Crash Site - out of this world
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Just saw this come up on my screen saver - one of the best mars pictures yet I reckon: Opportunity crash site[^] Go to Medium Image[^] down the bottom.
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Just saw this come up on my screen saver - one of the best mars pictures yet I reckon: Opportunity crash site[^] Go to Medium Image[^] down the bottom.
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Anyone happen to know what NASA's reproduction/copyright information is? Or if they have a sight that has prints of these pictures for sale? This would be a nifty print to put up in the office. :cool: -J
Do you think the Martian justice system will catch you? :omg: I don't think there are any extradition treaties with Mars yet.
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Do you think the Martian justice system will catch you? :omg: I don't think there are any extradition treaties with Mars yet.
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Just saw this come up on my screen saver - one of the best mars pictures yet I reckon: Opportunity crash site[^] Go to Medium Image[^] down the bottom.
That's a great pic, it was the APOD yesterday[^]. I also like the one they had that showed the landing site of whichever rover it was that landed in the crater, you could see the airbag prints showing how it bounced around. --Mike-- LINKS~! Ericahist updated! | 1ClickPicGrabber | CP SearchBar v2.0.2 | C++ Forum FAQ Strange things are afoot at the U+004B U+20DD
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Anyone happen to know what NASA's reproduction/copyright information is? Or if they have a sight that has prints of these pictures for sale? This would be a nifty print to put up in the office. :cool: -J
Being a (US) government-funded body, I'm pretty sure it's output is implicitly public domain. You can request just about any pictures or footage from NASA that you want, and they pretty much charge shipping + reproduction cost. In addition, lots of NASA image sites have links to huge, high-resolution image files that are fit for printing. The link in the parent points to a 8mb version of that picture that is 1905x6461 pixels at 100DPI. You could upload that to zazzle.com and create a custom poster. There are already a number of people who have taken NASA images from the mars missions and turned them into posters on zazzle -- Russell Morris "So, broccoli, mother says you're good for me... but I'm afraid I'm no good for you!" - Stewy
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Being a (US) government-funded body, I'm pretty sure it's output is implicitly public domain. You can request just about any pictures or footage from NASA that you want, and they pretty much charge shipping + reproduction cost. In addition, lots of NASA image sites have links to huge, high-resolution image files that are fit for printing. The link in the parent points to a 8mb version of that picture that is 1905x6461 pixels at 100DPI. You could upload that to zazzle.com and create a custom poster. There are already a number of people who have taken NASA images from the mars missions and turned them into posters on zazzle -- Russell Morris "So, broccoli, mother says you're good for me... but I'm afraid I'm no good for you!" - Stewy