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Space Shuttle External Tank Webcam

mpd2014 writes "When the next shuttle takes off to the space station on October 2nd it will have a new webcam attached to the external tank that is sure to provide spectacular images. If you're interested in the schematics and technical details NASA has also made those available."

3 of 131 comments (clear)

  1. Not liftoff by Perdo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The good pictures will be from seperation and re-entry.

    I still think they should fly the otherwise wasted tank into orbit to be used as parts or huge additions to the space station.

    Multiply the space station's internal volume by 10 in just one trip. After all the tank is a high pressure vessel. It should be able to hold 14.5 lb/sq in atmospheric.

    Just give the shuttle a bit more power, drop the boosters and park the tank next to ISS.

    Would make ISS look like a toy.

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    If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.

  2. The actual URL, anyone? by hazyshadeofwinter · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Anybody got the actual URL of this thing? I'm thinking y'all could Slashdot it now so it'll be nice and empty come launch time...

    That is, assuming it's woodpecker-proof.

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    Click here if you just like to click on shit.
  3. Re:hope it doesnt get /.ed by billstr78 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It will. Unless the frame rate is extremely low, an event of this popularity will quickly consume a 100Mb/sec line. This was the max Ames Research Center (NASA) could host a couple of years ago, but they are probably going with a 3rd party provider. Let's hope they have lots of high bandwith mirrors load balanced and sprikled accross the country. This is the inherernt problem with a popular live event comensing at one specific moment and using at least 20Kb/sec per viewer. I am not saying it won't go off without a hitch, but when I interned at Ames, every event we hosted saturated the 100Mbit/sec line we had that went straight to an OC21 backbone pipe.