- Joined
- Nov 12, 2016
- Messages
- 36
- Reaction score
- 3
- Age
- 64
I can not really believe anyone thinks that is real?Here is the video
I can not really believe anyone thinks that is real?Here is the video
Couple things stand out to me.
1. There are two fairly large shopping centers in the video. There appear to be ZERO vehicles in the parking lot. It looks like a smooth expanse of black.
2. The purported aircraft is approaching from the east with the sun going down. Yet there are *no* car headlights glinting, no street lights, no glare at all in fact until the camera faces directly into the sun. According to the flight schedule I saw, this is either a 343pm flight (from Austin), 512 pm (Madison) or 521 (Cincinnati). This is purportedly Las Vegas, a major city with rush hour. Yet the brief view of the interstate looks essentially empty.
3. The plane covers a distance of approximately 4 miles in 15 seconds of video. Obviously there is some video twiddling going on here with the slowdown, but I don't see any of the normal artifacts you get when speeding up a video 4x.
Of course, almost all of these could be the poor quality of the video. But my gut is leaning toward fancy editing.
As to the thread with facts... uh, my read is more that this is more speculation. There is a lot of "this was done but taken down quickly" and a lot of links that are dead, videos that don't exist or are unavailable. Kinda shaky as evidence and facts. But just my .02
I too am fervently hoping it is a fake. Which is almost certainly coloring my viewing of the video
As someone who's worked in computer graphics for the past 2 decades, I have to say I very much doubt that the source video is fake or from a flight simulator. The lens distortions, the jittery movement, the jello in the footage, the slight lens flare... that would all be really, really difficult to simulate. So I think the footage is real.
Now, what I can't say for sure is if the airliner is real. It would be pretty easy to render a CG plane into real footage, and the low resolution and compression is a classic way to mask a too-clean render. It's obviously on-board video from a camera, not transmitted FPV video, and what on-board camera would take such low res video or compress it so badly? And who would pull a stunt like this and not get the best footage they could. A few things bother me:
-The plane is covering a lot of ground each frame as soon as it becomes visible, but conveniently appears much slower for the close up. The opposite should be true - it should appear slower as it approaches and then scream by. Let's say the plane is traveling at 150 mph, which is in the general range of an approach. Divide by 60 twice and you get 220 feet per second. At 30 frames per second, that's over 7 feet per frame. Yet there's no motion blur on the plane. Stand on a highway overpass and see if you can capture a car passing at 65 mph with no motion blur, panning with it perfectly, and that's only half the speed of the plane.
-There would be a very large wake/vortex behind that plane, but the drone seems entirely unaffected as it drops down behind it. The ending roll looks like the typical FPV freestyle snap roll vs. being caught in major turbulence.
-There is no heat distortion behind the engines. Hard to see because of the low res and the compression, but if you look frame by frame of the houses on the left and the road on the right, as the plane passes, there is no distortion at all.
If it is real, the pilot is either extraordinarily good or extraordinarily lucky to nail that timing and pan perfectly. And if he was that good, why would they only capture or post such shitty quality footage?
I'm not putting it passed some idiot to try to do something like this, and I reserve the right to change my mind if better quality footage shows up, but if I had to place a bet, I'd say it's a CG plane.
I can not really believe anyone thinks that is real?
Yeah is not the average hobbyist that commits this acts and if it is, they need to be put in jail, but the one that goes buys a drone to take pictures, videos and doesn't care to know that there are safety regulations and operational regulations to avoid harm with these types of equipment that could get out of control without warning.
I've been working with digital video for decades. I'm leaning towards it being real, despite how *fake* it looks at first glance. There are several factors that make it look fake, just as there are several factors that make Starman look fake to someone who has no photography background(i.e. the "where are the stars, its fake" folks)
Care to share what those factors are?
I also fail to understand why everyone thinks the "jello" and camera shake couldn't be rendered? It's not a complex phenomenon. It is vibration overlaid onto a rolling shutter. Completely calculable and thus able to be rendered. But I don't have decades in the field so maybe someone can educate my low-rent @$$?
It doesn't matter weather there was or not an aircraft in the air, it is still a restricted RC aircraft flying area.
No one is saying that the camera shake and jello couldn't be rendered. It was merely pointed out that usually such video's don't feature that level of detail, it's something that's overlooked when fake video's are being made (see other video's of drones filming aircraft, hitting aircraft etc).Care to share what those factors are?
I also fail to understand why everyone thinks the "jello" and camera shake couldn't be rendered? It's not a complex phenomenon. It is vibration overlaid onto a rolling shutter. Completely calculable and thus able to be rendered. But I don't have decades in the field so maybe someone can educate my low-rent @$$?
Funnily enough, if the video featured a pair of boobs at the start, the debate about "real vs fake" would have been over in a few seconds... Yeah... keeping it classy!Ah. OK
Let's face it, the only reason drone videos shoot to the top of the news is because of the public's mistrust of drones and distrust of drone operators...
This is how the public see's drones:
they turned and saw a white "DJI Phantom quad-copter" drone headed into their airspace, the report states.
Police say the instructor took controls of the helicopter to avoid the drone and while attempting to land, the helicopter's tail rudder struck a small tree, causing him to lose control of the helicopter.
"
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.