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A Rock Moves In Space

theBrownfury writes: "The BBC is reporting here that a very large Earth collision course asteroid has been discovered. This asteroid, NT7, was first observed on July 5th and current data suggests an impact date of February 1st, 2019. NT7 is 2kms wide and on date of impact will be approaching Earth at 28km/s. An asteroid of this size is large enough to cause continent wide destruction. However astronomers are still cautious in reporting this asteroid as the orbit of NT7 has not been fully verified. Current data on NT7's orbit suggests it orbits the Sun every 837 days and travels in a tilted orbit from about the distance of Mars to just within the Earth's orbit." The BBC article's headline (and accompanying illustration) are more alarming than the story itself seems to warrant: this asteroid has been given a 0.06 on the Palermo technical scale, which means it shouldn't bump getting run over by a llama off your list of worries.

40 of 828 comments (clear)

  1. Drivers by Traxton1 · · Score: 4, Funny
    God damn llama riders! Why don't they watch where they're going.

  2. Listen to the Simpsons. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Lets burn down the observatory so this never happens again!

  3. Big boost for space tech if it is on course... by vkg · · Score: 5, Funny

    "You have 19 years to do something about a 2km rock headed for Washington. Go!"

    Nothing like a crisis to focus the mind, eh?

    1. Re:Big boost for space tech if it is on course... by brsmith4 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Lets just hope by then NASA gets its std/metric conversions correct or we're all toast.

    2. Re:Big boost for space tech if it is on course... by Mad+Marlin · · Score: 4, Funny
      "You have 19 years to do something about a 2km rock headed for Washington. Go!"

      16 years and 7 months.

    3. Re:Big boost for space tech if it is on course... by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 5, Funny

      October 2018 Status Report

      We have finally decided on the location for the meeting for the committee that will determine the budget proposal for the committee to plan the catering for the blue-ribbon commission for the removal of the asteroid threat.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
  4. terrorist! by Cardhore · · Score: 3, Funny

    Mother nature is a terrorist! First the thunderstorms and now the asteroids! What's next? Exploding stars? scary stuff

  5. NT7 by cascino · · Score: 5, Funny

    Well, if Win2k was NT5, and WinXP is NT6, then I suppose it's due time that the next generation NT7 makes it's "impact" on the world.

  6. Quick, before it's too late by knodi · · Score: 4, Funny

    We need to hurry up and send a team of foul-mouthed perverted semi-illiterate oil miners into space! And for the love of all that's holy, somebody start having sex with Liv Tyler!

    --
    Austin is more fun than Dallas.
    1. Re:Quick, before it's too late by friscolr · · Score: 4, Funny
      Why bother? There's really not all that much need to worry. According to the post,
      an asteroid of this size is large enough to cause continent wide destruction
      so even if the asteroid turns out to really be on a collision course, we have a 1 in 7 chance of not getting hit. I'll take those odds to Vegas any day.

      But if you really think it'll help, i'll get right on the sex bit.

    2. Re:Quick, before it's too late by G-funk · · Score: 4, Funny

      somebody start having sex with Liv Tyler!

      *Sigh* If I must...

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    3. Re:Quick, before it's too late by guttentag · · Score: 3, Funny
      We need to hurry up and send a team of foul-mouthed perverted semi-illiterate oil miners into space!
      Why say semi-illiterate?Is there a difference between "semi-illiterate" people and "semi-literate" people? How about "slashdot readers who drill for oil?"

      Also, are we so consumed with the fossil fuel "crisis" that when a killer asteroid is found on course for earth our first reaction is, "send someone up there to find out if it's got any oil?"

    4. Re:Quick, before it's too late by nd · · Score: 3, Funny

      an asteroid of this size is large enough to cause continent wide destruction

      I hope it's Canada.

      Oh, wait....

    5. Re:Quick, before it's too late by troemyd · · Score: 3, Funny

      Why say semi-illiterate? Is there a difference between "semi-illiterate" people and "semi-literate" people?

      It depends on whether you're an optimist - one's half full, the other's half empty.

  7. Now we know where Bill Gates came from... by Quixotic137 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Those aliens are running NT7 already!

  8. London tabloids by Picass0 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Leave it to British tabloits to sensationalize a non-story. Fortunately I never see biased or inacurate stories at this site.

  9. run over by a llama? by friscolr · · Score: 4, Funny
    which means it shouldn't bump getting run over by a llama off your list of worries.

    well i was caught in a llama stampede when i was younger, so anyone within a 1000 mile radius of me might wanna consider moving...

  10. And you thought NT 3.51 was bad? by descubes · · Score: 3, Funny

    It keeps getting worse and worse. NT5 had an estimated 65000 bugs, if I recall correctly, but at a few grams per bug (when they don't fly), nobody cared about such a tiny mass. But now NT7 would be large enough for continental scale devastation? Wow. That must be a serious number of bugs.

    On the other hand, announcing a product 17 years before it hits, come on, that's not really serious, even by NT's standards.

    You think you know about programming?

    --
    -- Did you try Tao3D? http://tao3d.sourceforge.net
    1. Re:And you thought NT 3.51 was bad? by sessamoid · · Score: 4, Funny
      It keeps getting worse and worse. NT5 had an estimated 65000 bugs, if I recall correctly, but at a few grams per bug (when they don't fly), nobody cared about such a tiny mass. But now NT7 would be large enough for continental scale devastation? Wow. That must be a serious number of bugs.

      Oh, crap. Let's see:

      1) it's from Microsoft,

      2) it's got literally tons and tons of bugs.

      Obvious conclusion:

      We're all dead because it's bound to crash!

      --
      "No, no, no. Don't tug on that. You never know what it might be attached to."
  11. Hooray! by Ed+Hacker · · Score: 3, Funny

    I told my cow orkers not to worry about the unix signed 32-bit int date problem! Ha-hahahaha, I love being right! Oh, wait a minute...

  12. Petition NASA! Blast it out of the way now! by mo · · Score: 4, Funny

    This dangerous situation only get's harder to deride the longer we wait. I am doing everything I can to influence NASA to start working on getting a nuclear blast to deride the course of the oncoming danger. I agree that detonating a nuclear bomb in the course of the approaching llama is a bit drastic, but I refuse to sit idly by as the approaching threat of llama collision approaches.

  13. Re:a moral imperative by mbadolato · · Score: 5, Funny

    I guess in about 17 years it'll be time to ask that girl if she'll sleep with me if the world was about to end

    and won't *you* feel like shit if she still says no? ;-)

  14. Re:Vegas Odds by Moonshadow · · Score: 5, Funny

    Asteroid NT7: it really whips the llama's ass!

  15. Life imitates SatireWire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Apparently it's too late... Check out this news flash.

  16. Ah, Those Brits by BlackGriffen · · Score: 5, Funny

    Note the picture. The asteroid in the story is a couple km wide, the one depicted was hundreds of km (big enough to discorporate this seemingly solid little planet of ours for a while). Also note that it is hitting right in the U.S. I think that the artist has some issues with Uncle Sam...

    In short, definitely unwarranted.

    BlackGriffen

  17. Re:a moral imperative by ryusen · · Score: 3, Funny

    probably, but hey... like the old saying goes...
    you can't make somebody love you
    you can only stalk them and hope they panic and ive in...

    --

    I believe sex is highly over rated... unless it involves me
  18. Re:Nah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    And Linux may be on version 3.0 if we are lucky. Mozilla may be to version 2.

  19. Time's running out! by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Most of you only have 16 years to lose your virginity!

    Heh teasin =)

  20. Next up: by sulli · · Score: 5, Funny

    Bush declares war on A Rock!

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  21. Bummer.. by NanoGator · · Score: 4, Funny

    We may never see Mozilla 2.0. :(

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  22. asteroids? by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 5, Funny

    Don't worry everyone. I spent most of my youth in the local arcade preparing for just such an event!

    --
    Everything will be taken away from you.
  23. Re:Pull it into Earth orbit and... by hagar� · · Score: 5, Funny

    pull it into earth orbit.

    Well im fresh out of tractor beams today, and I think at 28km/s I wont be pulling along side it in the Pinto. But fear not it will have a use!

    We will finally be rid of Britney Spears.

    --
    Insert something insightful here, or I'll insert something painful there.
  24. Re:Why isnt the world testing deflection technolog by WEFUNK · · Score: 4, Funny

    Anyone that figured out a real nice way to make these NEO rocks bounce, blow up, deflect, time phase shift, or tractor away from the earth could pull some mass patents on that and laugh all the way to the bank.

    Well, that's just the problem with our outdated patent system. Not enough incentive for developing killer astroid deflection systems. Before you get the chance to make your royalties, you find out the end of the world is just past your expiration date and those damn generic solutions and open source hackers are already waiting in the wings to save humankind for basement bargin prices. If you want to make any money at all you've pretty well gotta tie up your application for as long as possible and then slap injunctions on all the would-be good samaritan heroes with some killer submarine claims. We can only hope that they'll increase the term for anti-apocalyptic devices - otherwise I just can't think of any incentive to innovate.

    --
    My next sig will be ready soon, but friends can beat the rush!
  25. Crisis in Washington by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 5, Funny

    After a brief press conference today, president George W. Bush was seriously mauled, when he declared war on The Rock, actor/wrestler Dwayne Johnson, which resulted in a surprise drop kick attack followed by a head butt and a pile driver by the professional wrestler, before White House Spokesperson Ari Fleisher managed to stop laughing out loud and informing the press and Dwayne Johnson that the President meant " a rock" and not "" The Rock". President Bush was rushed to the local hospital where doctors feared severe brain damage, but concluded that "there was nothing there to begin with, so it couldn't be hurt anyhow".

    The President later appologised for his mistake blaming it on terrorists who had sabotaged his statement.

    --
    We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  26. Palermo scale by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Funny

    It doesn't look so bad. -0.14 on the Palermo Scale (recently downgraded?).

    You mean slashdot-like moderators can save us from asteroids just by modding the rock down?

    I'm impressed!

    Better a rock than me.

  27. Look on the bright side by Our+Man+In+Redmond · · Score: 3, Funny

    Remember all that fuss and bother about Y2K? Remember the Unix crowd talking about having a similar problem in 2038 when the epoch rolls over?

    Suddenly it doesn't seem like much of a problem anymore, does it?

    --
    Someone you trust is one of us.
  28. Re:Pull it into Earth orbit and... by MrSeb · · Score: 3, Funny

    5. ...and, well, you get the point. If it's coming close enough, let's turn it in to something useful.

    How about making a Deathstar?

  29. Re:Don't laugh yet.. :( by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 4, Funny
    Why would anything...coming from interstellar space move any faster than our everyday, regular in-solar-system asteroids.

    If it's something from far away, then unless it were going really fast it wouldn't get here yet.

  30. Asteroid to hit tommorow by skintigh2 · · Score: 3, Funny

    December 1, 2017
    Reuters
    Today in the 17th year of the anti-terror extended presidency, Bush urged everyone on Earth to pray to Jesus to stop the asteroid. He blamed democrats for stopping all efforts to divert destruction but said he had faith everything would be "hunky-dorey."

    A summery of the anti-asteroid efforts are as follows:

    2002: Republicans reject idea that asteroids exist.

    2004: A bill funding more science is rejected as "pork barrel".

    2006: Republicans reject theorey asteroids have ever hit Earth in it's 4000 year history, and therefore never will.

    2008: Republicans admit asteroids may exist, but if one did hit the Earth it wouldn't be that bad.

    2010: Despite mounting evidence that the asteroid will have a direct hit, Bush rejects the science as "shakey and controversial."

    2012: UN resolution on asteroid vetoed by US as being too intrusive.

    2014: Senate plan to stop asteroid rejected by Bush as "too costly." Tax cut for rich is passed.

    2016: Emperor Bush rejects an internation coalition to stop the asteroid as "flawed."

  31. Re:Don't laugh yet.. :( by mrogers · · Score: 3, Funny
    How about a supernova in our quater of the galaxy? We will be ripped away. How about things that we don't even know about? Or a strong neurino star far far away, pointing it's north pole exactly on erath for a while? We will radiated to nothingness. Who says the whole univese is not suddendly slipping into a hole of some kind of superuniverse we don't even have an idea of today? (and stops to exist as whole?) Just calm down.

    Calm down? CALM DOWN? You just mentioned three ways the human race could be annihilated that I've never even thought about and there's not a damn thing we can do about it and you want me to CALM DOWN? Well YOU can calm down mister, I'm going out to buy a tin-foil helmet RIGHT NOW!

    However what about global earth warming? Oil resources? Malaria? The pest coming back?

    Better make that a tin-foil helmet AND a copper torc bracelet!