Interesting. Thanks for the link Steve. I remember seeing the trailer
for "Chasing Ice" and wanting to see it, but then promptly I forgot
about it. Will need to hunt it down.

I'm especially interested in how they programmed things to only
photograph during daylight hours. That would be a Good Thing.



On Thu, Nov 5, 2015 at 1:41 PM, steve harley <[email protected]> wrote:
> On 2015-11-05 11:06 , Darren Addy wrote:
>>
>> The camera must run at a remote location - unattended (hopefully for
>> month's) and it can't run out of power OR fill up a memory card. The
>> remote location has no power and is about 1/2 mile (line of sight)
>> from civilization and a Wi-Fi network connection. It is going to have
>> to survive in Nebraska weather, including the potential for snow/ice,
>> high wind, rain and hail.
>
>
> except for wifi this sounds like a moderate-conditions version of what James
> Balog did for his Extreme Ice Survey; the associated movie (Chasing Ice) is
> as much a human drama about what it took to get the cameras in position as
> it is about the photos they took and the changes they documented
>
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extreme_Ice_Survey#Fieldwork_and_equipment>
>
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