Solar Eclipse Webcasts 13
KjetilK writes "There is a nice partial solar eclipse in the morning of May 31. On Greenland, Iceland and northern Scotland it will be annular, whereas in most of northern Europe (and reaching into Asia), it will be a normal partial solar eclipse.
There are several webcasts of the event coming up, including some from Netherlands and Belgium. Plugging our own, we have live webcasts from four cities in Norway. The eclipse comes up to 92% of the sun's radius here, and we have a great weather forecast."
BBC Link (Score:5, Informative)
I am ready. (Score:1)
*moan* (Score:4, Funny)
Now, there's a solar eclipse... Woohoo! Next is in 100+ years. And the time it's going to happen where I live:
Saturday, 5:40 am, forecast is cloudy.
WTF!
Re:*moan* (Score:2)
I have good news for you! A spectacular astonomical event is coming up, and the timing will be perfect for you see it first hand!
A once-in-a-century meteor nearly 10 meters across - comparable to the Tunguska event - will impact less than half a kilometer from your house. The skies will be perfectly clear and you'll be home to see it! What amazing luck!
-
Were all done for! (Score:1)
Lousy webcasts (Score:1)
Re:Lousy webcasts (Score:2)
Unfortunately, our servers were pretty much wiped out by the flood of requests. We had two AS-20 alphas, each with 2 CPUs and a few gigs of RAM. A nice RAID, and fibrechannel between the disks and the machines, and each of the boxes had a gigabit/s link to the rest of the net. Apache had been recompiled for the occasion, to allow for more children (which was the bottleneck at the Mercury transit). Still,
Re:Lousy webcasts (Score:1)
Cheers for the effort though. Your live pic hosting might have worked out quite a bit better had it not gotten slashdotted...
Pictures of the eclipse here (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Pictures of the eclipse here (Score:1)
Look! Dark! (Score:2)
Somehow eclipses just strike me as something you have to be there for.