I look down on you, because I am considerably more in orbit attached to the international space station than you.
This is a new webcam attached to the ISS - streaming HD video most of the time. (sometimes there isn't signal space.channel4.com/tracker/ shows you where it is. )
If it's over a dark shaded area - it's night there, and you won't see much - dawn/dusk is awesome.
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 10:27, Reply)
This is a new webcam attached to the ISS - streaming HD video most of the time. (sometimes there isn't signal space.channel4.com/tracker/ shows you where it is. )
If it's over a dark shaded area - it's night there, and you won't see much - dawn/dusk is awesome.
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 10:27, Reply)
no signal as it passes over Ukraine, is that deliberate? *chemtrail hat on*
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 10:38, Reply)
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 10:38, Reply)
'High Definition Earth Viewing'
It must be very cloudy as it's solid gray at the moment
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 10:41, Reply)
It must be very cloudy as it's solid gray at the moment
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 10:41, Reply)
Give it about 45 minutes and it will be over Atlantic going towards Europe and in daylight.
EDIT: the tracking site's clock is wrong though. says it's 10:18 GMT but it's defo 11:18 here so my guess would be South America visible around 12-12:30 GMT
Edit edit: It's got audio too...
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 11:10, Reply)
EDIT: the tracking site's clock is wrong though. says it's 10:18 GMT but it's defo 11:18 here so my guess would be South America visible around 12-12:30 GMT
Edit edit: It's got audio too...
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 11:10, Reply)
Aaaah, of course, well that's explained that.
Sunrise just completed over Chile, and it was magnificent.
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 11:52, Reply)
Sunrise just completed over Chile, and it was magnificent.
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 11:52, Reply)
strangely (or not)
it went grey when it started to pass over Russia and China, and kicked back in once it reached the Pacific.
*oooOOOOoooOOOhhhhhh*
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 11:26, Reply)
it went grey when it started to pass over Russia and China, and kicked back in once it reached the Pacific.
*oooOOOOoooOOOhhhhhh*
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 11:26, Reply)
That 'Gravity' isn't quite as exiting as I remember it at the cinema
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 12:00, Reply)
( , Fri 2 May 2014, 12:00, Reply)