Zarban wrote:And what did we have 35 years before the Wright Flyer? Carriages. And before that? Still carriages, going back 2000 years.
Actually transport technology progressed steadily for 500 years. From square rigged sails to lateen sails that allow sailing into the wind, improvements in navigation (e.g. longitude) that prevented getting lost or shipwrecked, mapping of currents & winds to optimize travelling times, steam engines from the 1820s which were continually made more efficient, and railways got steadily faster throughout the 19th century, etc.
Chemical rockets are the best part of 100 years old now, and the engineers assure us they've extracted all the efficiency that is possible out of them. There are other propulsion systems once you get into space (e.g. ion) but as yet there's no replacement for rockets to provide the thrust to launch off Earth's gravity well.
In other words, our generation is the first for 500 years where transport technology has stagnated, so that A to B times remain the same from the day we were born to the day we die.
Horse - Steam - Internal Combustion Engine - Jet - Rocket. We've still no clue what the successor is. A space elevator using carbon nanotubes? After >10 years of working on carbon nanotubes, they can't make them longer than an inch or so.
So when seen in this light, MSL is not some radical step on a ladder of progress that'll see us walking on Mars next decade. It's a modest improvement over Viking, after 35 years, which is a greater interval than when we went from WWII plane to walking on the Moon.
I'm just trying to zoom out and place MSL into the big-picture context, which is an antidote to some of the recent hyperbole. I've nothing against MSL. In fact, I'm full of admiration for the engineering marvel that it is. I wish there could be MSL rovers all over the solar system bring us HQ data from worlds we haven't explored yet e.g. Triton, Titan, Europa, Enceladus, Mercury, etc.
not long to go now...