Bane, Joker and Penguin. On Monday, I helped David move his equipment from his car to the lab. Those were the names of the high-speed cameras he used for the Costa Rica trip. The appropriately named Batman villains, as well as the bat soft toys around the room, welcomed me into the second week of the lab. For the first three days, I worked on more digitizing – except this time, I ran the trial from start to the final edit process. I had to calibrate the xma files before I could digitize properly. I did this by choosing around 30 good photos from the 900 from the stacked JPG of the chessboard video and digitized those on the three cameras: B, J and P. Before each set of trials, David waved a chessboard with certain black and white tiles before the cameras. This allows XMALAB to accurately represent x-y-z coordinates in relation to the points that I click for digitizing. Then, I ran 100,000 calibration iterations, which took around 4 hours. While the calibration...