I just released 'elsewheres', a trio of short films that I wrote, directed, shot, edited, and produced.
It's free-to-watch (with a voluntary donation model) on my site, but was made for the Big Screen, so I'm also planning a DIY pop-up cinema tour across Europe in the months ahead.
a trio of short motion pictures that i've written, directed, produced, shot and edited, and will launch on my website late next month, followed by a european tour of free screenings with my pop-up, makeshift cinema. an experiment to see if i can become fully-funded by tips/donations from the audience.
sign up for the mailing list in footer of my site if that sounds of interest:
It's that tracking shot where it starts with spaceships we're familiar with in our own "timeline" like the Space Shuttle and works up to larger and larger vessels, including Enterprise. Suppose having the ability to ferry more and more cargo to low earth orbit means we can start creating much larger structures in space?
Starship is a cargo conveyor system. The Starship is comparable in complexity to a 737, and so it’s not unthinkable to have a construction rate of 500/year. If each Starship manages 300 flights per year, each carrying 150 T of cargo, then we are talking a yearly incremental cargo capacity growth of 22 million tonnes to orbit. At this point, the most meaningful constraint on launch capacity might be launch pad construction rate.
This made me think of this shot in Star Trek: Into Darkness
https://www.carrozo.com/guillotine-emoji