http://www.pasadenastarnews.com/ci_14978168The camera is so advanced that "as you're driving, you could make a movie," states Joy Crisp, JPL deputy project scientist on Mars Science Laboratory. Now listed as a co-investor on the project, Cameron is taking great pains to see if the camera will be ready by launch, which is set for 2011.Cameron convinced NASA to buy a 3-D camera for Curiosity. It will sit on top of the rover's mast - even though a mast camera, without 3-D capabilities, had already been built and was delivered to JPL this month.
The article title is somewhat misleading:
James Cameron To Shoot A 3-D Film On The Surface Of Mars
Apr 30, 2010
http://io9.com/5527847/james-cameron-to-shoot-a-3+d-film-on-the-surface-of-mars
It was only earlier this week FreezeC77
was worried he would never see a film not shot on Earth, well...a fictional film. I brought up:
You can be assured the next time we go to the moon or an asteroid or a manned mission to Mars there will be multiple high definition cameras shooting science documentaries.
Now the question is how will James Cameron get motion capture technology into NASA for some future stuff like the man's first steps on Mars with motion capture dots all over the spacesuit and half a dozen cameras on the ship capturing the data in 2040?
A 3-D Mars science documentary is obviously down the road. Now how about allowing the moviegoing public live 3-D images from Mars for 2 minutes before every 3-D digital cinema movie?