

NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory specializes in robotic space and Earth exploration, and is home to the Deep Space Network.Also, NASA’s Artemis I Rocket at Rollout, downloadable here. Latest addition: From NASA Kennedy, Orion in 360 Degrees video with downloadable stills here, here, and here. See the NASA Media Use Policy and the JPL Image Use Policy. Files are downloadable below, including videos. There are also some true, interactive VR experiences listed on this page. The media here should be usable by most digital planetarium systems, headset Virtual Reality, and smartphone VR setups, with minimum extra work to import them. Members can access an interactive, planetarium curriculum using these assets.

This is a collection of media and tools, which includes 360 spherical images/videos using equirectangular warping. Software: Digital Sky 2 buttons, Uniview instructions, Digistar instructions, Digitalis instructions, Emerald Planetarium instructions, Shira player instructions, ePlanetarium instructions, OpenSpace instructions, some Rift, some Vive, and general media More videos from Insta360 can be found on the company’s Instagram and TikTok.Format: Live, interactive, and short clips/stills, with some fully immersive Virtual Reality (VR) experiences, and some Augmented Reality (AR) experiences The video shows the custom domed unit which appears to hold a few items, one of which is very likely an external battery since Insta360 only rates the battery of the camera to last 80 minutes and the company says it was able to continuously record in space for two hours, which doesn’t count the ascent time. While cameras reaching similar heights and continuing to function isn’t uncommon and has been done for many years, it’s still impressive to think that relatively affordable, consumer-level cameras can survive and operate at the negative 56-degrees Celcius (about negative 68.8 degrees Fahrenheit) for two hours. High altitude balloons generally reach a height between 18 and 23 miles above sea level, which matches Insta360’s claim that the balloon and camera floated to 100,000 feet and remained there for two hours. Clearly, the idea was to attach the Insta360 X2 to what appears to be a type of high-altitude balloon and see what would happen. NewMakeIt describes itself as a collaborative facility that enables members of the local community to start innovative, creative, entrepreneurial, or learning endeavors by providing them with physical space, tools, and technology to turn ideas and turn them into reality.
