by d-76 » Wed Jun 15, 2011 3:07 pm
This was refreshingly different.
Sure, it's a bunch of images and a somewhat obscure industrial-techno soundtrack spliced together to form a hip video. Sure, there's a vast amount of collected data missing from this presentation. Sure, from a purely scientific standpoint it's devoid of value.
I loved it. After watching it a few dozen times, it compelled me to search for more information about the Cassini Mission (one which, unfortunately, just isn't prominently fixed at the forefront of the world's collective consciousness) and the Project's findings.
More to the point, it prompted my daughter, who was walking past, to backstep and ask "What is THAT?" So now she's found time to separate herself from the Hollywood gossip and whatever the current boy-band thing is in lieu of actually learning a thing or two about our Solar system.
I don't know about you, but I'd consider that a "mission accomplished."
D.
This was refreshingly different.
Sure, it's a bunch of images and a somewhat obscure industrial-techno soundtrack spliced together to form a hip video. Sure, there's a vast amount of collected data missing from this presentation. Sure, from a purely scientific standpoint it's devoid of value.
I loved it. After watching it a few dozen times, it compelled me to search for more information about the Cassini Mission (one which, unfortunately, just isn't prominently fixed at the forefront of the world's collective consciousness) and the Project's findings.
More to the point, it prompted my daughter, who was walking past, to backstep and ask "What is THAT?" So now she's found time to separate herself from the Hollywood gossip and whatever the current boy-band thing is in lieu of actually learning a thing or two about our Solar system.
I don't know about you, but I'd consider that a "mission accomplished."
D.