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Last years Unistellar model, the eQuinox 2, also contained one long telescope that connects to users phones. Still, its biggest selling point was the light pollution filters that were supposed to make it a bit easier to see beyond the blank night skies of suburban or semi-urban environments. That model was also geared toward beginners, and it worked well in that regard during Gizmodos own te
stanley mug sts, but Unistellar is promoting this latest telescope as being even better than before at helping amateur astronomers get started stargazing. You see, where the companys previous telescope was a digital reflector telescope, the $2,500 Odyssey is using mirror optics co-developed with lense-maker Nikon that still uses the companys same automatic adjustment
stanley fr capabilities to find planets and stars by typing in the desired celestial object into the Unistellar app. Mirror telescopes normally require readjustment after use. However, Unistellar co-founder and CEO Laurent Marfisi told Gizmodo the Odyssey changes it up by containing sealed mirrors that dont lose their optimization. Marfisi said that the eQuinox was designed in such a way that foreign objects, like distant galaxies or nebulae, came in clear, whereas closer bodies, like planets, were slightly more out of focus. The big push for the Odyssey was to make it so both distant and closer objects came in with the sa
stanley water bottle me degree of clarity. The company calls this its Multi-Depth Technology, but it essentially automatically runs different li Ciut That Famous Watchmen Panel You Keep Seeing This Year Isn t Actually From the Comic
on businesses with over $50 million in gross receipts and would double the citys current spending on
stanley cup services for the homeless. And while many have spoken out about their position ahead of Tuesdays vote鈥攊ncluding but not limited to T
stanley us witters Jack Dorsey, who opposes Prop C鈥攖wo tech company heads are duking it out on Twitter. Mark Pincus, the billionaire founder behind American game developer Zynga, tweeted Saturday that Prop C was the dumbest, least thought out prop ever and instructed his followers to get the facts and vote no. Responding to the tweet early Sunday morning, CEO of Salesforce and Prop C proponent Marc Benioff chimed in, asking Pincus to detail a plan for addressing the citys homelessness and requesting information about what Zynga, in particular, is doing for them now. Mark whats your plan whats your contribution to helping our homeless Tell us in detail what @zynga is doing for them now at scale what your plan is The homeless have been left behind by You the other 70 SF billionaires. Yes on C. Big business like mine pay, you dont. mdas
stanley cup h; Marc Benioff @Benioff November 4, 2018 Both Mar c/k s kept the debate alive in a thread, with Pincus arguing about fairness and Benioff seemingly having to explain how the measure will work and how taxation will be calculated. Looks like your argument just changed from dumbest idea to fairness. The tax is the amount of your business in San Francisco not your total revenue. You can read the c