Categories: News

You can take a selfie with the Earth using this YouTuber’s satellite

The stunt escalation on YouTube may have reached new heights with Mark Rober’s offer to snap anyone’s selfie with the planet Earth using a satellite he’s launching into orbit with the help of Google and T-Mobile.

Rober is a former NASA engineer who made a name for himself on YouTube by glitter bombing porch pirates, creating the world’s largest Super Soaker, and building an obstacle course for squirrels. Now he’s merging his interests with the launch of a satellite that can take photos of anyone’s portrait displayed on a Google Pixel with the Earth — yes, Planet Earth — in the background.

If you tell Rober where you live, he claims that he’ll take the selfie while the satellite is located over your city, and he’ll tell you exactly when the photo is going to be taken, so you can go outside and technically get in the shot twice. The satellite is scheduled to be launched by SpaceX in January 2025 (aboard the Transporter 12 mission), and is set to start taking selfie photos a few months after that.

Yes, it’s a total gimmick, and while Rober and T-Mobile are advertising the opportunity as “free,” I regret to inform you that there are some strings attached. You’ll need to subscribe to CrunchLabs, which offers engineering-build kits for kids, to get the free code for the satellite selfie. (CrunchLab subscriptions run between $25-$80 annually, depending on the selected package.) Existing T-Mobile subscribers can also get a free code via the T-Life app, and Google Pixel customers are being offered codes as well.

Codes can be redeemed starting December 3rd at spaceselfie.com. You’ll be directed to upload your selfie, after which you’ll receive an email allowing you to track when your selfie will be taken.

Image: Mark Rober/T-Mobile

Rober has a whole YouTube video explaining the mechanics of the selfie-taking satellite. There are actually two cameras and two Google Pixel phones mounted on either side of the satellite for redundancy, and the whole thing is powered by an expansive solar array, sending energy to a 120Wh battery pack.

Original Author: Andrew J. Hawkins | Source: The Verge

Akshit Behera

Share
Published by
Akshit Behera

Recent Posts

Trump administration’s deal is structured to prevent Intel from selling foundry unit | TechCrunch

The deal allows the U.S. to take more equity in Intel if the company doesn't…

6 months ago

3 Apple Watches are rumored to arrive on September 9 – these are the models to expect

We're expecting two new models alongside the all-new Apple Watch Series 11. | Original Author:…

6 months ago

Fujitsu is teaming with Nvidia to build probably the world’s fastest AI supercomputer ever at 600,000 FP8 Petaflops – so Feyman GPU could well feature

Japan’s FugakuNEXT supercomputer will combine Fujitsu CPUs and Nvidia GPUs to deliver 600EFLOPS AI performance…

6 months ago

Microsoft fires two more employees for participating in Palestine protests on campus

Microsoft has fired two more employees who participated in recent protests against the company’s contracts…

6 months ago

Microsoft launches its first in-house AI models

Microsoft announced its first homegrown AI models on Thursday: MAI-Voice-1 AI and MAI-1-preview. The company…

6 months ago

Life 3.0 – Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence by Max Tegmark

A comprehensive review of Max Tegmark's Life 3.0, exploring the future of artificial intelligence and…

6 months ago