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Comment Stupid Motherfuckers (Score 1) 173

NASA was gutted, both of funds and personnel. They were LAST in line to get any money.

Maybe they were "gutted" because they were so fucking stupid they couldn't be trusted to do things like SAVING THE ORIGINAL TAPES!!!

Holy Cow. I've read through this whole thread and see people trying to rationalize how NASA could have done something so monumentally stupid. Let's just all save some time and recognize the real reason --

THEY WERE STUPID, INCOMPETENT MOTHERFUCKERS.

NASA has betrayed an entire generation that entrusted them to safeguard the legacy of the tremendous efforts of a nation to push the frontiers of mankind to another world. NASA FUCKED IT UP and robbed future generations of humanity of their heritage. There is no excuse WHATSOEVER for that, and the significance of this utter disgrace should not be glossed over or diminished with bureaucratic understatement. NASA has also spit on the legacy of John F. Kendedy, proving that the only thing important to them about landing on the moon was the money they could get.

To be quite honest, NASA should be gutted again. They've got to use Russian built rockets to get the European and Canadian parts up to the space station, they don't know the difference between the metric system and the english system, they kill astronauts by the half-dozen, and interplanetary projects are handled at JPL. And if that's not enough, realize that the guy they put in charge of finding the tapes is the SAME SOB THAT LOST THEM.

"Houston, we've got a problem...And it's us."

I hope the shuttle gets back safe.

Comment Re:Incredible (Score 1) 173

Strange, when an object is too close to you in space, it appears bigger than same size object at a distance. But when it is very close to you in time, we don't think it is any big deal. Only later we realize how big whatever that thing was.

That's good. Makes me want to add more documentation of, and comments to, my source code.

Debian

Submission + - Mono Squeezed Into Debian Default Installation

pallmall1 writes: "OS News reports that Debian developer Josselin Mouette got Tomboy accepted as a dependency for gnome in the next release of Debian (codenamed Squeeze). While that may seem like nothing big (except for the 50 MByte size of the Tomboy package), Tomboy requires Mono — meaning that Mono will now be installed by default. Apparently, Debian doesn't have the same concerns over using specifications patented by Microsoft and licensed under undisclosed terms that Redhat does. Perhaps Debian doesn't believe that Microsoft might do something like Rambus did."
Quake

Submission + - North Korea conducts nuclear test (reuters.com) 5

viyh writes: "North Korea conducted a nuclear test on Monday, South Korea's Yonhap news agency quoted a ruling party official as saying.

A magnitude 4.7 earthquake was recorded by the USGS in North Korea.

South Korean President Lee Myung-bak has called an emergency meeting of cabinet ministers over the test, Yonhap said."

The Internet

Submission + - SPAM: Malware knocks out U.S. Marshals Service network

coondoggie writes: "Malware Wednesday crippled Windows-based computer systems at the U.S. Marshals Service, which hunts federal fugitives and operates the country's witness protection program, knocking the agency's network offline. The agency's press office confirmed it was having network problems and that its e-mail system was down this morning, but it was unclear if the outage extended across the entire network. The press office said a statement would be issued today, but has yet to be released. [spam URL stripped]"
Link to Original Source
Power

Small Nuclear Power Plants To Dot the Arctic Circle 255

Vincent West writes with news of a Russian project currently underway to populate the Arctic Circle with 70-megawatt, floating nuclear power plants. Russia has been planning these nuclear plants for quite some time, with construction beginning on the prototype in 2007. It's due to be finished next year, and an agreement was reached in February to build four more. According to the Guardian: "The 70-megawatt plants, each of which would consist of two reactors on board giant steel platforms, would provide power to Gazprom, the oil firm which is also Russia's biggest company. It would allow Gazprom to power drills needed to exploit some of the remotest oil and gas fields in the world in the Barents and Kara seas. The self-propelled vessels would store their own waste and fuel and would need to be serviced only once every 12 to 14 years."

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