A Coral Sea Rehearsal for the Eclipse Megamovie Hudson, H.S., SSL, UC Berkeley and U Glasgow Davey, A., Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics Ireland, J., NASA/ADNET SYSTEMS Jones, L., NCAR McIntosh, S.W., NCAR Paglierani, R., SSL, UC Berkeley Pasachoff, J.M., Williams College and Caltech Peticolas, L., SSL, UC Berkeley Russell, R., UCAR Suarez Sola, F., NSO Sutherland, L., NCAR Thompson, M.J., NCAR The "Eclipse on the Coral Sea" - 13 November 2012 - will have happened already. Our intention is to have used this opportunity as a trial run for the eclipse in 2017, which features 1.5 hours of totality across the whole width of the continental US. Conceived first and foremost as an education and public outreach activity,the plan is to engage the public in solar science and technology by providing a way for them to include images they have taken of the solar eclipse into a movie representation of coronal evaluation in time. This project will assimilate as much eclipse photography as possible from the public. The movie(s) will cover all ranges of expertise, and at the basic smartphone or hand-held digital camera level, we expect to have obtained a huge number of images in the case of good weather conditions. The capability of modern digital technology to handle such a data flow is new. The basic purpose of this and the 2017 Megamove observations is to explore this capability and its ability to engage people from many different communities in the solar science, astronomy, mathematics, and technology. The movie in 2017, especially, may also have important science impact because of the uniqueness of the corona as seen under eclipse conditions. In this presentation we will describe our smartphone application development (see the "Transit of Venus" app for a role model here). We will also summarize the data acquisition via both it and more normal Web interfaces. Although for the Coral Sea eclipse event we don't expect to have a movie product by the time of the AGU, for the 2017 event we do intend to assemble the heterogenous data into a beautiful movie within a short space of time after the eclipse. The movie(s) would have relatively low resolution but would extend to the base of the corona. We encourage participation in the 2012 observations, noting that no total eclipse, prior to 2017, will occur in a region with good infrastructure for extended observations. JMP's eclipse work about the eclipses of 2012 is supported by NSF grant AGS-1047726. The Megamovie project and the National Center for Atmospheric Research are sponsored by the National Science Foundation