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Armstrong is buried at sea...
ZOMG! Just like Osama! *shakes fist* OBAMAAAAAAA!! WHY DO YOU HATE AMURICA?!
Last edited by Zarban (2012-09-18 13:05:38)
I found From the Earth to the Moon at Walmart for $13... that is all.
So Water-Ice has been confirmed on Mercury.
Wait, did you spell Mars wrong?
Nope.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/30/scien … ggest.html
Nice. Very nice.
Also, warp drive : http://io9.com/5963263/how-nasa-will-bu … warp-drive
A fascinating tour of the ISS. It's both bigger and smaller than I thought it was, and reaffirms my strong desire to not go to space. I like my home with gravity, large air-filled spaces, and bedrooms bigger than phone booths.
The video also shows just how different current space travel looks from the sci-fi visions (Alien, Star Trek, Sunshine, etc.). Things such as having to detach their exercise bike from the wall so that it doesn't vibrate the solar arrays... it's a whole different way of thinking and living.
Also, I love her hair.
*cough*
*cough*
Just saying.
Or you could go the more cynical route of:
(That's the Russian rocket Soyuz TMA-05M that NASA is buying flights on to get astronauts up to the ISS)
*cough*
*cough*Just saying.
*cough*
*cough*
That Ford on the right is hardly an exemplar of innovation.
The automobile internal combustion engine, invented in the 1890s, is still standard. They've been working on electric cars for decades but they didn't haven't achieved critical take-off in the marketplace, so to speak.
Basically anything electronic has progressed dramatically from 1970s - present.
Anything to do with physical transport has stagnated during the same period
Last edited by avatar (2012-12-11 13:10:09)
*cough*
*cough*Just saying.
Or you could go the more cynical route of:
(That's the Russian rocket Soyuz TMA-05M that NASA is buying flights on to get astronauts up to the ISS)
Okay, so a rocket has moved from public domain to the private doman. But it's hardly an example of innovation, in the sense that it can carry more payload than Apollo or deliver a sample return mission to Mars or probes to Titan, Venus, Enceladus, Europa, etc.
Sure, now commercial satellites can be delivered privately into low-Earth orbit. That's good. It's about time NASA got out of the "space-truck'n" business. But it's hardly 'going forward' for humanity. Meanwhile Obama has cut NASA's planetary exploration budget by 20%
That Ford on the right is hardly an exemplar of innovation.
Basically anything electronic has progressed dramatically from 1970s - present.
Anything to do with physical transport has stagnated during the same period
Since everything on the right is a luxury item, replace the Ford with the Tesla Model S, the first really practical EV. Seats 5 with two trunks; 265 miles of range; recharges in 1 hr at a Tesla Super Charger or 5 hrs at home; costs $80K; accelerates like a super car.
Bonus: Like SpaceX, Tesla is also an Elon Musk joint.
Last edited by Zarban (2012-12-15 18:27:27)
The automobile internal combustion engine, invented in the 1890s, is still standard. They've been working on electric cars for decades but they didn't haven't achieved critical take-off in the marketplace, so to speak.
Yes, but engine is not everything:
avatar wrote:That Ford on the right is hardly an exemplar of innovation.
Basically anything electronic has progressed dramatically from 1970s - present.
Anything to do with physical transport has stagnated during the same periodSince everything the right is a luxury item, replace the Ford with the Tesla Model S, the first really practical EV. Seats 5 with two trunks; 265 miles of range; recharges in 1 hr at a Tesla Super Charger or 3 hrs at home; costs $80K; accelerates like a super car.
Bonus: Like SpaceX, Tesla is also an Elon Musk joint.
Yep - just need to get it down to $20K and common people will start buying (rather than the eccentric rich). Bring on the EVs and self-driving cars and hypersonic jets, etc. What I'm sick of is hearing how it's just around the corner (for decades now) or even worse, always "20 years away" (like fusion) or worse still, regressed (e.g. Concorde/Shuttle/Apollo is something we had then lost).
What I'm sick of is hearing how it's just around the corner (for decades now) or even worse, always "20 years away"
I think we'll be seeing this happening less and less. Thanks to the internet and sites like indiegogo or kickstarter people can leave big companies out of the equation and get funding directly from the public which will speed things up considerably.
EDIT:
http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/282006 - somehow I don't think any company associated with making lightbulbs would invest in something like this.
Last edited by Lamer (2012-12-11 18:28:13)
Zarban wrote:
Yep - just need to get it down to $20K and common people will start buying (rather than the eccentric rich).
Let's let the eccentrics fund the new technology for a while longer. It took 20 years for cells phones to become affordable to the masses. The Tesla Roadster—the first really practical modern EV—only came out four years ago.
Last edited by Zarban (2012-12-15 19:01:33)
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