Posted by
chrisd
on from the sorry-no-wishlist dept.
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."
Now we get to see them fumble with those tiny screws..
Re:Woohoo
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
Daddy." Lisa grinned coquettishly and stretched out on her bed.
"Well, you have grown into quite a fuckable *DOH*! Er.. I mean attractive young lady. Said Homer. He awkwardly tried to position his paunch to hide his bulging hardon. His eyes travelled hungrily over Lisa's body. Her firm, perky breasts, long sleek legs, her smooth, lemony-yellow skin, the enticing sharp points of her hair.
Lisa giggled girlishly, her eyes crossing, "Daaad! Did you just say fuckable?" In her mind, she rejoiced. Her plan was coming to fruition. A lifetime of rebelling against the constraints of society was reaching a high point. Vegetarianism, Union Agitation, Animal Rights, Jazz , none of these acts compared in terms of social transgression to seducing her own father! "You weren't thinking about this, were you? Lisa turned the taut rumps of her pert young ass in Homer's direction.Homer drooled: "Aagggggh...Mmmmmm... sweet cheeks... NO! I love Marge... Must resist..."
"Awww cummeeerre..." Crooned Lisa, rolling slinkily over and leaning forward so Homer could see down her cleavage: "Daaad, I think you've got a present for me, hehehehee!" She reached out and unzipped
Lo, there do I see my father. Lo, there do I see my mother, my sisters and my brothers. Lo, there do I see the line of my people back to the beginning. Lo, they do call to me. They bid me to take my place among them, In the halls of Valhalla --
Where the brave can live forever.
AC: I'm understanding, Mr. Taco, I thought it was The Old Lie
Taco: No, my son, it surely is sweet and honorable, come boy, cum here
Re:Taco and I talked IRL, this is what happened.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
WTF DOES Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori. MEAN????????
Re:Taco and I talked IRL, this is what happened.
by
agnosonga
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
seeing that the links are goatse...
I dont think you want to know
Re:Taco and I talked IRL, this is what happened.
by
maunleon
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
"Is it sweet and fitting to die for the country"
Not that it has anything to do with our current space porn topic.
If in some smothering dreams, you too could pace Behind the wagon that we flung him in, And watch the white eyes writhing in his face, His hanging face, like a devil's sick of sin, If you could hear, at every jolt, the blood Come gurgling from the froth-corrupted lungs Bitten as the cud Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues,-- My friend, you would not tell with such high zest To children ardent for some desperate glory, The old Lie: Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori.
(Wilfred Owen)
Re:Taco and I talked IRL, this is what happened.
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
So are you saying Taco is telling the AC to die for Christmas Island? I should've known CmdrTaco was a traitor.
in my opinion, if they have the webcam, the should also have the blog, so that we would be able to read their comments about their experience in space! =)
in my opinion, if they have the webcam, the should also have the blog [blogger.com], so that we would be able to read their comments about their experience in space! =)
Considering NASA's funding problems they might as well become complete CAM WHORES and post a wishlist URL of gifts that their admiring fans could give them.
Re:webcam? blog! ;)
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
too bad their wishlist would be full of 1970's cpu equipment. maybe good for them, i'll trade an old 286 for some titties.
The Quest Project already provided an early version of journals (blogs) as well as interactive chats and web casts with NASA crew and astronauts. It was primarily aimed at the K-12 audience though.
and everyone is thinking...
by
Prong_Thunder
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· Score: 3, Funny
"hey, I can see my house from here"
It has been onboard already
by
jukal
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· Score: 5, Informative
According to this release by the company which makes the RocketCams: "2002 Aug 21: Two Ecliptic RocketCam(TM) systems have provided launch-to-orbit onboard views during the inaugural launch of the Atlas 5 rocket. The launch was a complete success, taking Eutelsat's Hotbird 6 comsat from Cape Canaveral and placing it into the desired transfer orbit. Both RocketCam(TM) cameras captured dramatic views looking aft: one from outside the Atlas 5's second-stage skin and one from inside the aft end of the second stage. "
Apparently, this is just the first time it can be publicly accessed.
Re:It has been onboard already
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Don't know what you mean by "publicly accessed", but I've been watching Delta and Atlas rocket launches with the rocketcam live on the net for some years.
Re:It has been onboard already
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jukal
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· Score: 2
> I've been watching Delta and Atlas rocket launches with the rocketcam live on the net for some years.
Ohh, the newsvalue of that article was close to zero then:)
Re:It has been onboard already
by
FrostedWheat
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· Score: 5, Informative
And this section of there website, you can view these videos. Very much publicly accessible.
They even provide MPEGs for those Quicktime-impared.
Re:It has been onboard already
by
Planetes
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· Score: 2, Informative
Actually it's been done several times. If you go to Space.com or Spaceflightnow.com you can see archive clips of rocket launches. My personal favorites are of the Mars Odyssey 2001 launch.
It's really neat watching the rocket's SRBs seperate and spiral off.
-- Planetes
"One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promo Ad
"Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer" - Adolf Hitl
Re:It has been onboard already
by
a_timid_mouse
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· Score: 1
I watched the Mars Odyssey launch on NASA TV that had one of these cameras onboard. Most impressive thing I've watched on TV in a long time! Video started before launch and ended with payload separation. I believe they had TWO cameras on that one, one outside one the main booster and one inside the payload bay area. It was neat watching the protective nosecone being blown off during deployment! I imagine the shuttle launch will last much longer than Titan launches since it moves so much slower than they do initially.
Re:It has been onboard already
by
Jish
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· Score: 2
This is the first time its been with the Space Shuttle as opposed to just a rocket launch.
How it's gonna look like...
by
arnoroefs2000
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· Score: 2
To have an idea of the picture you're gonna get from that camera, take a look here. If you ask me, it's really not that novel, oke this rocket is a bit bigger...but it still just goes up....
A webcam would offer shocking quality; you'd get to see the shuttle on the pad, and then the next frame update would be a cloud. Plus imagine the risk to the mission caused by the Shuttle crew continually being asked to be a little more erotic with their clipboards. I knew NASA was strapped for cash, but cheesey zero-gee pornos?
Re:hope it doesnt get /.ed
by
billstr78
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· 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.
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.
--
If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.
Re:Not liftoff
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Of course, you'd need to clean out the tank before you stick any humans in there...
The external tank is not just a huge hollow beer can - within it are separate tanks of liquid H and O2, along with insulation, piping, etc...
I don't know if the actual visible part of the tank is high pressure (it probably is, or could be easily made to be), but to be of any use as an ISS component the tank would need a major redesign.
-- __
Someday, but not this morning, I'll finally learn to use the preview button.
Re:Not liftoff
by
DeanAsh
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· Score: 3, Insightful
The shuttle main engines have been placed central to the mass of the joined shuttle/tank. The OMS engines (Orbital Maneuvering System), being placed much higher, are not. I expect the shuttle would tumble in orbit if the OMS were activated with the tank attached.
The reaction-control jets will have similar troubles. Remember the control problems the astronauts in Apollo 13 faced when trying to control the LEM with the command/service modules still joined?
--
What is the shortest sig that cannot be expressed in fewer than 20 words?
Re:Not liftoff
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Re-using the external tanks in that way is not possible. They do not survive re-entry and there is no way of getting something that large back into space afterwards if it did. Spacelab was a refurbished Saturn V third stage that came from the unused hardware that was built for the cancelled Apollo missions. The difference there was it fit perfectly on top of the Saturn V 2nd stage, and the 3rd stage engines were only necessary for missions to the moon. The 1st and 2nd stages of the Saturn V were the only ones required to get it into orbit.
I agree 100% about reusing the Shuttle's External Tanks.
NASA must have a giant stick up its ass to bring the ETs almost completely into orbit, only to let them burn up in the atmosphere.
I still haven't heard a reasonable explaination as to why this great idea has been ignored for so long. IMO, it's because the idea of "Reuse/Recycle/Reduce" is not compatible with getting maximum tax funding. They'd rather blow billions on a shiny new ISS (where maintenance consumes scientific work) than on boosting and retrofitting the large ETs.
Umm.. why do they need to get the tank back into orbit or have it seperate during reentry? If you're going to try it, don't seperate it at all and just stay connected until you reach the station. At that point, seperate and the tank will be in orbit along with the shuttle and station.
-- Planetes
"One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promo Ad
"Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer" - Adolf Hitl
Oh, if only it were a giant beer can, then we could host the first Intergalatic Kegger (MIB).
Re:Not liftoff
by
Guppy06
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· Score: 3, Informative
"The good pictures will be from seperation and re-entry."
Um... no. Obviously you haven't seen this flick here (some stills are available here). The video from a similar camera mounted on a Delta II is simply stunning. Seriously, I can't begin to describe how beautiful it is, you need to go watch it. I have yet to get tired of watching it.
Re-entry pictures are going to be few if any. But I'm already drooling at the thought of video like this from a shuttle launch.
Not quite. To gain extra altitude on some flights, the OMS are activated in tandem with the SSMEs during orbital injection.
I do not know, however, if the OMS were ever used after MECO and before ET SEP.
-- Vos teneo officium eram periculosus ut vos recipero is.
Re:Not liftoff
by
ek_adam
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· Score: 2, Informative
The tank is not built to withstand vacuum. Some of the resins in the external tank would start to sublimate in vacuum. It would last for a several days in space, but not the months or years that would be required for a space station.
They could redesign an external tank that would survive in space, but it would be significantly heavier and would greatly reduce the payload.
Re:Not liftoff
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
The tank, in order to be used in such a way would require massive refurbising. It wouldn't be possible to re-fit it in orbit.
Not quite. To gain extra altitude on some flights, the OMS are activated in tandem with the SSMEs during orbital injection.
I do not know, however, if the OMS were ever used after MECO and before ET SEP.
Not quite. The OMS can be used during second stage for an abort. They could, but would not, be used during a non-abort, since their fuel is needed for orbital maneuvers and deorbit. Moreover, during a nominal mission, it is more efficient to use the OMS for Holman transfer to a higher orbit than to use it to push the extra mass of the tank and fuel in parallel with the SSMEs.
There is no reason that the OMS would ever be used between MECO and ET Sep. That is only a few seconds. Also, as mentioned before, they do not have the control authority required with the ET attached.
The SSMEs cannot be used after ET Sep. There is no fuel for them except a few pounds trapped in the lines, and even that is vented and purged to prevent ice damage.
-- People should not fear their government. Governments should fear their people.
Actually the last bit of the powered phase of the shuttle flight drives back toward the earth to give the tank a trajectory that will intersect the atmosphere. After release of the tank I believe the OMS is then used to guarantee that the shuttle itself does not reenter prematurely. Thus keeping the tank would actually save fuel. Maneuvering with the center of gravity offset by the mass of the tank would probably cost a little in fuel use but probably way less than the orbit adjustment after release of the tank.
Self-Destructing Web Cams
by
guttentag
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· Score: 2
This is a much cooler way of showing the world a Web cam that destroys itself than that Crushing Experience.
Scores so far: Strapped to the Space Shuttle: 9.7 Sitting in a British museum: 4.2
They should put two cameras on it though.. the other one should be in the same housing, but facing forward. That would be a nice view of the splashdown of the external tank...
-- Whoever stated that signature sizes should be limited to one hundred and twenty characters can just go ahead and kiss my
Given the design of the Apollo programme command modules, I would have to say that it's more likely that if the tank re-entered in a stable attutude (ie not tumbling), it'd be arse-backwards.
--
What is the shortest sig that cannot be expressed in fewer than 20 words?
Ask Slashdoot
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
Hello. I am a 24 year old right-handed male. Up until now, I have been wiping my ass exclusively with my right hand holding the paper. Now I have decided to start alternating hands to hold the paper when I wipe my ass, so I can get an equal workout with both arms (I am a computer geek, so wiping my ass is about as much exercise as I get).
My efforts have been less than optimal. Holding the paper in my left hand just doesn't feel *right*, and I take almost twice as long to wipe. Do any Slashdoot readers have advice for transitioning from main-hand to off-hand wiping?
Re:Ask Slashdoot
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
As a self proclaimed geek, to get an even workout simply, errrr, watch, porn with your other hand.
NEW ./
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
Most of you must have noticed that the majority of the intelligent people have left Slashdot. There is a great thing happening underground - a completely new discussion forum for intelligent individuals. Hackers will need to request access to discussion forums and those who troll, will be kicked out and banned. It's the quality - not the quantity that matters. One could call this a secret society for hackers. Keep your eyes open!
Re:NEW ./
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
Heteros will need to request access to discussion forums...
d00d yu0r ghey.
That's cool but...
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 1
Whose tax dollars paid for this? The shuttle-to-earth data link has to be ridiculously expensive to operate knowing how the US Gov. does things...
Rest assured that the com link between the shuttle and mission control already exists. The cost of the webcam and the infrastructure required to stream it is a drop in the bucket, no a molecule in the bucket of the vast expences that the shuttle already racks up.
If its the government (and NASA with the 70's era components), then they are probably still using a 28.8K modem (albiet bought with a hefty markup).
The next step will be to upgrade to a 56K. In a couple of years they'll go with a cable modem, they just need to find a big enough spool to hold all that CAT5.
Now we will be able to Slashdot the Space Shuttle. Personally, i hope it won't crash.
Good golly, lookit all the documentation!
by
Nanoda
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· Score: 1
This thing has more information available publicly than my car probably has. (Not that I think it shouldn't).
I'll bet if one of the astronauts wanted to sign the external tank, they'd have to test the ink for combustability, and analyse the difference in solar heating.;-)
My favourite quote: "Considering the strong controls and verifications in place, the overall likelihood of occurrence of a catastrophic hazard remains "improbable", and all hazard causes are 'Controlled'"
Re:Good golly, lookit all the documentation!
by
Wolfrider
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· Score: 1
Based on my recent Kennedy Space Center tour, that "joke" may have some basis in fact--!:) .
-- .
== WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
How much extra drag will this cause, and how much harder will the engines have to work to compensate? Will it have to carry a lot more fuel? Will it be ripped off my the force of the wind rushing past?
My figures are probably off, but from memory I'd heard that's it's in the ballpark of $10G/LB of rocket fuel to send something into orbit. I'm guessing that this cam only weighs a few ounces at most. At least one would hope!
Can anyone verify my figures?
Re:Drag and Fuel
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Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Use your judgement. According to your figure, the yearly NASA budget can only afford 1 lb into orbit.
That is one of those vague numbers that really does not mean much in the real world. A few years ago, a project I had been working on, SRTM, finally went to Florida to be launched on the shuttle. One of the surprising things I found out was that they were also bolting several hundred pounds of lead weight into the cargo bay, basically to balance the load. This is for the same reason airplane pilots (are supposed to) calculate "weight and balance".
So basically, something as lightweight as this camera, even counting the two S band antennas and transmitters, probably has no real effect on fuel consumption.
At least they know what they are doing. Unlike most slashdotters who change cpu every month.
Maybe you find old hardware funny because you are a dumb monkey.
MOD UP, hilarious parody
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
hahahaha this was right on
Question
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
Do you wash your forearms after wiping your ass? Wiping with your right hand transfers some fæces on to your arm hairs, but wiping with the unaccustomed hand really saturates the arm with fæcal matter. You'd be surprised at the number of people who neglect washing this important area.
Estes has been doing this since the sixties.:) see.
Re:nothing new...
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Hm, this takes one grainy picture on the way down... If you're lucky. Usually, you get a picture of the sky as the Estes motor blows up instead of working properly.
I used to fly one. Fun, but novelty wears off after two or three pictures.
W00T
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1
Get yo' shit, man:
wget -r http://goatse.cx/
It's a Rocketcam! Wohoo!
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 3, Informative
This is really what the shuttle has been missing. After watching dozens of launches through streaming meadia, shuttle really has been behind Delta and others which have had the rocketcam for years. I am sure going to be following the next launch closely.
What's this?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: -1, Offtopic
What12/03/96
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
OF THE
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 94-KA-01226 COA
ROOSEVELT ANTHONY CROCKETT
APPELLANT
v.
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
APPELLEE
THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION AND
MAY NOT BE CITED, PURSUANT TO M.R.A.P. 35-B
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. KOSTA N. VLAHOS
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:
STEPHEN J. MAGGIO
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY: W.GLENN WATTS
DISTRICT ATTORNEY: MARK WARD
NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL: SALE OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE
TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: SALE OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE: SENTENCED AS A HABITUAL OFFENDER TO A TERM OF 30 YRS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MDOC WITHOUT HOPE OF PAROLE OR PROBATION
BEFORE BRIDGES, P.J., KING, AND PAYNE, JJ.
BRIDGES, P.J., FOR THE COURT:
Roosevelt Crockett was convicted of selling a controlled substance as a habitual offender in Harrison County Circuit Court. From his conviction and sentence of thirty years, Crockett appeals to this Court on two issues: (1) whether the trial court erred in restricting the cross-examination of a witness, and (2) whether the trial court erred in denying a jury instruction on the issue of entrapment.
FACTS
On September 1, 1993, undercover agent Sean O'Neil drove to an area off Highway 49 in North Gulfport in a truck that had been previously fitted with a concealed camera and tape recorder. On reaching the corner of Alabama and Tyler, he saw several males standing at the corner. He slowed his truck and rolled down his window; Crockett then approached his car, and asked what he needed. Officer O'Neil explained that he needed a "twenty dollar piece." Crockett asked him for the money, to which O'Neil replied that he would not give him the money until he had the crack cocaine. Crockett jumped in the back of O'Neil's pick-up truck and directed him where to go in order to make the purchase. O'Neil drove there, Crockett got out of the pick-up, and returned a few minutes later with the crack cocaine.
ARGUMENT AND DISCUSSION OF THE LAW
I. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING THE APPELLANT THE OPPORTUNITY TO CROSS-EXAMINE A WITNESS IN ORDER TO DEVELOP AN ENTRAPMENT DEFENSE.
During trial, the court refused to let Crockett develop the defense of entrapment while cross-examining Officer O'Neill. Crockett alleged that the multi-jurisdictional drug task force operated mostly in economically depressed areas, and its main purpose was to induce poor people and specific individuals to sell drugs.
The State explained that the task force was designed for the purpose of providing an opportunity for people already selling or wanting to sell drugs to do so, whether in North Gulfport or in any other area of Harrison County. Consistent with the State's argument, was testimony proving that Crockett approached the car on his own volition. He approached the car and asked what the officer needed. The officer did not verbally or physically ask Crockett to come over; he merely slowed the car.
During Officer O'Neil's cross-examination, testimony was proffered that proved that the undercover task force targeted both high and low economic areas and did not operate to isolate or entrap specific individuals.
Q. Did you in your two months with the narcotics Task Force, did y'all ever formulate plans to go to an area like Windance (a higher income area of Gulfport) and cruise that neighborhood and try to induce people to sell you drugs?
A. Yes, sir
Q. You did?
A. Uh, huh.
Q. And again, your plans were in fact to get somebody, your whole goal at this point was to get somebody, anybody, to sell you drugs that day, correct?
A. I wouldn't use the word 'get' myself. We would, you know, see the area, see if somebody would approach the vehicle for the possibility of buying narcotics.
Q. Was this going to be done telepathically, the communication, or by mind reading? How was it going to be done?
A. By cruising the area.
After having a bench conference, the trial judge sustained the State's objection to the entrapment line of questioning, and ruled that the theory of entrapment could not be developed on cross-examination.
With regard to the scope of cross-examination, the Supreme Court of Mississippi has stated that although the scope of cross-examination is usually very broad, it is within the sound discretion of the trial court to limit cross-examination to relevant matters. Hewlett v. State, 607 So. 2d 1097, 1100 (Miss. 1992). However, the discretion of the trial court is not without limits; the court has reversed where the trial court exceeded the limits in an area proper for cross-examination. Hewlett 607 So. 2d at 1100; Carr v. State, 655 So. 2d 824, 847 (Miss. 1995). Yet, "cross-examination on an irrelevant point is not permitted." Sayles v. State, 552 So. 2d 1383, 1386 (Miss. 1989).
Using his discretion, the trial judge ruled that prolonged cross-examination on the point of where the task force operated was irrelevant. As illustrated in Hewlett, Carr, and Sayles, the judge has the inherent power to limit cross-examination to relevant matters. For this reason, we believe this issue is without merit, and we affirm the lower court.
II. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING A JURY INSTRUCTION ON THE ISSUE OF ENTRAPMENT.
Crockett contends that the refusal to grant his requested jury instruction on entrapment was erroneous. Consistent with the standard of review for the denial of other instructions, the Mississippi Supreme Court requires in reviewing whether an entrapment instruction should have been given, that the accused "be given the benefit of all doubts about the evidence." King v. State, 530 So. 2d 1356, 1359 (Miss. 1988). Entrapment is an affirmative defense and, to secure an instruction on the defense, the accused is obligated to make a prima facie case of entrapment, and an instruction should only be refused when "the evidence is so one-sided that no reasonable juror could find" entrapment. King, 530 So. 2d at 1358-59; see Bush v. State, 585 So. 2d 1262, 1264 (Miss. 1991).
As for Crockett's requested jury instruction, the trial court ruled that there was no factual basis to allow for an entrapment instruction. Because the court restricted Crockett's cross-examination of Officer O'Neil to relevant matters, the defense was not able to expound on the entrapment theory and thus, was not able to make a prima facie case of entrapment, a prerequisite to a jury instruction on entrapment. As discussed above, the trial court ruled that the entrapment line of questioning was irrelevant and because of this, not a proper affirmative defense. Finding no assignment of error which warrants reversal, we affirm the lower court.
THE JUDGMENT OF THE HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT OF SALE OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE AND SENTENCE AS A HABITUAL OFFENDER FOR A TERM OF THIRTY YEARS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS IS AFFIRMED. HARRISON COUNTY IS TAXED WITH ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL.
FRAISER, C.J., BARBER, COLEMAN, DIAZ, KING, McMILLIN, PAYNE, AND SOUTHWICK, JJ., CONCUR. THOMAS, P.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
's this? I don't get it!
Occasional live webcasts from space are nice. But I think it's confusing to call it a "webcam". I expect webcams to be on the web most of the time and to be hooked up more or less directly to the web. Webcams need to be on and there even if nothing is happening. A live broadcast going into a streaming server occasionally doesn't strike me as something to be called a webcam.
I just hope NASA will broadcast the camstream on a very good line with a very good server...
-- 42 + 1 = 42
Seems a little long in coming
by
Dock
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· Score: 1
I hope they release the entire launch. The movies on the site in one of the comments (while VERY cool) were all less than thirty seconds or so. I know, maybe racing through clouds is boring, but I'd still like the see the entire thing.
I would have thought something like this would have happened a while ago, and I honestly expected a little more commercial exploitation of technology like this to pick up interest in shuttle launches. Can you imagine an IMAX camera on the outside tank? Or how about something from the inside, with sound and perhaps a unstable mount (a little shaking would make do a lot for conveying what it's like to really fly).
Better yet, how about a camera mounted on the shuttle itself for a landing? (think dashboard, what a view.)
-- http://about.me/paultenny
Re:Seems a little long in coming
by
leeward
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· Score: 1
The article I read indicates it will be one starting 10 minutes before launch and last until a short time after separation.
This, after looking at the specs and designs they have online, is a regular camera with a regular NASA style live RF feed back to ground control... The only thing that could possibly make it a webcam would be that someone would take that video feed and encode it for the web. Something they did not mention was going to happen.
calling that a webcam is the same as calling a studio camera and camera crew a webcam... It is another monitoring camera / eye-candy camera added to the shuttle launch vehicle.. IT is identical to most cameras that NASA uses on it's launch vehicles.
Too bad that it's a throw-away one time use item.... it's built like a tank and would probably last 100 years at a weather station or pointing at my back yard.
Testing reveals: ET Shuttle Observation Camera STS-112 PAR Flight Hardware Certification Summary [...] No issues ".
Just as long as they don't put a hairline crack in the tank when they screw on the web cam.
IMAX on the shuttle - been done!
by
6Yankee
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· Score: 1
Better yet, how about a camera mounted on the shuttle itself for a landing? (think dashboard, what a view.)
When I was at Kennedy Space Center [sic], and it must have been 10 years ago now, they had an IMAX film, "The Dream is Alive". That had some nice shots of the runway as seen from the flight deck. Landing a Cessna 150 was never the same, after that:)
I've seen several IMAX films since, and none have come close to being as good as this one.
oh yea right that's gonna work
by
io333
·
· Score: 0, Offtopic
1. add camera 2. link posted on/. on launch day 3. server fries before launch 4. profit?
Until this shows up - check out GBR!
by
Oggust
·
· Score: 2, Informative
While you're waiting for the NASA stuff - Check these guys out:
Now why don't they put webcams all over the space station so we can see where all our $$$ is going to. It would be pretty sweet to be able to view the earth and the station from all over 24/7.
-- -Cnik
They had one on the Stardust launch vehicle -
by
jpellino
·
· Score: 2
A great movie of the launch from a head-down fuselage camera.
Seeing this makes me wonder what took them so long. If they had done this during the Challenger days, we'd probably have a better idea of what went wrong, and we wouldn't have had the setbacks with the space program that we did during the late '80's. Even thogh it couldn't bring back the lives lost, we would have had answers to what happened a little faster, which woul dhave helped the process along. Ideally, they should mount these wherever there may be something that needs to be monitored.
I know NASA has sensors everywhere on the Shuttle to monitor everything, but sometimes when sensors give strange readings, it's nice to be able to see what the actual end result is manifesting as.
I'm just saying it's long overdue, and could be used to provide more than just cool video footage of a launch. Two cameras coud interleave their picture at 15fps, and you'd get two full streams. But NASA will probably never do that.
"Seeing this makes me wonder what took them so long. If they had done this during the Challenger days, we'd probably have a better idea of what went wrong,"
Well... actually, they know exactly what went wrong. There are several cameras on and around the launchpad, and after much analysis they found out exactly when the O-ring broke seal (during initial firing if I recall correctly). An extra cam may have helped, but really, they've got it covered.
-- {} ------
When I think of a good sig, I'll put it here
Err, well I realize that was an attempt at humor. But since I tend to be pedantic, the "chemicals" in the tank, hydrogen and oxygen, are only highly explosive when mixed.
I was referring to this article http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/09/08/213425 3&mode=thread&tid=160
when i said 70's computer hardware.
I as being lite harded.
The real joke is how much Nasa probably paid for the webcam.
Troll. Old hard ware can work great. But Nasa's old hardware is getting hard to replace because no one is making the parts anymore.
--
A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.
What would really be cool...
by
somebaudy
·
· Score: 2, Insightful
- a webcam on a satellite: check for yourself what the weather looks like where you're going.
- webcams on the moon, one of them showing the earth seen from the moon.
and of course...
- plenty of webcams on Mars, monitoring the red planet in case the little green men thta live up there (?) show up.
B.
I didnt think this was the first time for an external camera on the space shuttle - I thought ive seen many clips of the space shuttle from the angle the website represented. I dont understand why NASA would have waited as long as it has though to put a camera on the shuttle. Well if the space shuttle had a camera, I sure wish MIR would have had a camera when it fell to earth - that would have been very cool.
-- Kyle "DotCom" Lynch:: http://www.kylelynch.com
...I need some cheeze-its...
It sure will be spectacular, indeed...
by
Pig+Hogger
·
· Score: 2
... if the shuttle blows-up again, à la Challenger...
You did it wrong
by
Anonymous Coward
·
· Score: 0
1. add camera 2. link posted on/. on launch day 3. server fries before launch 4. ???? 5. profit!
The name of the story was, "Tank Farm Dynamo" about a privatized effort to reuse external tank, written by David Brin. I read it as part of a collection bound in dead tree form, but it's available on the web at: http://www.orbit6.com/et/tankfarm.htm
-- The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
NASA has tons of videos of this too
by
Anonymous Coward
·
· Score: 0
they have some full-length videos (instead of the wussy short ones) showing the on-board view from launch into orbit, i remember browsing them all a couple years ago.
http://stardust.jpl.nasa.gov/photo/launchanim.ht ml
Apollo launch footage?
by
quacking+duck
·
· Score: 1
Wondering... I remember seeing footage of Apollo rocket stage separations. Like rocketcam, these shots were aft-facing. Why didn't they think to install a camera that could record the launch itself?
Considering that very few modem component makers are desiging or building newer systems that can withstand the radiation and other riggors of space travel, I'm not terribly surprised.
You don't need a shitload of computational power to run the shuttle. What you do need is a computer that will actually work in space. And guess what, Sparky? That brand new Pentium 4 or Athlon you've got on your desk won't work. The systems need to be hardened at the fab level in order to work.
-- Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
for a test
by
Anonymous Coward
·
· Score: 0
time to try out those so called 6" to infinity focus ranges...
It's been used 21 times; this is the 1st STS use
by
T.Hobbes
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· Score: 2
STS-112 will be 21st launch for RocketCam (if you don't count the first demo launch in 1997). All of the RocketCam's have worked so far. A total of about three dozen cameras have been flown.
...
The view of the Earth falling away will be familiar to anyone who has watched a Delta rocket launch lately - but will be a first for the Space Shuttle program.
Why can't NASA use the tank
by
clockworkbox
·
· Score: 1
I've often wondered why the external tank is allowed to burn up in the atmosphere. It's a very large insulated tank with two chambers for oxygen and hydrogen. With some extra fuel it could be put into orbit and converted for human habitation.
Imagine the number of tanks that have been up in the span of the shuttle project. It seems with that number of tanks we could have several large wheels in orbit around the earth. The tanks currently float around in a decaying orbit until they burn up in the atmosphere.
Alternatives to spaceflightnow.com footage?
by
Buran
·
· Score: 2
I used to use Spaceflight Now to watch launches and retrieve video later of those I was not able to watch. Now, the videos are locked behind a password which they demand a fee for.
As a taxpayer who (willingly, mind you! note my name!) supports the space program already with tax dollars, I don't feel I should have to pay to view something I already helped to fund. While I still read SFN's text coverage, which is still free, I can't view the videos.
Is there another site out there that posts timely (SFN does it same day or next day) videos of launches? And if the Ecliptic's site fails to post the entire sequence, all 10+ minutes of it, where might I find it?
Heck, what about archives of on-orbit ops, other launch shots, reentry/approach, and landing? I've a video project in mind that I'd like to use footage for...
Er, this is innovative how exactly?
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
umm, perhaps this is new for a shuttle launch, but I've seen this before (space.com) on a satellite launch.
sarcasm
by
Anonymous Coward
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· Score: 0
Now we'll be able to really see what a leaking shuttle booster 0-ring seal looks like, as it happens!
Sounds like a good idea, except...
by
Wolfrider
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· Score: 1
What about the smell? Not to mention you'd have to scrub the thing clean from all the residual fuel left inside and pressurize it before it could be occupied. That's a LOT of air... .
-- .
== WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
Re:Sounds like a good idea, except...
by
Perdo
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· Score: 2
The smell... liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen...
Think about it for a minute.. It will come to you.
--
If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.
Lots of rocketcams online
by
Anonymous Coward
·
· Score: 0
Now we get to see them fumble with those tiny screws..
Taco:
AC: Taco, is it true what the wise say?
Taco:
AC: Please Taco, I must know.
Taco: Speak, boy.
AC: Is it true Taco? Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori.
Taco(whilst dropping his pants and bending over): Look at this... here will you find your answer
AC(now understanding The Truth): I see...
Taco(chanting):
AC: I'm understanding, Mr. Taco, I thought it was The Old Lie
Taco: No, my son, it surely is sweet and honorable, come boy, cum here
personally, i'm looking forward to alien/spacewoman upskirt shots...
in my opinion, if they have the webcam, the should also have the blog, so that we would be able to read their comments about their experience in space! =)
irma trattino
eat.me at http://irmetta.free.fr
"hey, I can see my house from here"
Apparently, this is just the first time it can be publicly accessed.
To have an idea of the picture you're gonna get from that camera, take a look here.
If you ask me, it's really not that novel, oke this rocket is a bit bigger...but it still just goes up....
Actually, where's my wallet...
that web cams server load will be sky-high
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.
If voting were effective, it would be illegal by now.
Scores so far:
Strapped to the Space Shuttle: 9.7
Sitting in a British museum: 4.2
X-10: It's not just for vouyers anymore!
They should put two cameras on it though.. the other one should be in the same housing, but facing forward. That would be a nice view of the splashdown of the external tank...
Whoever stated that signature sizes should be limited to one hundred and twenty characters can just go ahead and kiss my
My efforts have been less than optimal. Holding the paper in my left hand just doesn't feel *right*, and I take almost twice as long to wipe. Do any Slashdoot readers have advice for transitioning from main-hand to off-hand wiping?
Most of you must have noticed that the majority of the intelligent people have left Slashdot. There is a great thing happening underground - a completely new discussion forum for intelligent individuals. Hackers will need to request access to discussion forums and those who troll, will be kicked out and banned. It's the quality - not the quantity that matters. One could call this a secret society for hackers. Keep your eyes open!
Whose tax dollars paid for this? The shuttle-to-earth data link has to be ridiculously expensive to operate knowing how the US Gov. does things...
...to learning about the combined results of zero-g and the /. effect.
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.
Click here if you just like to click on shit.
They have webcams.. and Nasa still runs the shuttle on computer hardware from the 70's. Why do I find that funny?
A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.
Now we will be able to Slashdot the Space Shuttle. Personally, i hope it won't crash.
This thing has more information available publicly than my car probably has. (Not that I think it shouldn't).
;-)
I'll bet if one of the astronauts wanted to sign the external tank, they'd have to test the ink for combustability, and analyse the difference in solar heating.
My favourite quote: "Considering the strong controls and verifications in place, the overall likelihood of occurrence of a catastrophic hazard remains "improbable", and all hazard causes are 'Controlled'"
As geeky as this may sound, this thing's cool!
I figured "webcam=crappy picture", but after checking out the samples, I'll definitely tune in for the webcast (if there is any)
Nothing like giving space/tech/cool stuff people another way to watch the launch.
d3vpsaux: Two Geek Thumbs-Up
How much extra drag will this cause, and how much harder will the engines have to work to compensate? Will it have to carry a lot more fuel? Will it be ripped off my the force of the wind rushing past?
Stick Men
At least they know what they are doing. Unlike most slashdotters who change cpu every month.
Maybe you find old hardware funny because you are a dumb monkey.
hahahaha this was right on
Do you wash your forearms after wiping your ass? Wiping with your right hand transfers some fæces on to your arm hairs, but wiping with the unaccustomed hand really saturates the arm with fæcal matter. You'd be surprised at the number of people who neglect washing this important area.
Estes has been doing this since the sixties.
see.
This is really what the shuttle has been missing. After watching dozens of launches through streaming meadia, shuttle really has been behind Delta and others which have had the rocketcam for years. I am sure going to be following the next launch closely.
c am.shtml.
For previous rocketcam footage, check http://www.eclipticenterprises.com/gallery_rocket
Hey, at least this is not another repost.
Money for nothing, pix for free
Hey, at least this is not another repost.
Money for nothing, pix for free
if it blows up in the sky due to slashdot effect
What12/03/96 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI NO. 94-KA-01226 COA ROOSEVELT ANTHONY CROCKETT APPELLANT v. STATE OF MISSISSIPPI APPELLEE THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED, PURSUANT TO M.R.A.P. 35-B TRIAL JUDGE: HON. KOSTA N. VLAHOS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: STEPHEN J. MAGGIO ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL BY: W.GLENN WATTS DISTRICT ATTORNEY: MARK WARD NATURE OF THE CASE: CRIMINAL: SALE OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION: SALE OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE: SENTENCED AS A HABITUAL OFFENDER TO A TERM OF 30 YRS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MDOC WITHOUT HOPE OF PAROLE OR PROBATION BEFORE BRIDGES, P.J., KING, AND PAYNE, JJ. BRIDGES, P.J., FOR THE COURT: Roosevelt Crockett was convicted of selling a controlled substance as a habitual offender in Harrison County Circuit Court. From his conviction and sentence of thirty years, Crockett appeals to this Court on two issues: (1) whether the trial court erred in restricting the cross-examination of a witness, and (2) whether the trial court erred in denying a jury instruction on the issue of entrapment. FACTS On September 1, 1993, undercover agent Sean O'Neil drove to an area off Highway 49 in North Gulfport in a truck that had been previously fitted with a concealed camera and tape recorder. On reaching the corner of Alabama and Tyler, he saw several males standing at the corner. He slowed his truck and rolled down his window; Crockett then approached his car, and asked what he needed. Officer O'Neil explained that he needed a "twenty dollar piece." Crockett asked him for the money, to which O'Neil replied that he would not give him the money until he had the crack cocaine. Crockett jumped in the back of O'Neil's pick-up truck and directed him where to go in order to make the purchase. O'Neil drove there, Crockett got out of the pick-up, and returned a few minutes later with the crack cocaine. ARGUMENT AND DISCUSSION OF THE LAW I. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING THE APPELLANT THE OPPORTUNITY TO CROSS-EXAMINE A WITNESS IN ORDER TO DEVELOP AN ENTRAPMENT DEFENSE. During trial, the court refused to let Crockett develop the defense of entrapment while cross-examining Officer O'Neill. Crockett alleged that the multi-jurisdictional drug task force operated mostly in economically depressed areas, and its main purpose was to induce poor people and specific individuals to sell drugs. The State explained that the task force was designed for the purpose of providing an opportunity for people already selling or wanting to sell drugs to do so, whether in North Gulfport or in any other area of Harrison County. Consistent with the State's argument, was testimony proving that Crockett approached the car on his own volition. He approached the car and asked what the officer needed. The officer did not verbally or physically ask Crockett to come over; he merely slowed the car. During Officer O'Neil's cross-examination, testimony was proffered that proved that the undercover task force targeted both high and low economic areas and did not operate to isolate or entrap specific individuals. Q. Did you in your two months with the narcotics Task Force, did y'all ever formulate plans to go to an area like Windance (a higher income area of Gulfport) and cruise that neighborhood and try to induce people to sell you drugs? A. Yes, sir Q. You did? A. Uh, huh. Q. And again, your plans were in fact to get somebody, your whole goal at this point was to get somebody, anybody, to sell you drugs that day, correct? A. I wouldn't use the word 'get' myself. We would, you know, see the area, see if somebody would approach the vehicle for the possibility of buying narcotics. Q. Was this going to be done telepathically, the communication, or by mind reading? How was it going to be done? A. By cruising the area. After having a bench conference, the trial judge sustained the State's objection to the entrapment line of questioning, and ruled that the theory of entrapment could not be developed on cross-examination. With regard to the scope of cross-examination, the Supreme Court of Mississippi has stated that although the scope of cross-examination is usually very broad, it is within the sound discretion of the trial court to limit cross-examination to relevant matters. Hewlett v. State, 607 So. 2d 1097, 1100 (Miss. 1992). However, the discretion of the trial court is not without limits; the court has reversed where the trial court exceeded the limits in an area proper for cross-examination. Hewlett 607 So. 2d at 1100; Carr v. State, 655 So. 2d 824, 847 (Miss. 1995). Yet, "cross-examination on an irrelevant point is not permitted." Sayles v. State, 552 So. 2d 1383, 1386 (Miss. 1989). Using his discretion, the trial judge ruled that prolonged cross-examination on the point of where the task force operated was irrelevant. As illustrated in Hewlett, Carr, and Sayles, the judge has the inherent power to limit cross-examination to relevant matters. For this reason, we believe this issue is without merit, and we affirm the lower court. II. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING A JURY INSTRUCTION ON THE ISSUE OF ENTRAPMENT. Crockett contends that the refusal to grant his requested jury instruction on entrapment was erroneous. Consistent with the standard of review for the denial of other instructions, the Mississippi Supreme Court requires in reviewing whether an entrapment instruction should have been given, that the accused "be given the benefit of all doubts about the evidence." King v. State, 530 So. 2d 1356, 1359 (Miss. 1988). Entrapment is an affirmative defense and, to secure an instruction on the defense, the accused is obligated to make a prima facie case of entrapment, and an instruction should only be refused when "the evidence is so one-sided that no reasonable juror could find" entrapment. King, 530 So. 2d at 1358-59; see Bush v. State, 585 So. 2d 1262, 1264 (Miss. 1991). As for Crockett's requested jury instruction, the trial court ruled that there was no factual basis to allow for an entrapment instruction. Because the court restricted Crockett's cross-examination of Officer O'Neil to relevant matters, the defense was not able to expound on the entrapment theory and thus, was not able to make a prima facie case of entrapment, a prerequisite to a jury instruction on entrapment. As discussed above, the trial court ruled that the entrapment line of questioning was irrelevant and because of this, not a proper affirmative defense. Finding no assignment of error which warrants reversal, we affirm the lower court. THE JUDGMENT OF THE HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT OF SALE OF A CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE AND SENTENCE AS A HABITUAL OFFENDER FOR A TERM OF THIRTY YEARS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS IS AFFIRMED. HARRISON COUNTY IS TAXED WITH ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL. FRAISER, C.J., BARBER, COLEMAN, DIAZ, KING, McMILLIN, PAYNE, AND SOUTHWICK, JJ., CONCUR. THOMAS, P.J., NOT PARTICIPATING. 's this? I don't get it!
Occasional live webcasts from space are nice. But I think it's confusing to call it a "webcam". I expect webcams to be on the web most of the time and to be hooked up more or less directly to the web. Webcams need to be on and there even if nothing is happening. A live broadcast going into a streaming server occasionally doesn't strike me as something to be called a webcam.
I just hope NASA will broadcast the camstream on a very good line with a very good server...
42 + 1 = 42
I hope they release the entire launch. The movies on the site in one of the comments (while VERY cool) were all less than thirty seconds or so. I know, maybe racing through clouds is boring, but I'd still like the see the entire thing.
I would have thought something like this would have happened a while ago, and I honestly expected a little more commercial exploitation of technology like this to pick up interest in shuttle launches. Can you imagine an IMAX camera on the outside tank? Or how about something from the inside, with sound and perhaps a unstable mount (a little shaking would make do a lot for conveying what it's like to really fly).
Better yet, how about a camera mounted on the shuttle itself for a landing? (think dashboard, what a view.)
http://about.me/paultenny
This, after looking at the specs and designs they have online, is a regular camera with a regular NASA style live RF feed back to ground control... The only thing that could possibly make it a webcam would be that someone would take that video feed and encode it for the web. Something they did not mention was going to happen.
calling that a webcam is the same as calling a studio camera and camera crew a webcam... It is another monitoring camera / eye-candy camera added to the shuttle launch vehicle.. IT is identical to most cameras that NASA uses on it's launch vehicles.
Too bad that it's a throw-away one time use item.... it's built like a tank and would probably last 100 years at a weather station or pointing at my back yard.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
10...9...8...7...EMERGENCY LAUNCH HOLD!
"We have a warning light!" "What's wrong!" "The External Fuel Tank, It's The Camera. It melted."
Ummm. It doesn't splashdown. It burns up on re-entry.
Best Slashdot Co
Testing reveals: ET Shuttle Observation Camera STS-112 PAR Flight Hardware Certification Summary [...] No issues ".
Just as long as they don't put a hairline crack in the tank when they screw on the web cam.
Better yet, how about a camera mounted on the shuttle itself for a landing? (think dashboard, what a view.)
When I was at Kennedy Space Center [sic], and it must have been 10 years ago now, they had an IMAX film, "The Dream is Alive". That had some nice shots of the runway as seen from the flight deck. Landing a Cessna 150 was never the same, after that :)
I've seen several IMAX films since, and none have come close to being as good as this one.
1. add camera /. on launch day
2. link posted on
3. server fries before launch
4. profit?
The Gates brothers flies some of the coolest rockets in HPR today, and they have hands-down the best video.
"An object declared as type _Bool is large enough to store the values 0 and 1." -- 6.1.2.5, C99 standard.
visit Camville.com
/. friendly since it's build on php, linux, mySql and 100% ad free.
Very
I'll have to add this as a news feature.
Live web cams
I can just see the X10 popup adds now...
Now why don't they put webcams all over the space station so we can see where all our $$$ is going to. It would be pretty sweet to be able to view the earth and the station from all over 24/7.
-Cnik
A great movie of the launch from a head-down fuselage camera.
l
A 3MB version is here - http://stardust.jpl.nasa.gov/movie/part10.html
The biggie is here - http://stardust.jpl.nasa.gov/photo/launchanim.htm
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
We get signal.
What happen?
Somebody set us up the slashdot.
IT'S YOU!
CmdrTaco: How are you, gentlemen?
All your shuttle are belong to us... (etc)
The Other Nate
Seeing this makes me wonder what took them so long. If they had done this during the Challenger days, we'd probably have a better idea of what went wrong, and we wouldn't have had the setbacks with the space program that we did during the late '80's. Even thogh it couldn't bring back the lives lost, we would have had answers to what happened a little faster, which woul dhave helped the process along. Ideally, they should mount these wherever there may be something that needs to be monitored.
I know NASA has sensors everywhere on the Shuttle to monitor everything, but sometimes when sensors give strange readings, it's nice to be able to see what the actual end result is manifesting as.
I'm just saying it's long overdue, and could be used to provide more than just cool video footage of a launch. Two cameras coud interleave their picture at 15fps, and you'd get two full streams. But NASA will probably never do that.
Reeses
Actually, the computer systems have had several upgrades in their history. Do your homework before you crack a funny joke w/ no backing :-D
{} ------ When I think of a good sig, I'll put it here
Wouldn't /.'ing the webcam cause enough heat to set of the highly explosive chemicals in the tank?
Although, I gotta admit, it'd be an impressive explosion.
-Ed
docbrown.net NEW!
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They turned the camera on for a temporary test. Here's an actual preview of what the shot looks like from the Shuttle. Gonna be pretty cool.
1 2shuttlecam/
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/station/sts112/0209
I was referring to this article http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/09/08/213425 3&mode=thread&tid=160
when i said 70's computer hardware.
I as being lite harded.
The real joke is how much Nasa probably paid for the webcam.
A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.
sorry.i didnt mean to post non-link to above article.it is a slashdot article.
A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.
Troll. Old hard ware can work great. But Nasa's old hardware is getting hard to replace because no one is making the parts anymore.
A Good Troll is better than a Bad Human.
- a webcam on a satellite: check for yourself what the weather looks like where you're going. - webcams on the moon, one of them showing the earth seen from the moon. and of course... - plenty of webcams on Mars, monitoring the red planet in case the little green men thta live up there (?) show up. B.
http://www.somebaudy.com
Did anyone notice that there are a bunch of o-rings on the camera assembly? I can see it now:
"Ok, that was pretty good resolution - let's go for hi-res. Throttle up the camera feed to 106%."
BOOM!
I didnt think this was the first time for an external camera on the space shuttle - I thought ive seen many clips of the space shuttle from the angle the website represented. I dont understand why NASA would have waited as long as it has though to put a camera on the shuttle. Well if the space shuttle had a camera, I sure wish MIR would have had a camera when it fell to earth - that would have been very cool.
Kyle "DotCom" Lynch
...I need some cheeze-its...
... if the shuttle blows-up again, à la Challenger...
1. add camera /. on launch day
2. link posted on
3. server fries before launch
4. ????
5. profit!
-ac
The name of the story was, "Tank Farm Dynamo" about a privatized effort to reuse external tank, written by David Brin. I read it as part of a collection bound in dead tree form, but it's available on the web at: http://www.orbit6.com/et/tankfarm.htm
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
they have some full-length videos (instead of the wussy short ones) showing the on-board view from launch into orbit, i remember browsing them all a couple years ago.
t ml
http://stardust.jpl.nasa.gov/photo/launchanim.h
Wondering... I remember seeing footage of Apollo rocket stage separations. Like rocketcam, these shots were aft-facing. Why didn't they think to install a camera that could record the launch itself?
next time I look to the sky I must smile, just in case some geek girl looks at the cam...
------- The last Sig. got fired.
Scpace.com has had nasa tv for quite some time. i watch all the space walks streamed over the net. check it out.
I've seen it, also around 10 years ago, and it was fantastic. :-)
Ciao
----
FB
For here
Am I sitting in a tin can
Far above the world
Planet Earth is blue
And there's nothing I can do
Considering that very few modem component makers are desiging or building newer systems that can withstand the radiation and other riggors of space travel, I'm not terribly surprised.
You don't need a shitload of computational power to run the shuttle. What you do need is a computer that will actually work in space. And guess what, Sparky? That brand new Pentium 4 or Athlon you've got on your desk won't work. The systems need to be hardened at the fab level in order to work.
Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
time to try out those so called 6" to infinity focus ranges...
STS-112 will be 21st launch for RocketCam (if you don't count the first demo launch in 1997). All of the RocketCam's have worked so far. A total of about three dozen cameras have been flown.
...
The view of the Earth falling away will be familiar to anyone who has watched a Delta rocket launch lately - but will be a first for the Space Shuttle program.
I've often wondered why the external tank is allowed to burn up in the atmosphere. It's a very large insulated tank with two chambers for oxygen and hydrogen. With some extra fuel it could be put into orbit and converted for human habitation. Imagine the number of tanks that have been up in the span of the shuttle project. It seems with that number of tanks we could have several large wheels in orbit around the earth. The tanks currently float around in a decaying orbit until they burn up in the atmosphere.
I used to use Spaceflight Now to watch launches and retrieve video later of those I was not able to watch. Now, the videos are locked behind a password which they demand a fee for.
As a taxpayer who (willingly, mind you! note my name!) supports the space program already with tax dollars, I don't feel I should have to pay to view something I already helped to fund. While I still read SFN's text coverage, which is still free, I can't view the videos.
Is there another site out there that posts timely (SFN does it same day or next day) videos of launches? And if the Ecliptic's site fails to post the entire sequence, all 10+ minutes of it, where might I find it?
Heck, what about archives of on-orbit ops, other launch shots, reentry/approach, and landing? I've a video project in mind that I'd like to use footage for...
i am a soviet space shuttle
umm, perhaps this is new for a shuttle launch, but I've seen this before (space.com) on a satellite launch.
Now we'll be able to really see what a leaking shuttle booster 0-ring seal looks like, as it happens!
What about the smell? Not to mention you'd have to scrub the thing clean from all the residual fuel left inside and pressurize it before it could be occupied. That's a LOT of air...
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== WolfriderV6 == I'm willing to admit that *I just might* be wrong... Are you??
Many more rocketcams archived at :
http://spaceflightnow.com/features/rocketcams/