Your claims of sloppiness are not justified.
Again...
NISTs choice of location and methodology for their WTC7 position/time trace is a significant problem for their data because...
a) They misinterpreted initial motion as vertical rather than north-south (as they did not take account of the initial twisting motion visible from the Cam#3 viewpoint).
b) They did not perform perspective correction.
c) They did not perform static point extraction (the removal of camera movement from trace data. Even though the view may look static, it is not.)
d) They did not track a feature at all, but a horizontal position. As the building did not descend completely vertically, but included some east-west movement, their data is actually of a wandering horizontal point, not a feature on the facade.
e) In order to obtain a trace from their initial point to their stated final point they had to *splice* together two traces from completely different horizontal positions, which without taking account of the perspective and distance shearing effects makes the data further skewed.
f) They did not treat the base video data correctly, using an interlaced copy of the video (the actual copy they used is available within the recent FOIA releases. I have the original)
g) They did not perform a per-frame trace, but instead skipped frames, reducing the sampling rate considerably and reducing available data redundancy for the purposes of noise reduction and derivation of velocity and acceleration profile data.
h) They applied their interpretation to the entire north face.
i) It is highly probable they used a manual process to record the trace data, rather than the sub-pixel accurate automated feature tracing methods I employ.
These are some of the reasons their data is shoddy and their method sloppy.