identify which of two photos was faked. Some pointed to the right photo as being fake, but they pointed to areas that were not altered, so nobody was able to spot what was faked.
with distortion of our atmosphere and all the other things involved with it being filmed through a telescope does that not change what we would expect of PERCEIVED movement of the shadow and so forth?
originally posted by: SeaWorthy
with distortion of our atmosphere and all the other things involved with it being filmed through a telescope does that not change what we would expect of PERCEIVED movement of the shadow and so forth?
Thanks for doing the demos. I watched them and I was hoping More1ThanAny1 would reply since it was his comment/tangent you were pursuing. But since he didn't comment...I did watch them and didn't find any rolling shutter effect. I also did some research and found that that effect can vary a lot by the make/model of camera being used.
originally posted by: ArMaP
Here are 3 tests I just made, can anyone spot any rolling shutter effect?
It's the motion of the atmosphere suddenly halting in a single frame, that proves it's a fake more than any other argument:
originally posted by: SeaWorthy
with distortion of our atmosphere and all the other things involved with it being filmed through a telescope does that not change what we would expect of PERCEIVED movement of the shadow and so forth?
originally posted by: More1ThanAny1
This evidence suggests the back plate is not even a video, it is a still photo of the Moon. Knowing this we can probably find more proofs.
...
Turbulence stops exactly at frame 855 in the video I've extracted from YouTube.
The challenge is still open for you to find an impossible real video with turbulence stopping in a single frame, but you won't find one, so don't waste your time.
More1ThanAny1 posted that video on June 3, so you have had a long time to watch it, which could have saved you a lot of time worrying about nonsense like this:
originally posted by: JamesChessman
Lol, dude I haven't even glanced at the site in weeks
It's not a UFO video, it's a still picture enhanced by CGI, so that's why you should have watched the video QuickD: UFO on the moon, it explains that, so you would know to stop worrying about what other videos the person who faked that video has, that's not even a real video.
If he really has all these tons of moon videos then he should really post some, and help verify his ufo vid.
Like if he suddenly posted 100 vids showing the same things, then it would be more compelling and less arguable, I think...
originally posted by: JamesChessman
Ok so if I'm understanding you, and you think they're too fast to be in orbit, as you think they appear: Then why not just figure that they're actually flying from self-propulsion?
originally posted by: Arbitrageur
Even if aliens had more advanced propulsion, it would likely still take more energy to propel the craft than to just let it orbit at the normal orbital speed which doesn't require much if any fuel orbiting the moon. It's hard to think of a reason why the craft would need to waste that fuel if the UFOs were real, but if they are fake, it's pretty easy to think of why; the CGI artist knew more about CGI than about orbital mechanics and didn't make the orbital speed realistic.
So maybe it's not the most absolute proof if you want to assert that maybe the aliens don't mind wasting fuel when they could much more easily orbit the moon at natural orbital speed, but even in that case I wouldn't say it meets your statement of " It looks good to me, i.e. it looks convincing to me... ". I would say it doesn't look good at all, and is not convincing at all to expect that even aliens would waste fuel when it's completely unnecessary, and further it seems a lot more likely that it shows the CGI artist doesn't know orbital mechanics. Plus there are a lot of other clues that it's fake mentioned in this thread, but either you haven't read them or you refuse to accept them because you don't understand them. Like what about the say what appears to be an added heat distortion effect suddenly stops at 49 seconds? The turbulence in the Earth's atmosphere doesn't suddenly stop like that, it looks like an error in the CGI, and other errors have been mentioned too.