1.) In my quote am referring to comparisons of North America between this photo and...
good, good. you're taking this seriously, finally.
first of all, while it's good that you have posted an alleged discrepancy - and i'll get to that in a minute - it is not one of the remaining two you have been asked to clarify. specifically, you claimed [my numbers inserted]: "
1) The color of continents between shots is not constant, they turn from bright green to a dull brown. 2) The earth emits a glare in tandem with a polished billiard ball in one scene but not another [you lost this one]. 3) Clouds have shadows in one image but no others. Et cetera."
so you still have #s 1 and 3 to
lose go.
ok? ok. so back to the two globes.
the first one, as
trekky pointed out before me, is from the blue marble project. even i recognized that immediately. a poor attempt, bishop. really. some dead giveaways are the continental shelf and ocean floor features clearly visible, yet anyone with a hint of common sense wouldn't believe they really would be from an actual all-at-once visible photo.
...this photo. Obviously not the same earth. Additionally, the second image seems to have stars in the background. No other image of the earth from space has stars.
The second image which contains stars comes directly from NASA's website, so there is no doctoring applied.
the stars are obviously painted in. for starters, stars would not even be remotely visible in that shot. the camera is exposed for a very large [in the frame], very high albedo object. just as you can see no stars in the sky when photographing a full moon zoomed in anywhere close to that size [with an albedo of asphalt mind you], you should not see stars in that shot. you can see very few stars in the sky with the naked eye with a (comparatively tiny) full moon overhead, and the human eye has far more dynamic range than film.
secondly, if you zoom into the image, the aliasing is very light, and mysteriously blocky, on the "stars", and not at all consistent with the aliasing of the earth in the same image. also, the aliasing of the stars is entirely consistent with jpeg compression of an image with zero aliasing on the stars originally (try it - draw white streaks a few pixels wide on a black background in ms paint, and save it as medium quality jpeg). the "stars" were clearly - and very badly - added in after the fact. the streaking of the stars aren't even in a consistent direction of amount.
now the question - why is an image with badly faked stars hosted on a nasa.gov subdomain? i don't know, but you "conveniently" only provided a link to the jpeg. i googled the link itself, and turned up no actual page contianing it (which might have provided clarifying details). for all i know, it could have been on a page highlighting bad fakes, or user-submitted content.
provide a link to the page with the image *and* descriptive content, then we'll talk more. until then, it's irrelevant as an obvious fake.
in the spirit of full disclosure and honest debate [an alien concept to bishop i know], i should point out an interesting twist i noticed. trekky
posted another version of the exact same pic without the badly faked stars. that image is also hosted on the same nasa.gov subdomain (different directory). although trekky surely didn't notice and posted in good faith, the badly faked stars from the original have been blotted out, again very badly. you can just barely tell - i noticed by accident by catching the image from an extreme angle on my lcd monitor. further tweaking confirmed. the background is not quite black. the blotted out fake stars are done (badly) with pure black.
trekky, can you provide the original page that you found that image on? might help resolve things.
so far there is no evidence (that i have the technical savvy to determine at least) of any malfeasance or unfair play by either bishop or trekky in either the "starry" or "non-starry" photos. the photos seem to be on nasa servers. someone with more internets expertise should dig into this. until then, i can hear the screams of "see! this is proof that nasa is faking photos by hiring a 5-year old with ms-paint!" until we learn the context or more about it, it is proof of nothing but bad ms-painting on both versions.
2.) Once I procure the proper equipment I am planning to document my findings with photography.
bishop, as pointed out
here two and a half freakin' months ago, the adapter for your camera (
SteadyPix Universal Camera Mount) can be obtained for $36.95. you live in monterrey with a nice ocean panorama, some of the most expensive real estate in the nation. just take out a second mortgage on your mailbox flag with a 30-year repayment plan, i think you'll be able to cover it. i would also think you would be
highly interested and motivated in jumping at the chance to photograph this
phenomenon that should
shake the round earth theory to it's core. that is, unless you were just lying because it was convenient to your story, in which case you'd do anything possible to convince us you "can't" photograph it for some stupid reason.
that did
kind of sound like a commitment though. is it? is there some kind of time frame we can expect? can we donate to a "tom bishop telescope adapter fund" or something? because if that's a commitment bishop, be very clear and precise about it, something we can hang our hats on and
hold you to. tell you what: i know you are afraid of commitment. maybe you are being held hostage. so just write the word "supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" in a reply to this. i will take that as
your commitment to "procure the equipment" (you know, the $37 peice of plastic), and i will post my evidence. it's that easy.
3.) The video I had ordered was a documentary called "In Search of the Edge: An Inquiry into the Shape of the Earth and the Disappearance of Andrea Barns." It was shown on the Discovery Channel a while back.
I was told by a colleague that Rowbotham's experiments were reproduced in a Learning Channel documentary, and assumed that this video was the same one. However, my colleague must have been referring to a different Flat Earth documentary since upon watching this particular video, the content seems to deal more with the explorations of Antarctica rather than the convexity of standing water.
My colleague tells me that the video featured on the Learning Channel has an FES member from England who takes us to the Bedford Canal in Cambridge and preforms Rowbotham's original experiments. The FES member in the video further demonstrates math on a chalkboard to back up the assertion that, considering the events on the Bedford Canal, the earth cannot be a globe. I am unsure of the title of this documentary, however.
ok. so you said you would upload a video as soon as you received it. what you got was allegedly not the video you expected [due to some rediculously long-winded and therefore suspicious reason]. but that's ok, all we can do is take your word, in this case it is immune from disproof.
that's fine. why didn't you just say so, a long time ago? or when first challenged on it? were you afraid of being seen as being
wrong [however trivially] about something?
the bedford level experiment has been debunked. get over it.
instead, focus your efforts on: providing the two remaining pictures you need to provide to back up your random assertions of nasa fraud, and just *commit* to buying the freakin' telescope adapter already, and shut this debate down once and for all with your shocking visual evidence of a flat earth - which i for one (and many others have already stated as well) will accept with open arms.