Back to the Moon 312
starexplorer2001 writes "Space.com is reporting that NASA's planned trip back to the Moon isn't without a significant amount of science and technological innovation. Simply 'sponging off Apollo' won't do it. Among the issues: safer human spaceflight, lunar ice, sustainability, robotic scouting missions and more. This won't be easy."
Say what? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Say what? (Score:4, Funny)
60s technology you want, 60s technology you shall get!
You're going to the moon, Alice!
(POW! Right in the kisser!) Hamana-hamana-hamana-hamana...
Re:Say what? (Score:3, Funny)
It should be a lot cheaper than in the 60s. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It should be a lot cheaper than in the 60s. (Score:3, Informative)
If 1$ into NASA = 9$ back from R&D and only
However, this tells you nothing of what the other
PS: Most government waste = someone's profit which is why most people want to privatize government so they can profit from such
Re:It should be a lot cheaper than in the 60s. (Score:5, Insightful)
Even worse, what private company would spend ANY money on a purely scientific mission such as the Mars landers or Titan probe?
If there were ANY instances of private companies doing anything successful like this, you'd have a point. But you're just trolling.
Re:It should be a lot cheaper than in the 60s. (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, way back when NASA was new, they weren't bad. They had a specific goal and a mandate to reach it as fast as possible. Bureaucracy hadn't had a chance to build up. Now it's got it really bad, and the big three subcontractors for NASA are just as bad, if not worse.
I like the bounty system. You have multiple competitors for the goal, and the first wins. Increase the reward each year until s
Re:finance and exploration (Score:4, Insightful)
Private interests were able to fund and develop cars, electrical power, and telecommunications because the advances there had immediate and obvious commercial benefits. People were all too happy to buy Model Ts and stop riding horses, and they were happy to have electric lights. Telecom's a little different: a lot of the development of infrastructure for telecoms has been government subsidized because of the enormous capital expense.
Where's the commercial benefit to space exploration? Especially in the 1950s-1970s when it was at its peak? If you really think private interests could have had a man on the moon in 1969 you're a complete fool. Even today, private interests (which are only funded by 1) wealthy individuals like John Carmack, and 2) the incentive of big prizes from government money) haven't managed to get a man out of the atmosphere.
In today's economic environment, if there's no profit to be gained by something within 5 years, it's simply not going to be done.
I'm sorry if the reality of the necessity of government-funded research goes against your Randian ideals, but that's reality.
Re:Say what? (Score:5, Informative)
The public tolerates out of control spending on wars because the rhetoric is so heated on it - it's either an abomination or essential to the survival of our way of life, depending on which side you listen to. The level of discourse for space missions just isn't that extreme, and so people look a lot closer at the financial aspect. Apollo-level funding just isn't politically realistic. That's why they're stretching this out over the long run. The longer it takes, the less blatant it is that we're spending as much money as we are on this single program.
Lastly, something that I should mention: CEV design is not going well [spacedaily.com] 2 [spacedaily.com]. I agree with Jeff Bell, who's been very critical [spacedaily.com] of the whole proposal.
Some monetary reasons to return to the moon (Score:5, Informative)
It is theorized that there are over 1 million cubic tons,
with oil over $50 a barrel, and helium-3 then being worth
about 8 billion USD a ton, the total worth equalling 8,000 trillion USD .
It could smash the US deficit with 7,991 trillion USD to spare .
http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/ [brillig.com]
Also keep in mind most of the "other" moons have this as well .
Here are some photos of the reactor at the University of Wisconsin :
http://fti.neep.wisc.edu/iec/GeneralOpPics.htm [wisc.edu]
http://fti.neep.wisc.edu/iec/GeneralOpPicsII.htm [wisc.edu]
25 tons could power the US electrical needs for a year :
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/helium3_000
I don't need to tell anyone that the US is the largest user of electricity on
the planet at present, and slated for massive growth .
The current immmigration bill sets aside for 100 - 200 million new citizens .
Kulcinski adds that, if it sold for $4 billion a metric ton, helium-3 would still be a
good energy value: "That's the equivalent of paying $28 a barrel for oil."
It will be a cold day in hell before we see oil at $28 a barrel again
So adjust the math accordingly
It becomes more viable with every passing day .
If we can make solar mining robots for the moon to process the soil, and
then use a mass driver to fling a projectile canister into lunar orbit for pick up.
Then a lunar orbit robotic satellite mass driver to fire it into earth geo-sync orbit .
Then have either a new space station, shuttle, or satellite prep it for re-entry
into the ocean for pick up much like the apollo capsules .
The robotic equipment could be tested here on earth prior to deployment on the moon .
It might be possible to make robots that could build it all via remote control, but
most likely we would initially need ppl to go to the moon to build the mass driver
and support facilities .
Building some or all of the support facilities underground would protect it to some
degree versus leaving it exposed on the surface .
At some future point 3HE+3HE fusion will be achieved and it will have zero nuetron emissions
and thus be truly clean as per the following link .
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fusion#Crite
Hope for the future
Ex-MislTech
Re:Some monetary reasons to return to the moon (Score:4, Insightful)
And by "process" I mean "extract it, transport it to H3 extraction facilities, grind it, bake it and get rid of the waste". Those facilities will need to be huge (because they have to process a huge amount of rock), built there with local materials (which, in turn, will have to be made there in factories built here), supplied with power, and, unless we advance robotics substantially, manned.
All that assuming we can do He3 fusion on industrial scale at all.
Re:Some monetary reasons to return to the moon (Score:3, Funny)
Since the further you outsource the cheaper labour gets, wages on the moon ought to be fairly low. Besides those Selenites are probabl
Re:Say what? (Score:2)
SCE to AUX (Score:2)
Brett
Why Then Not Now? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why was it possible to go to the moon in '69 but not possible now even using the same old technology? Has the moon/earth/atmostphere/space changed?
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:5, Insightful)
From the top of my head:
In a word, it's not that it's impossible to go to the moon now, but that it's inacceptable.
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2)
Holy crap!. If they're throwing millions at zero-G recliners, I want my taxes back right now.
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:5, Funny)
Me fail english? That's unpossible!
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2)
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2, Funny)
We must not let the terrorists complete their evil plans to build a moonbase known as Moon Unit Zappa!
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2)
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not really. Apollo was on vary thin margins in a lot of circumstances, and had plenty of life threatening failures. Apollo 13 is the most dramatic, but it is far from the only close call. Fundamentally, it was high risk. Based on the history of other launchers and spacecraft, it is hard to imagine Apollo wouldn't have killed
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:3, Informative)
The crew of Soyuz 11 [wikipedia.org] died while attempting to return from the Salyut 1 space station. A faulty valve led to the loss of all their air just prior to re-entry when the service module was separated from the descent module. They had fired the de-orbit burn, so they were not technically in orbit, but they died in space proper rather than the upper atmosphere like the crew of Columbia.
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:4, Insightful)
I vote budget. (Score:2)
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:4, Insightful)
Why was it possible to go to the moon in '69 but not possible now even using the same old technology? Has the moon/earth/atmostphere/space changed?
A little thing called "lost technologies". It is entirely possible to forget how to do things.
A goodly portion of the knowledge encapsulated in any serious technological endeavour cannot be captured in blueprints and technical documents. It exists in the heads of the engineers, scientists, and astronauts who actually do the stuff. Going back to the original documents will give us a head start in re-learning how to do it, but not much more than that. If you don't have a teacher that actually knows how to do it, you are in the same position as someone learning how to speak Ancient Egyptian, given nothing but walls of hieroglyphics. It is possible to deduce some semblance of meaning, but it's frightfully hard to actually learn how to do it.
The primary problem is that the senior NASA engineers in 1969 are mostly dead now. They did not have any apprentices whom they could mentor in the arcane business of placing men on celestial bodies, and no young masters in that art grew up in their footsteps applying their own clever insights to refine the art further. The entire business was pretty much forgotten, and now we are back where we started, albeit with some hieroglyphics that we could spend some time trying to decode if we had to.
At Cape Canaveral, there is a complete Saturn V launcher on display at the Visitor's Centre. This is like the Great Pyramid of space missions -- a complete, working example of a device to put men on the moon. Unfortunately, they chose to lay the rocket on its side, which it was never designed to do. So structurally, the device was completely destroyed and is now useless, having even lost much of its value as an engineering archive.
So in many respects, we simply have to start over, and re-learn what we already knew.
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:3, Insightful)
We still know how to put a complicated technological device into orbit and how to include humans in that. We still know how to find the point of breakaway orbit to accomplish putting that object in places outside of Earth orbit. We still know how to manage the health of those humans and how to return them to Earth.
I get your point, but I don't think the situation is as dire as you prese
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe this isn't, but since there isn't any "-1 Terminal Stupidity" mod it's the closest /. has.
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2)
Back then, NASA got a lot of its funding from the government who basically weren't particularly concerned with how much it cost, they just wanted to get there and get there first.
Today, the only major incentive to go back to the moon is for scientific reasons, and unfortunately scientists don't have much of a voice in the planning of the government budget.
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2)
Also, how would the astronauts have survived the pungent odor of green cheese that's been aging since the moon was born?
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2)
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:4, Informative)
Make it from sheet metal and it works for radio waves...hang one from the mast of your sailboat and vessels with radar will see you as easily as they can see the Love Boat.
rj
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2)
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:2)
There was once discussion about Moon landing here on /., and I asked if we could see Apolo equipment with a telescope. Answer was no, even with Hubble we cannot see the equipment - resolution of existing telescopes is not good enough. Still, there was a picture that seemed to catch shadows of the Apolo eqipment (Sun was almost on horizon, so shadows were loooong).
Refractors, of course, could be easily spotted from the Earth with appropria
Re:Why Then Not Now? (Score:3, Interesting)
"Didn't they stick a mirror up there for astronomers to be able to reflect off of to get a very accurate distance between the earth/moon?"
We certainly did. The question is, did men place it there?
I hear this one alot. We obviously went to the moon because Apollo astronauts placed mirrors on the moon which reflect back to Earth. How do we know that Apollo astronauts placed these on the moon? B
Back? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Back? (Score:2)
Yep. And we planted a flag, which is still there, flapping in the breeze from the studio's unusually strong AC units.
And this time, we'll try not to paint the black crosses on the film before we take the pictures.
Re:Back? (Score:2)
The Vietnam war was still being fought in my lifetime. I can't say the same thing about an Apollo moon landing.
Re:Back? (Score:3, Funny)
Green Cheese (Score:3, Funny)
It wasn't easy for Apollo either (Score:5, Informative)
"The Apollo program cost $25 billion, equivalent to about $125 billion in today's dollars."
[Source: http://www.waltercunningham.com/op_ed_0204.htm%5D [waltercunningham.com]
Re:It wasn't easy for Apollo either (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It wasn't easy for Apollo either (Score:2)
Tech for Sustained Human Space Colonization (Score:4, Insightful)
We don't have the industrial setup to make new 60's gear - and doing so would be unsafe and unwise.
This is like building shipyards - so we can build ships.
Properly done - and I have some doubts about the CEVs basis in design - this will allow for much more access to space.
Re:Tech for Sustained Human Space Colonization (Score:2)
Here's a deeper, fuller explanation. [space.com] Basically, our next job is to be able to grow plants in space.
Actually, I think discarding bodies entirely [marshallbrain.com] is even better, but nobody will go for that today; We may have to wait 40 years before a society that can defend itself decides that that is not a controversial way to go, and has the technology to do it.
Personally, I think we should go for that as quickly as possible. NASA should study cybernetics, not how to make spaceships with showers
Re:Tech for Sustained Human Space Colonization (Score:2)
What, don't you like solid-fuel boosters on a crewed vehicle?
The real reason Bush wants to go back to the moon (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The real reason is military related (Score:2)
Going back to the moon is considered by many a 1st step to mars, but more importantly, it keeps NASA stuck funding stupid crap instead of other more worthwhile projects; such as earth studies.
Re:The real reason Bush wants to go back to the mo (Score:2)
(Actually there does seem to be carbon in the asteroid belt as well.)
Re:The real reason Bush wants to go back to the mo (Score:2)
You mean space gas - there is lots and lots of methane here - on Jupiter moons, comets, etc. You could try to convert it to oil by flying a container close to a Sun so it heat up, though a catalyst will also help.
Why we don't use Apollo Hardware (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps this film explains why (Score:2, Informative)
Meshes nicely with the earlier WTC story (Score:2)
We should all welcome our new conspiratorial overlords!
-h-
Yeah but... (Score:2)
Re:Yeah but... (Score:2)
One can dream. . .
Re:Yeah but... (Score:2)
Bout Time (Score:4, Insightful)
The truth is we will never solve our problems here and geological and life history tells a story with several instances of wide spread extinction of species. Life has come a long long long way and if our puny existance has any meaning at all it is spread self-aware intelligent life beyond our little neighborhood.
There's a whisper on the night-wind, there's a star agleam to guide us, And the Wild is calling, calling...let us go....
Re:Bout Time (Score:2)
Re:Bout Time (Score:4, Interesting)
First things first, the liklihood of a catastrophe large enough to wipe out humanity is geologically small. The most likely forms for such catastrophe would be man-made, such as nuclear or biological war and even these aren't likely to wipe out humanity by themselves. We can afford to wait a very long time for technology to make colonies cheaper and more practical.
Second, for the forseeable future, any Lunar or Martian colonies will be dependent on a healthy Earth to supply them. If Earth gets wiped out, these colonies are all dead within a generation. It will take a great while before we have the technological and financial ability to create truly self-sufficient colonies on Mars and even longer to do so on the Moon. In the meantime, you're wasting your survival money.
Third, any disaster that could threaten an unprotected humanity here on Earth could be better (and much more cheaply) survived by building self-contained shelters/cities here on Earth. If you really want to prevent a calamity from wiping out humanity, it is much easier and cheaper to build Terran colonies than Martian ones.
Here on Earth, a Terran colony would only have to be self-contained until the conditions improved enough to go outside again. Even if that is 50-100 years, it's much better than on Mars or the Moon, where it is never going to get better. A more realistic scenario would have a staged recovery on Earth, with full self-containment only necessary for a short period of time, if at all. Maybe you would only have to be entirely self-contained for 5 years, after which you could start to pull in filtered air and water from the surface while you continue to shelter in the colony. That's not possible anywhere else in the Solar System.
Let's review what Earth would offer would-be survivalists only months after an asteroid strike of the proportions that wiped out the dinosaurs:
1. Ideal gravity
2. Ideal atmosphere
3. Abundant liquid water
4. Ideal soil conditions
5. Ideal temperature
6. Ideal Solar flux
7. Zero travel costs
The rest of the Solar System is a very inhospitible place to live, let alone raise children and flourish. Even an Earth ruined by war, global warming, or impact is literally a "hospitable sustaining womb" relative to any other place in the Solar System and can not be beat. It may not help you get to see Mars in your lifetime, but the best place to escape a catastrophe on Earth is Earth.
Re:Bout Time (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't see why we should gamble that nuclear or biological war won't wipe out the human race. Your assurances are after all worthless. And even if humanity can survive any such event doesn't mean that all cultures will.
Also, there are other types of human catastrophes. For example, a stagnant global government (particularly something along the lines of a "hydraulic empire" [wikipedia.org] might be stable on geological time scales. Runaway global warming is another potential threat.
Second, for the forseeable future, any Lunar or Martian colonies will be dependent on a healthy Earth to supply them. If Earth gets wiped out, these colonies are all dead within a generation. It will take a great while before we have the technological and financial ability to create truly self-sufficient colonies on Mars and even longer to do so on the Moon. In the meantime, you're wasting your survival money.
As I see it, you seem to think now is not a good time, but some hypothetical future will be a good time. What's the criteria you're using here?
There will be a period of dependency no matter when the colony is started. We don't even know how much gravity a human needs, Mars and the Moon might not be inhabitable by us in our current forms. But we won't know until we try. Therefore, it isn't a good reason to *delay* the creation of a colony. After all, the sooner we get started, the sooner we understand just what is needed, the sooner a colony is established, and the sooner it will become self-reliant.
And once a colony is self-reliant, your whole argument is irrelevant.
Third, any disaster that could threaten an unprotected humanity here on Earth could be better (and much more cheaply) survived by building self-contained shelters/cities here on Earth. If you really want to prevent a calamity from wiping out humanity, it is much easier and cheaper to build Terran colonies than Martian ones.
As I noted before, there are disasters (like stagnant world governments stable on geological time scales) that can only be avoided by not being on Earth.
Here on Earth, a Terran colony would only have to be self-contained until the conditions improved enough to go outside again. Even if that is 50-100 years, it's much better than on Mars or the Moon, where it is never going to get better. A more realistic scenario would have a staged recovery on Earth, with full self-containment only necessary for a short period of time, if at all. Maybe you would only have to be entirely self-contained for 5 years, after which you could start to pull in filtered air and water from the surface while you continue to shelter in the colony. That's not possible anywhere else in the Solar System.
But it doesn't need to be anywhere near as good as Earth on Mars or the Moon. Let me add that an Earth-based self-contained colony has little value outside of disaster insurance while space colonies will be able to provide a considerable supply of scientific data and adaptation to extreme environments even if nothing else. Frankly, I think most industry will end up in space. There's no ecology to destroy there and plenty of mass, energy, and space for making things.
Earth will likely remain a better place for humans to live than anywhere else in the Solar System, but it need not stay that way.
The rest of the Solar System is a very inhospitible place to live, let alone raise children and flourish. Even an Earth ruined by war, global warming, or impact is literally a "hospitable s
H to O? (Score:2, Funny)
Turning hydrogen into oxygen would be a nifty trick...
Re:H to O? (Score:2)
Re:H to O? (Score:2)
Them thar terrists cain't beat us, George! (Score:3, Funny)
Sponging?!? (Score:4, Funny)
Damn you, Slashdot! Now I'm picturing some strange Greek Hentai stuff. *goes to stab out eyes*
Remember When . . . (Score:2, Insightful)
You could buy a new car for $2,500. .27 a gallon.
Most people didn't wear seat belts, and most cars didn't have them.
Most cars didn't come with air conditioning, if at all.
Gas cost around
Most people watched the moon walk on a black & white TV.
Calculators were big and expensive ($500.) and did the basic stuff.
The total electric house was the "house of the future".
I don't think that it would be possible to use the old 1960's technology to get to th
The one thing they never expected (Score:3, Insightful)
Jerry Pournelle likes to say that he always hoped he'd live to see the first trip to the Moon, but he never expected to see the last one. It's about time we started exploring the Universe again!
The other thing they didn't expect (Score:3, Insightful)
According to another post in this thread, the total cost in 2006 dollars was $125 billion. That's about four times
Re:It's not like they EVER landed there anyway! (Score:3, Funny)
I guess you could say that the public interest in a given topic does not LET'S RIDE BIKES!!
Re:It's not like they EVER landed there anyway! (Score:2)
Re:It's not like they EVER landed there anyway! (Score:2)
The old phylosopher dude, with the chair and the balloons,
and the gunpowder rockets.
Re:It's not like they EVER landed there anyway! (Score:3, Insightful)
Yep, of course, how didn't I think of that one, the american government created 300kg of rocks that couldn't have been created anywhere on earth, shipped them all around the world, and no scientist ever realised it!
Those 419 guys are sooo beaten...
Re:It's not like they EVER landed there anyway! (Score:2)
Re:Moon Base Bush is pie in the sky (Score:5, Insightful)
Your short-sightedness is amazing here. "There's nothing more to learn on the Moon"? Where do you get that from? We've sent precisely six manned missions to the moon in all of human history. Only twelve humans have actually walked on it. Almost none of them had a strong scientific background (although many learned it in order to be more effective). Yet we know everything there is to know about the moon according to you. Your hubris is absolutely mind-boggling.
Experts have long admitted that launching a mission to Mars from the Moon is far more difficult than doing it from here.
Umm...exactly who is proposing we launch a Mars mission from the Moon? Bush sure isn't, and neither is any other sane person. To build up a launch infrastructure on the Moon would be a multi-decade endeavor and would likely eclipse a Mars mission for sheer complexity and cost.
No, the Moon is a beta test site, if you will. No human has left low Earth orbit for almost four decades! All the engineers who made Apollo work are either dead or retired. Our heavy lift capacity is completely moribund. With but few exceptions, we're going to have to learn a bunch of things all over again. Which is a better place to learn these things, a spot that's only a couple of days away from the Earth via free-return trajectory, or a spot that's months away with no such option? It doesn't take much more intelligence than a turnip to understand the former is far more advantageous than the latter. It's safer, it'll cost less, and we'll get quicker "knowledge returns".
Once we rediscover how to get to the Moon, setting up a moonbase will essentially be a "dry run" for setting up a Mars habitat. True, the lunar surface and Martian surface don't have a lot in common, but they're both immensely rugged and challenging environments to construct even a sand castle. Learning how to build a moonbase will teach us in no small part how to build a Mars base. Or would you rather we get to Mars first then try to figure all this out then, when astronauts are beyond any easy help from Earth?
NASA has become the "Santa Claus" of the U.S. Government. Keep the children excited and maybe they'll think there really is a future, after all.
While I'll freely admit NASA is merely a vast sinkhole for funds and functioning solely as a reason to have a space station right now, the return to the Moon does not fit that category. There is a future if ostriches like yourself would only see it. Instead, your cynicism and politcal bias appears to be clouding what might otherwise be a capability for sound judgement on your part.
Re:Moon Base Bush is pie in the sky (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Moon Base Bush is pie in the sky (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Moon Base Bush is pie in the sky (Score:2)
Re:Moon Base Bush is pie in the sky (Score:2)
While planes like the 777 and F-22 definitely show that aviation technology is still advancing (though rather slowly), is it me or is the technology level in general aviation completely unchanged since 1950? The only thing different in today's private small planes is they've added GPS systems to supplement the ancient VOR systems; otherwise, they're still using the same old 1950s Lycoming engines
Re:Moon Base Bush is pie in the sky (Score:2, Insightful)
New technologies to do it faster, better, and cheaper is a very good thing to learn. If we can do it on the budget that NASA has today.. that is an awesome achievement that will produce lots of great technology not only for future NASA missions, but also to further science which has a direct positive affect on everyone's lives.
Here comes the predictible velcro and Tang rebuttles.....
Read my lips: History always repeats itself (Score:5, Insightful)
March 14, 1992: Vice President Dan Quayle, who heads the space council, made public a space policy directive approved by President Bush that assigns "major roles" to the Department of Defense and the Department of Energy... [nytimes.com]
What? President George H. W. Bush got support for a big NASA budget to put men on Mars and then diverted the money to defense and energy contractors? Must've been a fluke. That could never happen again in a million years!
January 15, 2004: President seeks $1 billion more in NASA funding
Saying "the desire to explore and understand is part of our character," President Bush Wednesday unveiled an ambitious plan to return Americans to the moon by 2020 and use the mission as a steppingstone for future manned trips to Mars and beyond. [cnn.com]
Re:AMD or Intel (Score:2)
Re:PPC (Score:2)
Maybe they use Alpha on the ships.
Last I heard they'd only use 486s. But this was in 2000.
Re:PPC (Score:4, Informative)
No, not 486s. The CPUs in the 5 shuttle computers are AP-101S, which are upgrades from the AP-101B. iirc, the upgrades were circa 1991.
This CPU has its lineage in IBM 360 mainframes. See http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/compute
Re:Overclocker's wet dream! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:One more irreverent comment (Score:2)
It's useful, though, to keep another line from Apollo 13 in mind: "From now on, we live in a world
Re:One more irreverent comment (Score:2)
Re:One more irreverent comment (Score:2)
I support him, prove me stupid.
Re:One more irreverent comment (Score:4, Funny)
Re:One more irreverent comment (Score:2)
*Sigh*
Probably too afraid to lay his cards on the table.
Next?
Re:One more irreverent comment (Score:2)
Re:One more irreverent comment (Score:2)
If Bush were a mormon too you'd have something.
Next?
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
If you want to explore space I think there are two means: Abolish NASA and start over, with less pencils to push or....learn Mandarin.
Re:I might even be inclined to be sympathetic... (Score:2)
Re:I might even be inclined to be sympathetic... (Score:2)
Despite your low UID you have a remarkable inability to command either Italics tag or Preview button technology.
Re:Top Heavy (Score:4, Insightful)
That said, NASA is still a government organization (worse, it's now become a sort of international government organization), and as a result it suffers from the $1000000 toilet-seat effect you see in any government organization.
Re:Top Heavy (Score:2)
The ageny is fine, it just needs to be run by someone with a clue(perferable an experience ENGINEER), and it needs funding.
Nothing in NASA is ever over-engineered.
Re:Won't be easy? (Score:2)