00:33:42 Michael Connelly: glass universe was excellent 00:33:54 Krystal Rolon (GCS): Reacted to "glass universe was e..." with ❤️ 00:45:50 Dale Ghent: I'm involved with a group that does explanet surveys and run the telescopes that gather data. Would be happy to briefly chat about that. 00:45:57 Krystal Rolon (GCS): Reacted to "I'm involved with a ..." with ❤️ 00:46:28 Krystal Rolon (GCS): That's awesome Dale! 00:59:17 Arjun Meenashi Sundar: How faint the telescope can image? 01:00:10 Susan Drinnon: Doesn't sound like you'd be able to do star trail images, or would there still be a way to do that if you wanted to? 01:00:29 David Stein: You can take star trail images in scenery mode 01:03:27 Atul Agrawal: Seems like orientation of the image changed in the last 2 frames. Was it done automatically by SeeStar? 01:13:02 Arjun Meenashi Sundar: Thank you 01:16:23 Michael Connelly: can you share how long it takes from power up to be able to track something? 01:16:33 David Stein: About 30 seconds - maybe a minute 01:17:04 David Stein: It runs through a short routine the first time you take an astrophoto in a session 01:17:37 David Stein: Planets very small 01:18:23 Michael Connelly: that's way faster than my celestron starsense setup 01:18:32 Michael Connelly: which is about 2 min 01:19:08 David Stein: I haven't timed it, if it turned out to be 2 minutes I wouldn't be that surprised. My impression was 'wow that's fast' 01:19:24 Steve Royal: Maybe my next purchase, I like what I see so far from someone yet to do astrophotography 01:23:04 Michael Connelly: i like this from an easy to take on a plane for a trip perspective. 01:23:44 Steve Royal: That too 01:24:29 Shireen Gonzaga: Can you describe the filters that come with SeeStar? 01:25:18 David Stein: It comes with an externally attachable white light solar filter. There is also a built in dual-band narrowband filter for nebulas 01:25:55 Shireen Gonzaga: Thank you David. What’s the LP filter that Grace mentioned in the previous slide? 01:26:11 David Stein: That is the dual band filter 01:26:21 Shireen Gonzaga: Ah. Thank you for that clarification! 01:28:07 David Stein: Also it's basically one half of a 50mm binocular 01:30:14 Bob Savoy: So, in planet mode, one could time-lapse the Galilaelan (sp) moons across the sky 01:30:32 David Stein: Yes Bob, it ought to be able to do that easily 01:31:01 Bob Savoy: Thanks David 01:37:13 Steve Royal: What are the positive benefits from the higher priced models $500-$5000? 01:38:26 Steve Royal: Company 7 has them? 01:39:00 David Stein: One benefit for sure is they have larger apertures. The new one from Celestron is a 6" 01:40:24 Stephen Pribut: Reacted to "What are the positiv..." with 👍 01:40:34 Dale Ghent: I've notice a bunch of creations for the seestar (and other EAA scopes like this) pop up in the 3d printing community. Would be happy to print stuff for the club 01:40:51 Bob Savoy: Will the iMac on my desk connect to my soon-to-be-here 01:42:54 Jared : Reacted to "I've notice a bunch ..." with 😎 01:48:39 Krystal Rolon (GCS): Reacted to "I've notice a bunch ..." with 😎 02:06:45 Grace Coventry: Jared, this is APOD-worthy! 02:08:31 Dale Ghent: Could consider the D2 for HALO. There are 2 open filter slots I think. 02:11:00 Bob Savoy: Will my soon-to-be-here Seestar in my driveway connect to my iMac on my desk? 02:13:09 Grace Coventry: David, thanks for answering all the Seestar questions in chat! 02:14:04 Shireen Gonzaga: Thank you …. I came mostly to hear Grace but enjoyed the whole meeting.