And don't forget to check out Mars Exploration Rover Imagery at http://www.lyle.org/mars/ for the latest in processed images.
New raw Pancan images are also available.
Raw DIMES images are available but you'll need to stretch them vertically to get the real picture.
Looks like we got the third DIMES image.
Confirmed, that is the third DIMES image and it shows the shadow of the parachute which is kinda cool. So we have the first and third DIMES image. These images have a big crater (don't know how big, really) and a half dozen relatively much smaller craters and maybe a dozen visible even smaller craters.
We got at least one more DIMES image. It's closer than the last one. Looks like final image of three.
OK. Data again coming down from Mars Relay onboard Odyssey. Data downlink completed.
Oddyssey should be coming out of occultation any minute now...
They've been looking at a single DIMES image for quite a while, so I'm guessing that they haven't gotten the other two down yet. (DIMES takes three images and compares them during descent to guage the angle of entry and, if necessary, trigger the corrective rockets to straighten things out. The rockets were not fired with Opportunity; they were for Spirit.) DIMES images can be overlayed on MGS MOC images to help identify the landing location.
There's a polling of engineering subsystems going on now. Flight software unable to report in because of the distractions and noise of those goofy science team members :-) Sounds like everything is green from Fault. Power sounded nominal, too.
Images being cleaned up and displayed. DIMES (descent) images being shown.
Odyssey occultation, so they expect downlink completion at 20:21 (in another 30 minutes). I think they said we got 22.9 Megabits of data (is that what's onboard Odyssey or what we've already got downlinked to NASA/JPL?), about what we got last night.
Pancam images and health data coming in. DIMES too? Yep. DIMES too. Closeup from Pancam of that outcropping! Sweet!
It's being explained that the Mars Relay onboard Odyssey is the most reliable data path we have. There's apparently a lot of handshaking and confirmation between Odyssey and the planetary assets to ensure data integrity.
The Odyssey mission controller says he sees data and he's preparing to send it to NASA/JPL (maybe I misheard that).
NASA TV has live coverage that started about 20 minutes ago while we all wait to get the next batch of data from Opportunity via Odyssey.
Steve Squyres, Charles Elachi, and Pete Theisinger are all in the room so hopefully Steve will get on the microphone and talk about the incoming images.
It sounds like this won't be all of the data that Opportunity gathered but closer to the volume we got last night.