As someone points out, one of technology's best attributes is helping us to better perceive our world. In that light, here is a trio of fascinating videos highlighted by one of my favorite sites, Gizmodo.
The first video illustrates a 3D version of what scientists have called the most amazing photo of the universe. Impressive, but for me, the narration helped me appreciate a more subtle fact. When a star emits photons of light, many photons are lost in the sense that they embed themselves in lifeless masses, never having been observed by anyone. But some photons, a precious few, traveled for 13 billion years through the vacuum of space only to embed themselves on the sensor of the Hubble telescope, allowing themselves to be discovered as perhaps the last remnant of a distant star that today may no longer exist.
The next video shows a more local miracle: a sea turtle grazing in a warm current, all captured with a state of the (commercially available) art dSLR camera which captures near HD video. An interesting intersection between technology and nature. Hard to not smile at this.
The final video shows our world on a more minute, more whimsical level: a dizzying array of flight patterns. Insects under a streetlamp, captured with a long exposure.
flight patterns from Charlie McCarthy on Vimeo.
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