spoonguardonline wrote:
weirdguy wrote:
Watch "Big O" for a while, and perhaps it might mean something.
Or you could just enjoy watching a robot beat the crap out of other large objects and buildings.
The people don't really seem to care about their past, as nobody had actually realized that it was lost until now.
How does the database for constellations know when you find a constellation? Is it hiding something, or does it miraculously remember when you find it? It seems crazy that you have to find stars in a sky that shifts randomly, for something that shouldn't even work like that. Constellations are made up, not things that you discover. And if they were already in the database, why can't we just ask the database for the coordinates in the first place?
That's my rant for today.
I think it's due to Neopia rotating, that the stars change in the sky - like in the real night sky. And the constellations have been discovered - it's just that, conveniently, everybody in Altador has forgotten them.
Good theory, but not quite. For my stars at least, the constellations stay fairly static, near the center. The other ones shift randomly, due supposedly to "stellar drift." The star map isn't remotely based on anything like real astronomy aside from the fact that there are seemingly random points of light that people make pictures out of. For one thing, a proper map of the heavens wouldn't be on a coordinate map, but on a map marked with the cardinal directions and measured in lattitude and longitude.
Rotation of Neopia would cause all the stars to move more or less together (though some might move as much as 3/3600ths of a degree more or less than others, due to their distance from Neopia) and the change would be noticeable within a few minutes, not sporadically over the course of days. Due to rotation, the stars would sweep across the entire sky at the rate of approximately a degree per 4 minutes. Due to revolution around the sun, the stars would change their position by about 1 degree every day, meaning that if you observed a star at 8:00 pm on one night, the next day it would be in that exact same point at 7:56 pm.
Anyway, my point is don't let them fool you into thinking this a real astronomy club. The "stellar drift" is just a way of saying "we don't want you mapping out the entire list of constellations ahead of time."