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T O P I C R E V I E WAphroditeDigital cameras have processors. Here's an excerpt I read today:"For most users, who didn't use the processor's floating-point unit very often, and didn't need accuracy to fifteen significant figures when they did, the answer was almost never. At the rate that the average Pentium owner used the floating-power unit, the Intel engineers calculated, wrong answers would come up about once every twenty-seven thousand years. The vast majority of PCs containing the flawed Pentium chips would be scrapped long before then. Memory chips had a mean time between failure, or MTBF, of about seven hundred years, and the Pentium chip itself had an MTBF of only about two hundred years.But what about people who took real advantage of the Pentium's floating-point calculation facilities? Some of these were graphic designers and typographers using software packages like PhotoShop; for them, the bug would only be likely to produce one pixel wrong out of hundreds of thousands or millions. The result would be no more worse than a single misplaced dot in a photo or a page of text. They they could even see the dot on the page, most people would attribute it to a speck of dust on a printing plate and forget it."lioneye68How is this related to orbs, Amy? I don't get it.RaHello Aphrodite I don't know about that explanation. It could explain some photos, but orbs like the one's in Amber's pictures take more space than one pixel. trillianThe company I work for put on a very large outdoor September 11th Memorial on the first anniversary.Towards the end of the event the sun had set, and there was very little light. During a 'parade' of those in the armed forces in front of the stage, several of the photos contained not only orbs, but orbs in red white and blue. Mistake? Dust specs? Unknown.I love the mystery of the orbs! And I'll have to see if I can find those photos and post them in our photo shop here at LL.Jazzebelthanks, Aphrodite...that sounds reasonable. I personaly never ever assumed the orbs are gosts or gnoms or whatever else mysterious and I am sure there is some techinacal explaination to it, just like the explenation you gave above. OH sightrillianJazz, I too believe there may be a sientific explanation to the Orbs...but, I still like the mystery. BloodRedMoonI just woke up so maybe that's why it doesn't make any sense to me One dot, though.... That seems like it would be incredibly small. Here's Hunter's orb.. http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/huntorb012204cropsm.jpg http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/huntorb012204asm.jpg http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/huntorb012103asm.jpg http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/orbshunt020503f.jpg http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/huntorb042104.jpg AphroditeHiya All,The excerpt above references mathematical errors Intel's Pentium chip had back in the 90s. ALL processors have bugs because there are at least 100 engineers working on a chip simultaneously with millions of transistors. Then the chip has to go to the fab facility, which increases the likelihood of bugs for a variety of reasons (i.e., radiation, material science, chemical reactions, heat).Imaging chips are similar in that regard. In addition, the images' colors, dimensions, and depths are mathematical representations of "halfs" to get them into digital form, i.e., binary numbers. This is to standardize input and facilitate easier movements and readings of electrons.In theory, there are 7 layers to technology, from the basic 1s and 0s to the application layer we see on the computer screen. Bugs occur between layers and do produce unintendend variances in the application form.Hope this helps clarify. Below is a picture of an outdated high-end image chip: Aph.pixelpixieIf any of you have the mistaken impression I am smart, let me clarify it right now for you.. this is what your statement looked like to me, Aphrodite~"Blah blah blah blah blah blah, Chips. Blah blah blah blah Technology. Layers. Colors. Yada yada yada yada yada, Engineers. Bugs. Blah yada yada blah blah blabber blah Movements." I am soooooo not savvy.So, The chips have layers that are colored (yum) and the engineers found bugs moving in the technology. (neat)That's how you get orbs.Orbs are perty. Yep. 0_oAphroditePixie, You know you are a smart lady. AmytrillianPixie,Ditto Aphrodite.And you had me laughing!BloodRedMoonbwuahahahaaa pixelpixie!! You have the balls to say what I can't. I am smart in some areas but I can't make heads or tails of this thread. O_oUtmost respect for Aphrodite for getting it, though!pixelpixie Yes!!Props for Aphrodite!!!No, I wasn't fishing for some love, but thanks for it, nonetheless... I was just flexing my Uranus. (eeeeeewwww! That sounded better in my head) lioneye68Aph, that explaination doesn't satisfy the questions of why do the orbs show up in one picture, then not the next, taken with the same camera on the same day? Why the inconsistant nature of their appearence if they are due to a defect? And why are they known to be more prominant in places known to be spiritually charged? That blurb wasn't an explaination for orbs, it was just some vague summery about processers having defects sometimes.That's like explaining ghosts by saying people are delusional sometimes.I dunno, I like to think we're starting to invent extremely sensitive instruments in this technological booming age, and our digital cameras just may be capturing a form of energy not visible to the naked eye. Could be. Who knows? The idea entertains my imagination, you know?BloodRedMoonTrue, lioneye.There was one spot in my old apartment where I'd always get orbs. And orbs show up in pics with HUnter quite often. It would seem strange that the same camera taking a picture of another place or another person wouldn't have those things.RaBingo lioneye ... and Amber lioneye68Yeah, Amber, I've seen your orb pictures with Hunter...he seems to have alot of pictures with orbs in them, doesn't he?
"For most users, who didn't use the processor's floating-point unit very often, and didn't need accuracy to fifteen significant figures when they did, the answer was almost never. At the rate that the average Pentium owner used the floating-power unit, the Intel engineers calculated, wrong answers would come up about once every twenty-seven thousand years. The vast majority of PCs containing the flawed Pentium chips would be scrapped long before then. Memory chips had a mean time between failure, or MTBF, of about seven hundred years, and the Pentium chip itself had an MTBF of only about two hundred years.
But what about people who took real advantage of the Pentium's floating-point calculation facilities? Some of these were graphic designers and typographers using software packages like PhotoShop; for them, the bug would only be likely to produce one pixel wrong out of hundreds of thousands or millions. The result would be no more worse than a single misplaced dot in a photo or a page of text. They they could even see the dot on the page, most people would attribute it to a speck of dust on a printing plate and forget it."
I don't know about that explanation. It could explain some photos, but orbs like the one's in Amber's pictures take more space than one pixel.
Towards the end of the event the sun had set, and there was very little light. During a 'parade' of those in the armed forces in front of the stage, several of the photos contained not only orbs, but orbs in red white and blue. Mistake? Dust specs? Unknown.
I love the mystery of the orbs!
And I'll have to see if I can find those photos and post them in our photo shop here at LL.
Here's Hunter's orb.. http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/huntorb012204cropsm.jpg http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/huntorb012204asm.jpg http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/huntorb012103asm.jpg http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/orbshunt020503f.jpg http://glamourjunkies.com/hunter/huntorb042104.jpg
The excerpt above references mathematical errors Intel's Pentium chip had back in the 90s. ALL processors have bugs because there are at least 100 engineers working on a chip simultaneously with millions of transistors. Then the chip has to go to the fab facility, which increases the likelihood of bugs for a variety of reasons (i.e., radiation, material science, chemical reactions, heat).
Imaging chips are similar in that regard. In addition, the images' colors, dimensions, and depths are mathematical representations of "halfs" to get them into digital form, i.e., binary numbers. This is to standardize input and facilitate easier movements and readings of electrons.
In theory, there are 7 layers to technology, from the basic 1s and 0s to the application layer we see on the computer screen. Bugs occur between layers and do produce unintendend variances in the application form.
Hope this helps clarify. Below is a picture of an outdated high-end image chip:
Aph.
"Blah blah blah blah blah blah, Chips. Blah blah blah blah Technology. Layers. Colors. Yada yada yada yada yada, Engineers. Bugs. Blah yada yada blah blah blabber blah Movements."
I am soooooo not savvy.
So, The chips have layers that are colored (yum) and the engineers found bugs moving in the technology. (neat)That's how you get orbs.
Orbs are perty. Yep. 0_o
You know you are a smart lady.
Amy
And you had me laughing!
Utmost respect for Aphrodite for getting it, though!
There was one spot in my old apartment where I'd always get orbs. And orbs show up in pics with HUnter quite often. It would seem strange that the same camera taking a picture of another place or another person wouldn't have those things.
... and Amber
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