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Originally Posted by dank
In the time was it crappy???
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As a witness to the events in July, 1969, I distinctly remember various commentators complaining about the low quality of the lunar video transmissions. In fact, as I sat there watching the live TV from the Moon, I thought to myself, "Darn. Why couldn't they have used better equipment, with less of an image decay rate? Those shots where you can see 'through' the astronauts due to image persistence will probably have some people crying 'fake!'"
Later I found out NASA had not even originally planned to have a video camera along on the flight.
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Originally Posted by dank
if this was real then we would not be able to find one mistake.
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Mistakes, no, since nothing was artificially generated. Artifacts, of course.
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Originally Posted by dank
Also in movies if you want to find mistakes you will, all movies have mistakes in final cuts, and the movie studios are trained to find mistakes but they never find them all.
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That's because movies are artificial depictions of reality. The Apollo videos and photos aren't.
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Originally Posted by dank
Same with a lot of the footage there are mistakes. Why because some of the work was done on Earth sorry to say.
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Artifacts are not "mistakes". Misinterpretations of photographs and videos are not mistakes in the photographs and videos, they're mistakes made by the person doing the misinterpretations. Re your final "sentence", you've provided no information that would validate that conclusion.
Editorial aside: Why do I get the feeling I'm at a recycling center? :roll: