NASA Fixes Galileo, Starts Recovering Data
linuxwrangler writes "After radiation damaged the recorders on Galileo it was feared that the data from the November flyby of Amalthea would be lost. Today NASA announced that they have repaired the recorder and are busy downloading the data. Meanwhile they also contacted pioneer 10 (64 bytes from pioneer10.nasa.gov: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=80700000 ms)"
I asked a friend about the Galileo problem, and the heck do you fix something from thousands or millions of miles away? It's very difficult he replied, and if aero/astro people are like him in general, these are bright folks.
:).
Most of his experience had been with trying to figure out why solar arrays in orbit weren't doing their job, where the problem turned out to be not a loose wire but defective engineering (not his
imagine trying to repair a 20 year old computer with continuous hardware and mobo probs from a gazillion miles away with only a console and a lag of a couple of hours....
My hat's off to you, guys...
Dirk
Poor host!!
We are Turing O-Machines. The Oracle is out there.
Here's some details about the fix. They isolated the problem to a bad LED, and ran current through it to melt away the damage... pretty cool.
There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
A lie so good it must be true?
I heard about a guy who timed his code to the speed of rotating drum memory so that "impossible" loops would work. It made the code a tad difficult for others to maintain after he retired.
Nothing worse than reading this stuff and then going back to my projects at work and no longer feeling as elite!
Oh well, would those NASA geniuses be able to improve patient healthcare? (Yes if they worked with me, damnit foiled again!) I guess helping people improve their quality of life is enough for me. It's too bad politics is 99% (coughHIPAAcough) of the problem instead of the solution.
I believe you're talking about Mel. The story is in the Jargon file I believe.
No, I thought it was the Story of O.
;-)
Wait, that's something else.
You're right.
Very few of these guys are rookies. They are culled from vast fields of applicants. Work hard, study hard, think hard, and apply for jobs at astro/aero/comm companies. You might just turn into one of these "elites".
;-)
Started with pilot lessons, then my eyes went bad. Even though I could no longer meet the mil spec for pilots (much less astronauts), I still got a Navy ROTC scholarship. I became an expert at writing embedded real time code. I got a job at Motorola. My code(not my body, but part of my mind) flies in space today.
Just as open source goes to show, pride is the greatest motivator when you want inspired, ultimate quality work. Even though my rate today is more than twice what I made back then, I have never, ever put so much effort and thought into a project as that one.
Cheer up, if you really, really try, chances are you will succeed.
Good judgement comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgement.
- W. Wriston, former Citibank CEO