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Fex303 (557896)

Fex303
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by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 03, @06:03PM (#24049783)
Attached to: Lt. Col. John Bircher Answers Your Questions

Good answers, just in time for Independence Day. I feel safe when we have such capable and smart people like Col. Bircher defending and protecting the United States of America.

I'm proud to be an American where at least I know I'm free, And I won't forget the men who died who gave that right to me, And I gladly stand up next to you and defend her still today, 'Cause there ain't no doubt I love this land God Bless the U.S.A.

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by Phairdon on Sunday June 29, @11:03PM (#23991113)
Attached to: Ares V Rocket Bigger and Stronger For Moon Mission

I work at Marshall Space Flight Center, and I can't get into too much detail about the specifics due to security reasons, but the ARES will fly and the design is coming along nicely. It's beyond naive to suggest that NASA does not want to use the best possible rocket.

You mention an internal study found DIRECT superior in every way? Can I ask, have you read this study? I have, and it does not say what you suggest that it says. Are you just spouting what you read from a newspaper, or do you have higher access than I do? Newspapers live on sensationalist reporting. Keep in mind that it takes a lot more effort to send a rocket to the moon that it does to send a rocket to orbit. Also, (and I am making up these percentages here but the trend is real) it takes a lot more effort to raise the safety rating from 85% to 95%. I would not sit on top of a DIRECT rocket.

Additionally, the quality of your opinion goes down further when you mention that almost no shuttle or previous equipment is being reused. That is simply not true. The J-2X engines are a direct evolution from the J-2. The RS-68 is a direct evolution from the Delta IV. The solid rocket boosters and recovery system are also improvements. Not a single solid rocket booster was ever lost on the space shuttle (they are all re-used) and the design for the ARES is almost identical.

The local newspaper here, The Huntsville Times, ran an article from the Orlando Sentinel that basically says exactly what you posted. The next day they printed a response from a higher up NASA executive. Keep in mind the importance of safety and reliability when humans are on board.

"NASA has an excellent plan in place for its future space fleet

The Huntsville Times reprinted an Orlando Sentinel story on June 23 that suggested NASA, now hard at work on the Ares I rocket that will return human explorers to the moon in the next decade, passed too hastily on "Direct 2.0," an alternative next-generation rocket concept some say is worthy of further consideration.

That decision was not hasty. Nor was it the only alternate concept considered - literally thousands of options were set aside for one compelling reason or another in the run-up to Ares development. Why?

Because the Ares family is the right set of rockets for the mission.

It's the best possible solution to our 21st century spacefaring challenges: flying humans routinely to space, supporting groundbreaking research on the International Space Station and sending explorers to the moon and worlds beyond.

To reach this solution, NASA has embraced a multitude of opinions, as it always has done. We value open debate and rational dissent, and rely daily on the innovative minds and voices of gifted engineers and developers who think around corners and buck conventional wisdom. They have been heard, and their insight has helped set us on our chosen path - which began in earnest in 2005 when NASA announced its formal plan to develop the Constellation Program vehicles: the Ares I and Ares V rockets and the Orion crew capsule, and which have continued to mature ever since.

Designing any rocket - particularly a rocket intended to accomplish such bold, far-reaching exploration initiatives - is a tough proposition. It takes years of training and rigorous analysis. In getting to where we are today, the agency has been thorough and conscientious in its evaluation of thousands of possible options. On the Ares family alone, we have evaluated more than 1,700 concepts since 2005, using proven, validated launch vehicle design models and techniques.

Was each rejected option a drawing-board failure, flawed from the start? Not by any means. The prodigious talents of our engineers and developers across NASA and among its partner organizations is second to none.

But NASA works within its budget to accomplish three goals above all else: maximizing the safety of our crews during launch and spaceflight; ensuring the highest-value, most cost-effective mission operations possible; and increasing the bounty of rewards our continued exploration of space will reap here on Earth.

Other vehicle system concepts may have offered benefits in one area or another - but those benefits worked against the system as an integrated whole. For example, certain configurations may have provided greater performance, but at the expense of safety and reliability. Other concepts may have sought to use more existing hardware, cutting near-term development costs, but subsequently would have increased recurring operational costs.

Direct 2.0, the concept in question in the June 23 Times article, falls significantly short of the lunar lander performance requirement for exploration missions as specifically outlined in Constellation Program ground rules. The concept also overshoots the requirements for early missions to the International Space Station in the coming decade. These shortcomings would necessitate rushed development of a more expensive launch system with too little capability in the long run, and would actually increase the gap between space shuttle retirement and development of a new vehicle. Even more importantly, the Ares approach offers a much greater margin of crew safety - paramount to every mission NASA puts into space.

To accomplish the nation's goals in space, we need more than a new rocket. We need a robust, multipurpose space fleet.

Ares meets those requirements. We have a good plan in place - based on years of flight data, practical experience, new and proven technologies and, above all, exhaustive study - and we're making excellent progress. Nearly three years in, we will conduct the preliminary design review for the integrated Ares I stack next month - at a pace unseen since the Apollo era.

David King is director of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. "

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by enoz on Wednesday June 11, @09:03AM (#23743765)
Attached to: BMW Introduces GINA Concept Car, Covered In Fabric

A vagina analogy in a car forum! Welcome to dotslash!
Actually I'd say it was a car analogy in a forum full of cunts.
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Submitted by Fex303 on Wednesday October 31 2007, @05:49PM
Fex303 writes "New Scientist is reporting that researchers at the Institute for Pervasive Computing in Zurich, Switzerland, have developed software (called Facet) that transforms a few cellphones into a smart camera network. Whenever a phone detects an object entering or exiting its field of view, it sends a message to alert the swarm and using this info, they establish their position in relation to one another to within 5%.

There's also the researchers' academic paper (PDF alert). The best bit is that they're releasing their software under an open source license."
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 [+] submission, handheld

  Dattebayo Staff Member Killed During Search[->] 2007-07-28 00:07 Anonymous

Submitted by Anonymous on Saturday July 28 2007, @12:07AM
Anonymous writes "[On Saturday] "...five members of the Dattebayo staff were arrested at the Baltimore Convention Center as they prepared for their panel as part of the Otakon Convention....following the earlier searches of several staff members' homes, the state police arrived at the homes of the remaining members who had been arrested in Baltimore this last weekend. However, when they arrived at the home of one of the staff members they were surprised to find that the member had removed all the hard drives from his computer and they now lay in pieces in a garbage bag. Frustrated officers then began to yell at that staff member and accused him of destroying evidence. When the staff member met their response with silence they decided to take him into custody. Family members looked on in shock as they tasered this individual repeatedly despite him not fighting back. Suddenly, the staff member began to convulse on the floor. Doctors would later say that the individual had suffered an epileptic seizure, possibly resulting from the repeated tasering. Officers claim they then mistook these convulsions for an attempt at escape and one of the officers fired his firearm, injuring the individual. The injured staff member, in handcuffs, was later transported to a local hospital...This morning at 02:43, Dattebayo staff member ImpSyn, also known as David Pryor, age 29, was pronounced dead.""
http://www.dattebayo.com/
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 [+] submission, yro, anime

  Trailers, Music and Media Players 2007-01-05 05:54 peck_ed

Submitted by peck_ed on Friday January 05 2007, @05:54AM
peck_ed writes "At work I have the task of showing of a 32" LCD TV, because I don't fancy playing any illegal films from the internet, I figured I would go with a mix of HD Trailers and Music using Visualizations. However, so far I have had no luck with any media players. I am stuck when it comes to players like Windows Media Player with support on certain file types like .mov, also the machine I am playing them on, isn't slow, but not faster enough to play HD footage with Windows Media Player. VLC works fine for the HD stuff, because it seems to be able to handle the HD footage better then Windows Media Player, but then I am stuck when it comes to audio files. WinAMP looses full screen when the media type changes place. Quicktime lacks features with Visualizations, and Media Player Classis suffers the same fate. Is there another program that I am missing, that combines all these features that I am so far overlooking? Or am I doomed to not be able to carry out such a task?"
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 [+] submission, askslashdot, media
Submitted by guzugi on Friday January 05 2007, @05:03AM
guzugi writes "This is a project I have been working for several months and been hypothesizing for much longer. The basic idea is to shortcut the need for an air conditioner when cooling multiple computers. Swimming pool water is pumped into the house and through several waterblocks to effectively cool these hot machines. This greatly reduces noise cooling requirements."
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 [+] submission, hardware, hardhack, freak

  1TB hard drives are here 2007-01-05 03:44 SparkyTWP

Submitted by SparkyTWP on Friday January 05 2007, @03:44AM
SparkyTWP writes "After much anticipation, Hitachi has announced a new hard drive with 1 terrabyte capacity. They are SATA/PATA 7200RPM, should retail for about $400 and will be available this quarter."
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 [+] submission, hardware, upgrades