Hi,
I just entered the forum the first time. Mainly to introduce myself and also to entertain you with a new aspect to the game I found.
Since people already mentioned that one can find stars by flying away from the system and then towards it and then watch out for moving objects I wondered
whether the game offers enough accuracy in its star field display and controls so that I could use the principle involved in a blink comparator (check wikipedia, the forum doesn't like my links).
Let me tell you the good news - it does, as you can see from the included gif. Oh the forum won't let me, well try your luck with the following:
i87.photobucket.com/albums/k150/kt256/friendian_blink_zps7s0asryy.gif
You can see two blinking objects the left is Frendian A and the other is probably the second star in the Frendian system I intend to explore next.
Taking two images from the same starfield is possible when getting out of Supercruise mode and stoping. For that only the keyboard should be used, then the starfield remains the same.
The distance from Frendian A is chosen according to the maximum Binary system sizes which is given as 1000Au or 1000 Astronomical Units = 499 004.784 light seconds according to Google.
I guess one could write a little program for this to make the blink comparison more efficient.
I'm totally amazed that it actually works. I would have expected micro mouse movements to spoil the starfield. Great job people!
Best Regards,
KT
I just entered the forum the first time. Mainly to introduce myself and also to entertain you with a new aspect to the game I found.
Since people already mentioned that one can find stars by flying away from the system and then towards it and then watch out for moving objects I wondered
whether the game offers enough accuracy in its star field display and controls so that I could use the principle involved in a blink comparator (check wikipedia, the forum doesn't like my links).
Let me tell you the good news - it does, as you can see from the included gif. Oh the forum won't let me, well try your luck with the following:
i87.photobucket.com/albums/k150/kt256/friendian_blink_zps7s0asryy.gif
You can see two blinking objects the left is Frendian A and the other is probably the second star in the Frendian system I intend to explore next.
Taking two images from the same starfield is possible when getting out of Supercruise mode and stoping. For that only the keyboard should be used, then the starfield remains the same.
The distance from Frendian A is chosen according to the maximum Binary system sizes which is given as 1000Au or 1000 Astronomical Units = 499 004.784 light seconds according to Google.
I guess one could write a little program for this to make the blink comparison more efficient.
I'm totally amazed that it actually works. I would have expected micro mouse movements to spoil the starfield. Great job people!
Best Regards,
KT