Top positive review
106 people found this helpful
A Revolution in Astronomy
By Tom Campbell on Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2006
I have literally been waiting for the Skyscout all my life. I always wanted to be able to look in the sky and identify celestial bodies but just didn't have the kind of brain that could wrap itself around star charts. Nor did I know anyone who could stand there and discuss it with me on a chilly night. The Skyscout is like no other astronomy-related device because for the first time, you can just take it out of the box, put in the batteries, wait a few seconds for it to find its location via GPS (same as a car navigation system), point at something in the sky and press the IDENTIFY button to have it identified to you. Think about that for a second. At last, you have an easy-to-use handheld device that can tell you what star or star formation you're looking at! Or you can work the other way. Have it list celestial bodies and formations for you, press the LOCATE button, then helpful arrows in the readout will blink until you've pointed it in the right direction. And many of the entries in its database have audio accompaniment so you can learn about them through the included earphones! How cool is that? It has a slot that will eventually accept cartridges with more stuff as time goes by, but the built-in database is pretty big as it is. And for what it's worth, because the Skyscout uses built-in GPS, you can use it to display your locaiton using GPS coordinates. I have a nav system on my car but the SkyScout is still better than that, because I can't figure out how to get that info out of the car! on the Skyscout it's just one button. All this stuff is particularly easy to access, and even the error messages are helpful. For example, on one particularly cold Seattle night I tried to use it from inside my car. A magnet icon popped up, and an error message explained that magnetic interference by something such as the chassis of an automobile was impeding it. Slick. The gizmos currently included with high-end telescopes come nowhere near this facility. First off, you need a telescope with you. The Skyscout is the size of a hotel alarm clock and has its own (non-magnified) viewer. Just whip this thing out of your pocket and go to town. Second, the ones with telescopes are agonizingly slow to calibrate, like half an hour or so, and must be reoriented every time you pick up the 'scope and move. Plus you have to enter all kinds of location and time information on many of them; the Skyscout just finds itself. And finally, none of them of course can simply tell you what you've pointed the 'scope at. The Skyscout can. I also need to emphasize that it neither needs nor comes with an 80-page manual like the ones that come with telescopes. It's like 1 printed sheet, and that's plenty. The UI is very, very simple. This is a revolutionary 1.0 product. My only complaint is that goes through batteries like I eat Lucky Charms. Bring an extra set when you go out. Oh, and one reviewer said that for $400 it should come with a lens cap. Fair enough. But remember that the optics are almost irrelevant--it's just a plastic cover so you can see the lighted guides pointing you in the right direction. Get a fingerprint on it, fine--just wipe it off with any lens tissue. The unit won't be damaged, nor will its usefulness be affected in any way by a dirty lens. Your telescope has the magnfication and the useful optics. If you even brought it with you--I never have, so far!
Top critical review
12 people found this helpful
Easy, fun tool to unlock the heaven's secrets
By jazz lover since 1960 on Reviewed in the United States on August 14, 2013
Update :11/18/15: I am withdrawing my 5 star rating posted previously. My Skyscout doesn't work anymore. See the recent reviews posted in 2015. They are true. Apparently there is a malfunction effecting most units. The GPS does not function on my unit anymore. It shuts down frequently for no reason. What a bummer! I used to love this thing. I may go to an app on my tablet, which does similar things. These are selling on Ebay for big sums of money. Don't buy one! I have owned this delightful gadget for 4 and a half years. It is still working fine. I does use up batteries. I just get batteries on sale=no problem. I gave up on telescopes after dropping my telescope in the parking lot of Brasstown Bald in Georgia and ruining the gear mechanism. The Celestron Skyscout is 1000 times more fun than any telescope I've used. Just turn it on and point it at any object in the sky, and it immediately identifies it, and gives details, such as the constellation it's in, etc. If I see something that I want to study further, I use my Canon 10X30 Image Stabilization binoculars. Just hold down it's button, and it steadies the image as effectively as if the binoculars were on a tripod. For example, you can see 4 or 5 moons of Jupiter in the binoculars as well as if you were using a small telescope! Getting back to the Skyscout, the only quirk I've found is that when you turn it on to start the GPS search, it will often have a message saying that there is "magnetic interference such as from electic lines or metal objects" and it can't find the GPS location. I have learned to ignore that warning message, and just press the button again, and it proceeds to get the GPS running. I have read how some reviewers say to move a few feet away and start again. I've found it is not necessary to move, just to ignore it and proceed again. If I ever needed a telescope, I would go to a star party, and look through the expensive telescopes of the serious amateur astronomers. But for my backyard astronomy, get this unique gadget, and enjoy yourself.
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