Comment Re:Correction (Score 1) 71
Actually, according to its creator, it was "Horatio Hornblower In Space".
Still managed to win a Hugo award, though.
Actually, according to its creator, it was "Horatio Hornblower In Space".
Still managed to win a Hugo award, though.
On behalf of the rest of the Slashdot readership, I humbly invite you to bite me.
I would have gone with "I just leech Cowboy Neal's wifi" myself.
Well, just so you know... I visited Guangzhou last week, and left there at roughly EOB on 30 April.
Put that little logical capsule in your Nespresso and see what gets poured into your mug.
I have mod points, but Slashdot has no "-1, Full Retard", so I'm posting instead.
Sounds like you haven't a clue as to what rsilvergun was talking about.
Thanks for that. Fortunately, our differences were settled years ago, and she's never tried to keep me from communicating with or seeing our daughter. They and my wife met for the first time on this trip we've just returned from, and everyone got along great, much to my relief.
It's a radio transmitter in a can. It would take an even larger departure from known physics to make it go boom. We have a good deal of experience with radio transmitters in space.
OK, I will try to restate in my baby talk since I don't remember this correctly.
Given that you are accelerating, the appearance to you is that you are doing so linearly, and time dilation is happening to you. It could appear to you that you reach your destination in a very short time, much shorter than light would allow. To the outside observer, however, time passes at a different rate and you never achieve light speed.
I am having an equally hard time thinking of how Earth is more habitable than Mars while atomic bombs are going off or impactors are impacting. If you wait a while, sure it's more habitable than Mars. But for that moment, no.
To an outside observer. I don't think it's the same in the inertial frame.
Before we call this real, we need to put one on some object in orbit, leave it in continuous operation, and use it to raise the orbit by a measurable amount large enough that there would not be argument regarding where it came from. The Space Station would be just fine. It has power for experiments that is probably sufficient and it has a continuing problem of needing to raise its orbit.
And believe me, if this raises the orbit of the Space Station they aren't going to want to disconnect it after the experiment. We spend a tremendous amount of money to get additional Delta-V to that thing, and it comes down if we don't.
I think that depends on whether you're using the Chop, Mince, or Purée setting.
Thus spake the master programmer: "After three days without programming, life becomes meaningless." -- Geoffrey James, "The Tao of Programming"