Remote hosting for your telescope

(sierra-remote.com)

140 points | by gregorvand 4 days ago ago

41 comments

  • tbagman a day ago

    I can also recommend starfront observatories (https://starfront.space) for folks looking to do remote hosting. It's in a remote location in Texas with solid skies and great staff, and has a pretty unique model of high density hosting to drive down cost, seeing a ton of deep sky astrophotographers come.

    From time to time there are fun collaborative projects too, like https://app.astrobin.com/u/bagman?i=ey9s59#gallery.

    • s0rce a day ago

      Is this for hobbyists or industrial use?

      • tbagman a day ago

        It's primarily for hobbyists. From the community discord, I know there are also serious rigs out there as well, on which some members are doing some astronomical science...

    • therein 21 hours ago

      Telescope datacenter, what a cool concept.

      • exe34 16 hours ago

        Farm might be a better word. Like render farm.

    • dmead 20 hours ago

      Obligatory comment that bray fals has been caught making up data ie, using Photoshop to paint detail in fals-1, the supposed new discovery that was actually already in some survey data.

      Fun fact, Bray was the second jtw trident user in North America. I think I was the first.

      Also, bit weird you can't come set up your own telescope.

  • fudged71 a day ago

    What are other examples of managed remote hosting of things that aren’t compute? I had considered this model for a 3D print farm years ago.

    • malfist a day ago

      Telescopes are pretty common for this, but lab equipment is too. Universal particle accelerators and stuff

    • BryanLegend 9 hours ago

      Factories & Food Delivery Kitchens

    • s0rce a day ago

      Medical device manufacturing, kind of.

    • tinix a day ago

      amateur radio antenna farms also

    • IgorPartola a day ago

      Solar panel collectives.

      • digdugdirk a day ago

        Wait... Collective? Not a utility? Are we talking about a neighborhood chipping in on a few panels, or something more interesting?

        • amoshebb a day ago

          In nova scotia there are grants to build “community solar gardens”. A 3-6MW solar farm is built somewhere cheap and convenient and then anybody in the community can pay for so many panels and then they get that amount knocked off the light bill as if they had rooftop solar. Idea is it lets people buy solar unrelated to if they rent/own or have a good roof pitch or whatever.

  • michaeldoron a day ago

    This might be the smallest of marketing nitpickings, but the technical support is not free, it's complimentary for $600/month.

  • jalk 17 hours ago

    I've been looking to take my kids to an observatory, but the logistics makes it tricky (travel + night time), so I have been searching for online services where you can get a guided tour, with "hands-on" telescope control, but have so far come up short. It needs to be guided, since I know very little about astronomy and telescopes.

    • whartung 10 hours ago

      Try to see if there’s a local astronomy club. They tend to routinely have field nights where folks bring their equipment out, point it at something interesting and let the public engage in the activity.

  • _xerces_ 10 hours ago

    I don't understand this service. I feel it takes away from the experience. One of the few hobbies that gets you outside and under the stars and learning to navigate the sky and its motions was already being reduced to pressing a few buttons on a laptop connected to the scope. Now, you don't even leave your house?

    • ranger207 8 hours ago

      I think it's more for astrophotography enthusiasts where the hobby is more about getting good photography setups than looking at stars yourself

  • teddy-smith 14 hours ago

    I had no idea this whole world exists and it makes me happy.

  • RainyDayTmrw 21 hours ago

    Since it's remote and networked to begin with, is there some way to get a time-share on one of these telescopes? I don't think I'm the target audience, but I imagine that one exists.

  • incognito124 a day ago

    Another telescope hosting service I heard about, based in Spain: https://www.pixelskiesastro.com/

  • ge96 21 hours ago

    There's some guy who built a ranch of remote operated telescopes for rent on YT pretty cool business

  • yapyap a day ago

    600/month

    good for whomever that’s a cheap price lol, but I think if you’re a regular earning-ish person you would rather host the telescope in your own backyard

    • manquer a day ago

      The backyard option is only feasible if you live somewhere without light pollution and clear skies, which is not most people.

      $600/month is a reasonable deal if comparing it to driving couple of times a month to a dark sky location near you.

      While it is fun and rewarding to be camping and hiking like that, the effort gets in the way of serious amateur astronomy.

      Amateur astronomy is one of the few hobby science fields left where real contributions can be made and published without being a professional astronomer.

      • __egb__ a day ago

        It really depends what your goals/targets are. You can still do a lot with narrowband filters that make light pollution a minimal concern.

        One of my favorite images was taken from a resort balcony with my telescope directly under a fluorescent light (pretty bright, probably a 75W equivalent) with plenty of other lights along the building and sidewalk below. I used an Optolong L-eXtreme filter.

        I always show people the picture of the telescope setup first (which includes a fully-lit cruise ship passing in the background), get the, “Why did you even bother bringing a telescope to Aruba if there wasn’t anywhere good to use it?” reaction, then show my final image of the Lagoon nebula.

        At home it’s not as bad, but there’s still a streetlight about 50 meters away, plus the neighbors’ deck lights…yet I don’t need to care about that at all.

        Bonus, not fumbling around in almost complete darkness makes things so much easier when setting up and breaking down the gear.

        • aaronbrethorst 17 hours ago

          you can't not link to your photograph of the lagoon nebula after all that :)

    • zokier a day ago

      Most backyards don't get

           • dark skies: 21.80 Mag/ArcSec²
           • 290 clear nights each year
    • rtkwe a day ago

      Better skies, less light pollution, already built observatory houses to cover during the day, no space/not allowed to build in your own back yard, etc. loads of reasons to go with a hosted solution instead of building one in your own back yard.

    • teamonkey a day ago

      You can rent out viewing time on your remote telescope using services such as https://www.itelescope.net/ (you can search for telescopes hosted at SRO).

      I wouldn’t expect it to be a massively profitable side hustle though.

    • aragilar 20 hours ago

      If you've got some cheap dob with no tracking it makes sense to do it in your backyard (where the point is to look through eyepiece, not take photos), but $20 per night for everything but the actual scope at a high quality site is pretty good deal. I would expect given the other outlays to get a scope plus camera worth this site to be pretty large (e.g. at least 50k), so this is going to be a club or a school level thing, not an individual.

      For comparison, pre-covid (so the cost has likely gone up quite a bit now) it was $200 a night for a 2m-class telescope and $1200 a night for a 4m-class telescope at a similar-ish site.

    • ocdtrekkie a day ago

      There's some wild stuff included though, roll-off roof enclosures over your telescope, gigabit symmetrical fiber on a mountain. Included a couple hours a month of specialized tech support.

      Like it's definitely not for an occasional hobbyist but if it's your main hobby... it sounds kinda neat.

      I could imagine $600/mo. being burned on more mundane hobbies like video games.

    • malfist a day ago

      That's a pretty reasonable price. Most are around $800

    • dnemmers a day ago

      How much remote hands time does that include per month?

      I’m guessing these still need ‘manual’ tweaking at times.

    • markus_zhang a day ago

      Yeah looks very expensive unless I can pay say a day.

      • jalk 12 hours ago

        This service is for hosting your own remote controlled telescope, not short term rental of a shared telescope (think colo. vs cloud provider)