I had a feeling this 'camera' recorded many frames which were used to build a composite, the video confirmed that.
Kinda limits it to static objects, but it is still very
very cool.
It just occured to me that the events this camera records, were well over by the time it recorded them

It is all relative ofcourse.
An interesting aside; I just finished reading the latest National Geographic a few hours ago which has a short article about Tim Samaras, who is photographing lightning with high speed camera's.
I am fascinated by lightning so it was the first article I flicked to. I was surprised to read Tim's name as I have been watching him chase tornado's for years on Discovery's 'Storm Chasers' which documented a number of tornado hunting teams. I had no idea he had shifted his focus.
For filming lightning, Tim uses two 'plain' 10,000 frame per second camera's and another he calls the 'Kahuna' which is a camera that was used to film nuclear explosions in the early 60's at 1,000,000 frames per second.
Tim has modified the camera with 82 digital sensors that were apparently designed for astrophotography.
The article(minus photo's) can be read here:
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/20...g/johnson-text
Here is one of Tim's video's at 10,000 frames/sec
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EyUsjsJ-E0c
Sadly according to the article, Tim has yet to capture lightning at 1,000,000 frames/sec