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Shuttle Politics

TheLoneCabbage writes "Texas Rep. Joe Barton has been quoted today in an AP article saying that he is in favor of grounding the remaining fleet of shuttles. 'If we have to stop manned spaceflight for five or 10 years, then so be it.' The fine gentleman from Texas displays his outstanding grasp of statistics and engineering stating that 1 failure in every 62.5 flights is NOT acceptable. According to OpenSecrets.org this may have more to do with Joe's friends than how much attention he paid to his math teachers." There's also an interesting piece on testimony given by the first Shuttle program manager.

694 comments

  1. Why rush? by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


    Why rush it? According to his math in another 187.5 flights, the shuttle fleet will be destroyed anyways.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Why rush? by Binestar · · Score: 3, Informative

      Problem with his math is that he can't divide properly.

      There have been 113 total flights, The true destruction odds are: 1:56.5 not 1:62.5

      With his math we'll be safe to send up shuttles another 12 time before worrying about the odds again.

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    2. Re:Why rush? by jd142 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Ok, so if the true destruction odds are 1:56.5, that means that over time, 1 out of every 56.5 flights the shuttle will be destroyed. That's a 1.7% chance of catastrophic failure. Because as we've seen, there are no survivors. Those actually seem a little high. What are the odds of other methods of space travel?

      Odds must be taken in context and with the benefits and outcomes weighed against each other.

      If I had a 1 in 56.5 chance of winning the lottery jackpot, I'd slap 60 bucks down with no hesitation. Small outlay of money for almost a guarantee of winning.

      If I were told that my child had a 1 in 56.5 chance of getting a fatal genetic disease, I'd certainly think twice before have a child, and I'd definitely have any possible screening tests done.

      In *your* opinion, the risk of death to people you don't know (probably) is low enough to justify letting them volunteer for a mission. Their spouses may think an almost 2% chance of death is far too high.

      Regardless of the political motivation behind it, an examination does need to be made, and the risks adequately explored.

      As a comparison approximately 129 soldiers have died in Iraq out of approximately 150,000. I had trouble getting an exact figure, but I think that's a conservative estimate of troop numbers and the 129 is an official DoD number from a couple of weeks ago. One place said there 110,000 troops around the Quwait border alone. So the chancces of getting killed in this latest ware were 1:1162. Pretty slim.

    3. Re:Why rush? by Mark+Bainter · · Score: 5, Insightful
      In *your* opinion, the risk of death to people you don't know (probably) is low enough to justify letting them volunteer for a mission. Their spouses may think an almost 2% chance of death is far too high.

      That's just it. These people volunteer. We aren't /ordering/ them to do this. They aren't conscripted. They volunteer to do it. Nobody lies to them about the risk. Hell, you /can't/ lie to them about the risk, it's all right there in our history.

      Why should we tell people they can't if they're willing to take on the risk? I would be willing to bet that this is more motivated by the cost of replacing shuttles and crew than it is the potential loss of life. Cynical yes, but sadly enough, probalby true.

      --
      "No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."
      --James Madison
    4. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      All precision issues aside, everything mentioned assumes the shuttle (pick any shuttle) is a constant. It's not. The fleet is showing wear and tear, which really shouldn't be a surprise to any rational person. Some parts are replaced, some are never replaced. How about factoring in some sort of decay here?

    5. Re:Why rush? by GMFTatsujin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If I had a 1 in 56.5 chance of winning the lottery jackpot, I'd slap 60 bucks down with no hesitation. Small outlay of money for almost a guarantee of winning.

      So.. play Roulette much?

      Didn't think so. When did 1:56 become "almost a guarantee?"

      Personally, I'd feel pretty good about taking a risk -- any risk -- if I knew there was a ~2% chance of failure. Turn it around, because it also means there's a ~98% chance of success.

      *Those* are odds I can live with.

      It's a stupid argument anyway. Nobody knows the chances of a given catastrophic event happening. What's being examined is the rate of failures versus rates of success, and that's not a probablilty, it's just a ratio.

    6. Re:Why rush? by pompousjerk · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's the posterior probability. It can't be used to predict what's going to happen, whether it be 1:56.5 or 1:1,000,000.

      After all, you don't have to have all seven million tickets purchased for someone to win the lottery; it could be the second ticket sold.

    7. Re:Why rush? by delphi125 · · Score: 1
      If I were told that my child had a 1 in 56.5 chance of getting a fatal genetic disease, I'd certainly think twice before have a child, and I'd definitely have any possible screening tests done.

      jd, I hate to have to tell you this, but any children you may have will have almost a 100% chance of that fatal genetic disease: age. So think twice! Oh and by the way, to save money you could consider waiting a hundred years or so instead of paying for screening tests. Good luck!

    8. Re:Why rush? by jd142 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If I had a 1 in 56.5 chance of winning the lottery jackpot, I'd slap 60 bucks down with no hesitation. Small outlay of money for almost a guarantee of winning.

      So.. play Roulette much?

      Didn't think so. When did 1:56 become "almost a guarantee?"


      Well, if each selection of 6 numbers had a 1 in 56 chance of winning the jackpot and that cost me a dollar, then spending 60 bucks pretty much guarantees that I'll win the jackpot. I could still lose of course, but such a loss would be unlikely.

      I assumed people would realize that 1 ticket costs a buck.

      if I knew there was a ~2% chance of failure. Turn it around, because it also means there's a ~98% chance of success.

      So if I told you there'd be a 2% chance of death everytime you drove your car, you'd drive to work every day? Odds are you'd be dead in under a year. Better take the bus. ;)

      If there were a two percent chnce yould die from taking cough syrup, would you tough out a sore throat or take the cough syrup. A plain sore throat is a minor irritation that goes away on its own compared to a small chance of death.

      At the other end of the spectrum, if there were a 2% chance of death as a complication to a heart transplant, you'd laugh off the risk because without the heart transplant you're dead anyway.

      Odds are about more than just pure percentages. You have to weigh the costs and the benefits.

    9. Re:Why rush? by luisdom · · Score: 1

      If I were told that my child had a 1 in 56.5 chance of getting a fatal genetic disease, I'd certainly think twice before have a child, and I'd definitely have any possible screening tests done.

      according to this , one of every 28.
      For me, if I was to have offspring, that wouldn't stop me. It wouldn't stop me to go in a mission either.

      But for me the point is not making statistics about the risk of each mission, but about the will to continue "on the edge", and the will is nation-wide gone in the US. So money is not for the space program, and that means low butget which means... that the people that is willing to go forth even in that conditions will risk their lifes.

    10. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      One thing to keep in mind is that a lottery with a 1:60 chance of hitting will have a payout that is much less than $60, so if you put down $60 to guarantee a hit, you end up losing money (which basically is how roulette works).

      That said, I do understand your point regarding rational risk analysis.

    11. Re:Why rush? by timeOday · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Why should we tell people they can't if they're willing to take on the risk?
      It's not a matter of "telling people they can't." It's a matter of NOT pouring billions into an overpriced, underproducing, dangerous program.
      I would be willing to bet that this is more motivated by the cost of replacing shuttles and crew than it is the potential loss of life. Cynical yes, but sadly enough, probalby true.
      Cynical how? According to your own argument, the loss of life is no problem, since they're volunteers anyways. But on the basis of science per dollars alone, the shuttle is a bad deal. (Factor back in the loss of life - as most of us do - and the damage to popular perception of space exploration, and it's an even worse deal).
    12. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone mod this informative - NOT!

    13. Re:Why rush? by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more. And i think this article shows that the benefits of the shuttle are lacking.

      To quote the article : "They [shuttle proponents] think the dream of spaceflight is so fragile that, while crashes cannot derail it, the cancellation of a single program could shut it down for good. They fear that if we take one small step back, we will never again be able to go forward. "

      lets go to mars already.

      --

      "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    14. Re:Why rush? by jeti · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      > As a comparison approximately 129 soldiers have
      > died in Iraq out of approximately 150,000.

      Surely you mean 129 soldiers of the USA and UK have
      died?
      I've never seen any reliable estimates, but housands
      of Iraqi soldiers have also died. (And unlike US and
      UK troops, most of them were pressed into service.)

    15. Re:Why rush? by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      The poster was talking about those that the U.S. governmnet sent into war. You know, the same government that runs NASA. The Iraqi government may or may not have a dissimilar cuttoff point for acceptable risk.

    16. Re:Why rush? by Pretzalzz · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Well, if each selection of 6 numbers had a 1 in 56 chance of winning the jackpot and that cost me a dollar, then spending 60 bucks pretty much guarantees that I'll win the jackpot. I could still lose of course, but such a loss would be unlikely.

      I assumed people would realize that 1 ticket costs a buck.

      You better check your math before playing the lottery. :) You have a 1 in 56.5 chance of winning for each dollar played, so you have a 55.5 in 56.5 chance of losing. The odds of you losing 60 times is (55.5/56.5)^60=34%. Hardly guaranteed. In order to be 'almost guaranteed'[have better than a 99.5% chance] you would have to bet roughly $297.

    17. Re:Why rush? by Grayputer · · Score: 0

      yup, cost benefit still counts. How about you have a 1:56 chance of winning. Oh, the prize is $10, it the original poster still going to plunk down $60 to get an almost sure chance? Doubt it.

    18. Re:Why rush? by philipdl71 · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Nice commentary, but don't forget the shuttle costs $500 million to launch per flight which is 100x the original amount they estimated it would cost to launch per flight. Besides being unsafe the shuttle simply costs too much. A half a billion dollars is a lot of tax payer money. If you like this arcane piece of technology so much why don't you pay for it?

    19. Re:Why rush? by cayenne8 · · Score: 2, Flamebait
      It's not a matter of "telling people they can't." It's a matter of NOT pouring billions into an overpriced, underproducing, dangerous program.

      Actually, we could EASILY afford to reconfigure the shuttles, design and build new ones, and solve most of our domestic (US) problems (education, etc) if we'd STOP giving so damned much money away in foreign aid!! We give ludicrous amounts to the UN, and most of the world....our tax dollars could go a long way here if we quit giving it away to the world....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    20. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No you fool... he meant that the population of Iraq is 150,000. 129 of which are Baath party soldiers. It also just happened to be by coincidence that all 129 soldiers in Iraq died. Don't you listen to CNN?

    21. Re:Why rush? by jd142 · · Score: 1

      Read my original post. I was postulating a 2% chance of winning a jackpot, not a $10 prize.

    22. Re:Why rush? by Hentai · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Foreign aid isn't the problem. Domestic pork-barrel is.

      If the Shuttle program wasn't DESIGNED, from the START, to make the most constituents the most money, and was rather designed to SEND MEN INTO SPACE, that's exactly what we would have got - a program designed to send men safely and economically into space.

      Instead, we get a system spread over as many Congressional districts as possible, with as many fingers in the pie as can possibly squeeze in... it's like pigs feeding at a trough.

      To generalize: You want to fix the government? Ban money.

      --
      -Hentai [in vita non pacem est]
    23. Re:Why rush? by Grayputer · · Score: 0

      My comment was, depends on the jackpot size. If the jackpot size is less than the 'cover all bets wager, then the strategy doesn't work. I THINK we believe the same thing (cost benefit counts), I was more trying to clarify the example than contradict the sentiment.

    24. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bummer. i wanted to tell the guy this.

      heh you have a 1 in 56 chance for each doller spent.

    25. Re:Why rush? by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more.

      The usefullness of the shuttle program has diminshed significantly. With it the glory and admiration of our astronauts has faded too. The days of Gagarin, Shepard, Glenn, and Armstrong are gone. I'd like to see the glory of space travel restored and "One giant leap for mankind" become a shuffle in comparison to our next great leap.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    26. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't really count troops who aren't in the line of fire for your comparison. Sitting on an aircraft carrier during this war was no different than sitting on an aircraft carrier 9 months ago. Being in the 3rd ID, however, is a different proposition.

    27. Re:Why rush? by bohoboho · · Score: 1

      The shuttle program exists, sucking up NASA money, for two basic reasons: to refuel surveillance satellites and to boost the ISS to higher orbits. The rest of the crap you see on shuttle missions is eye candy.

      The shuttles can't be grounded without finding alternate solutions to the above problems. Although watching ISS burn up in re-entry would be little loss except for the money we've wasted on it, the US government would never allow their fleet of surveillance sats to die.

    28. Re:Why rush? by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 1

      Interesting OT Tid-Bit, Niel messed up when he said "That's one small step for man, one Giant leap for mankind". He meant to say "That's one small step for a man ..... ". For the entire ride to the moon he was practicing the line, and then he messed it up. That's why he pauses on the comma for so long, then rushes through the rest.

      --

      "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    29. Re:Why rush? by davebo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      we could EASILY afford to reconfigure the shuttles, design and build new ones, and solve most of our domestic (US) problems (education, etc) if we'd Stop giving so damn much money away in foreign aid!!!


      An intersting perspective. Let's see if it's backed up by fact. Here are the numbers I get from the U.S. state department. You can find the report here. These numbers seem to be in pretty good agreement with what I've seen from other sites on the web (you can do your own googling to verify).


      U.S. Spending on Foreign Operations 2002: $17.9 Billion
      Requested spending in 2003: $16.4 Billion
      Requested spending in 2004: $18.8 Billion


      Just so you know - those aid figures include a little over $4 billion a year in foreign military financing and a couple hundred million each for anti-drug efforts and peacekeeping efforts. But, to give you the benefit of the doubt, we'll lump it all in as "foreign aid."


      In FY 2004, NASA's proposed budget is $15.4 Billion ( link).
      Cost of the ISS (estimated, from Young Report): ~$30 billion (link)


      Estimated costs of "other" domestic problems:
      Medicare prescription drug benefit for elderly: $11-15 Billion (link).
      Domestic port security needs: $2 billion (link).
      Upgrade school technology: $100 billion (link).

      I could go on, but I don't see much point in doing so. Foreign aid is a teeny tiny part of the federal budget, and cutting it won't do much of anything. A vast proportion of federal discretionary spending comes from Defense - if you want to cut, that's where you've got to cut.

    30. Re:Why rush? by Noehre · · Score: 2, Informative

      Of the major industrialized countries, we give the lowest percent of our GDP as foreign aid.

      As I recall, Sweden and Norway give some of the highest.

    31. Re:Why rush? by bleckywelcky · · Score: 1


      Well, only 60 of the original 214 Jamestown colonists survived through the first winter. At that rate a colonist had a 72% chance of dying, a lot worse than anything quoted so far. Should Europe have not established Jamestown then and give up on America until something like the industrial age would enable us to have better survival rates? But America had a large role in the devlopment of the industrial age, and not colonizing America would have put off the industrial age to the point that we might be in the midst of its development right now. I hope you don't enjoy your computer, cause they aren't coming around for several more decades.

      Space travel is an adventure into the unknown and as with all adventures into the unknown - past, present, and future - there are major risks involved. Does that mean we should stop the progress? In my book it doesn't. It just means we need to keep on trying and trying harder so that we make progress but improve our survival rates.

      Remember, we only have so long on Earth before it becomes inhabitable and if we haven't developed inexpensive and effective interstellar travel by then, then the human race is doomed.

    32. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The issue is not foreign aid, as the original misinformed poster claims, but rather military spending. Comsider that all conservative costs for the war on Iraq are $100bil. Even if you believe that this was a necessary and just war (this really isn't the venue to argue this either way), our military undeniably wastes money on dead-end programs and excessive, cold-war-era weapons programs.

      It's quite clear that we already have technological superiority with Iraq. Would the V-22 Osprey have made a difference? More to the point, how did we manage to spend billions in development and even start full production on this airplane without realizing that it didn't work until so late into the process?

      Say we were to spend 10% of our military budget on foreign aid (I don't recall where I originally heard this figure, unfortunately) we'd have enough, by UN estimates, to fund programs to bring everyone up to "minimum" living standards worldwide (not to mention our own domestic problems...).

      Is the greater risk some new USSR, or poverty and the lack of basic necessities like health care and education? Cutting the shuttle program would be a drop in the bucket, while cutting military spending would be a flood.

    33. Re:Why rush? by davebo · · Score: 1

      It's a pity you posted this as an AC - because you're post will probably never get noticed, and you've posted it as the respone to a response to the original post, and it's an opinion that I happen to agree with.

    34. Re:Why rush? by pfdietz · · Score: 1

      The shuttle is not used to refuel surveillance satellites, and in fact has never been used for that purpose. It now no longer even launches any surveillance satellites.

    35. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Remember, we only have so long on Earth before it becomes inhabitable and if we haven't developed inexpensive and effective interstellar travel by then, then the human race is doomed.


      Give it a fucking rest. Terraforming, colonizing, and then transporting Earth's population to Mars or someplace even worse can't be easier than ceasing to fuck up what has worked here for billions of years. You might as well be claiming that the Shuttle can't take a 5 to 10 year hiatus because the Universe will eventually suffer heat-death or a Big Bust.

    36. Re:Why rush? by Carnivorous+Carrot · · Score: 1

      > Would the V-22 Osprey have made a difference?
      > More to the point, how did we manage to spend
      > billions...without realizing that it didn't
      > work until so late into the process?

      I believe certain senators or congressmen kept it going. The military had pubicly stated "WE DON'T WANT THIS PIECE OF SHIT" on more than one occasion.

      --
      "Has [being a kidnapped teenage girl, raped repeatedly for months] changed you?" - Katie Couric to Elizabeth Smart
    37. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1 in 56.5 chance of winning the lottery jackpot

      60 tries

      0.0177 chance of winning each try

      0.9823 chance of losing each try

      (0.9823)^60 chance of losing all 60 tries

      0.3425 chance of losing all 60 tries

      0.6575 chance of winning at least one try

      65.75% is not almost a guarantee

    38. Re:Why rush? by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      You know space travel is dangerous, right. So do the astronauts. Admittadly, the shuttles need to be replaced, but not grounded until ther's a replacement. By your logic we shouldn't have an army either. Since that's kinda dangerous too.

    39. Re:Why rush? by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      Well, if each selection of 6 numbers had a 1 in 56 chance of winning the jackpot and that cost me a dollar, then spending 60 bucks pretty much guarantees that I'll win the jackpot. I could still lose of course, but such a loss would be unlikely.


      Of course, the jackpot would only come to $40 per person. You still lose. There is no guarantees in gambling. Either you're lucky or not. Over a long period of time you come down to even. Except the house isn't gambling and you still lose. Game over.

    40. Re:Why rush? by Pooua · · Score: 1
      Of the major industrialized countries, we give the lowest percent of our GDP as foreign aid.

      This is a bogus claim that a lot of Europeans (especially from Germany) keep posting to Usenet. I've disproved it repeatedly.

      The US *government* gives a lower percentage of money to UN programs than do other countries, but the United States (particularly private contributions) gives MUCH more to foreign countries as a percentage of GDP than any other nation. When I demonstrate this from various sources, the only reply I get is that private monies don't count. Only money given by our government--particularly TO THE UN--counts. Stinkin' Socialists...

      --
      Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
    41. Re:Why rush? by hobbesmaster · · Score: 1

      You forgot to add in cost/time in there. 30 billion over more than a decade isn't as impressive as the cost of the space station initially seems. Especially when you compare that to welfare programs over the same ammount of time.

    42. Re:Why rush? by nyseal · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I agree. If I were offered a chance to go into space with those odds, I'd definately jump on it and go. The difference is astronauts truly know the risks and every flight is (at this point in our technological evolution) a crap shoot. John Glenn was not privy to such statistics in our astro-infancy and he went anyway; probably when the odds were 1:2 that the mission would NOT succeed. You are correct in saying that it's a matter of perception but perhaps we should be asking the people that actually want to risk their lives in the first place if it's a good gamble; however they already know the risks. That's a personal decision....money is a completely different issue!

      --
      [SIG] Remember Mattel handheld games?
    43. Re:Why rush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Want a reason to continue on the program?

      Imagine halting all the program right now until we build a perfect space vehicle (if ever). Assume it takes 10 years to achieve it. Now then what? These future space flight controlers will have to relearn all the skills that have not been exercised. 10 years = 1 generation, folks. Skills may be written down (if luck would have it); but these space programs have been heavily relying on "hand-on" skills that have been passed on from one generation to the next. If we halt the activity now, the U.S. will have to relearn the skill all over again.

      Do you think we can build another Saturn rocket and launch it in one year? I've talked with my former boss at NASA over lunch and figured out that the particular skill has been lost, most likely because these NASA engineers are either retired or dead for a long, long time.

      I understand the risk is there. I know, I am trying to become an astronaut. And I don't mind risking my life for continuing on what seems one of humans' finest achievements.

    44. Re:Why rush? by StJefferson · · Score: 1
      To generalize: You want to fix the government? Ban money.
      Well, that's a little extreme - kind of like blowing your head off because your hair's become dirty.

      No, to fix the gov't, all that's necessary is to DRASTICALLY reduce taxation, to the level that it can only conduct the business of keeping its people safe from the application of force or fraud, foreign or domestic. That'd do it.

      In the case of the US gov't, that would mean elimination of the nanny state, elimination of foreign aid AND domestic pork-barrel spending, and (sad though it would make me, personally) elimination of programs such as NASA. Pitch overboard all of the ballast that drags down the ship of state, and trim it down to the essential functions of national (not global!) defense, and a functional court system.

      Of course, none of this will happen in the real world, so the best we can hope for is a holding action...

      As for NASA, I've long since come to the firm conclusion that space is too critical to be left to the thumb-fingered dolts that gov't service attracts -- so best to privatize it anyway. If you must fund it through gov't action, at least do it through incentive prizes, instead of cost-plus contracts awarded on the basis of Senate committee position. (e.g.: US $20B to the first organization to send a manned craft to Mars - and return them...)

      Feh. Oh well, one can dream...

    45. Re:Why rush? by ces · · Score: 1

      lets go to mars already.

      The Chinese are already planning it.

      President Bush's response to the Columbia tragedy should be to announce an Apollo like program to establish a Mars colony/research station.

      Let's get going with the space race for the 21st century.

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
    46. Re:Why rush? by davebo · · Score: 1

      A valid point - we should take into account cost/time.
      So let's change the SSI number to be $3 billion (on a roughly annual basis) rather than $30 billion. I suppose you could even change the school tech number to $10 billion (I believe it was per decade, as well.)

      But - does that recalculation mean the first poster was correct, that cutting out our foreign aid budget (~15-20 billion) lets us buy a new space station (~$3 billion/yr), new space delivery vehicle (who knows? I'd say considerably more than the ISS if you want something
      reusable), and solve ALL of our domestic problems?

      Not a chance. It just isn't that big a part of the budget.

    47. Re:Why rush? by edxwelch · · Score: 1

      Also, of the foreign aid that the US contributes, the lion's share goes to Isreal. Much of the rest comes with strings attached. For instance, the US threathened countries that voted on the last UN resolution that if they didn't toe the line they would have their aid pulled.

  2. The price of exploration by Lieutenant_Dan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The odds may be against the astro/cosmonauts when they go on their missions, but how is this much different when European explorers went out onto the Atlantic? There were many lives lost as well.

    Exploration has always been a risky business. I don't believe for a second that the ladies and gentlemen who volunteer for a space mission are not aware of the risks associates with it.

    --
    Wearing pants should always be optional.
    1. Re:The price of exploration by TheOneEyedMan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sure it is risky to explore. However, the purpose of most earlier exploration was profit, which made the risks of investment easier to bear. The space shuttle doesn't do much, costs a ton, and is not very safe either.

      --
      Reality is that which refuses to go away when I stop believing in it. --Phillip K. Dick (remove SPAM to email)
    2. Re:The price of exploration by Larsing · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...and is not very safe either.

      Actually, broken down on passenger miles, it's the safest way to travel, on or off this planet...

      --
      Ethics is what you say you do. Morals is what you actually do.
    3. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, stop bringing facts and figures into this discussion! If you're not going to condemn something in knee jerk fashion without first doing your homework and evaluating the evidence, well then we just don't want your sort around these parts!

    4. Re:The price of exploration by mikerich · · Score: 1
      ...and is not very safe either.

      Actually, broken down on passenger miles, it's the safest way to travel, on or off this planet...

      Per dollar, per mile it bloody well should be.

      If nothing else, economics should ground the manned space programme once and for all.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    5. Re:The price of exploration by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "If nothing else, economics should ground the manned space programme once and for all."

      Increasing understanding is more important than money.

      Sure, if you want to stop the shuttle and put all of the money into disease research or oceanographic surveys because they offer a better return there _might_ be an argument. However, if the shuttle was cancelled the money would just be pissed away on politicians perks and pointless wars, so we should fight tooth and nail to keep it.

      --
      Beep beep.
    6. Re:The price of exploration by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Actually, broken down on passenger miles, it's the safest way to travel, on or off this planet...

      Only if you count the useless miles that the shuttle takes on its circuitous route. If you cancel those out, you're left with 200 miles up from the Florida launch pad, and 200 miles back down to the Florida landing strip. For this 400-mile round trip, the odds are pretty dismal, even compared to medieval seafarers.

    7. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and broken down in terms of 'miles away from the earth's surface' it works out even safer.

      I prefer to measure my safety though in terms of 'how likely am I to die today?'

    8. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you honestly believe that "accidents per passenger mile" is a sensible measure of safety? I guess there is one born every minute...

    9. Re:The price of exploration by Larsing · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear!
      (I don't have any moderation points...)

      --
      Ethics is what you say you do. Morals is what you actually do.
    10. Re:The price of exploration by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Or perhaps on a meaningful unmanned space programme?

      Or perhaps on a sane Federal budget that didn't rely on deficit funding to cover every pork barrel?

      Although I'd have to agree with you if it meant America spending enough on space to stop Rumsfeld pissing it away on his latest toys.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    11. Re:The price of exploration by agrounds · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Per dollar, per mile it bloody well should be.

      You think so? NASA operates on a shoestring budget that is so microscopic compared the Department of Defense or virtually any other government agency it's pathetic. As a former employee, I can tell you firsthand that the public, and pardon my expression, ignorant opinions of most of the US population (read: voters) are -way- off-base. Compare the annual budget of NASA to, say one Naval warship, or one fleet of Army communication vans, or virtually anything DoD. Seriously. If you or others want to bitch about the way NASA is funded, back it up with some facts, and look around. I'll even help you!

      NASA Budget

      This reality check brought to by the Office of Management and Budget!

    12. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, but it can be used as a fairly good indicator.

    13. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's an utterly dreadful indicator. If they made the shuttle circle the Earth another couple of times each trip, "accidents per passenger mile" would decrease massively but the Shuttle wouldn't be any safer. Try to understand this!

    14. Re:The price of exploration by Arthur+Dent · · Score: 0
      200 miles up from the Florida launch pad, and 200 miles back down to the Florida landing strip. For this 400-mile round trip, the odds are pretty dismal, even compared to medieval seafarers.

      Kinda missing those orbits aren't you?

    15. Re:The price of exploration by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or perhaps on a sane Federal budget that didn't rely on deficit funding to cover every pork barrel?

      Because NASA's budget is so large compared to the federal deficit, right? The current budget problems have nothing to do with fighting a war, cutting taxes for the rich, or the current recession, is that what you're saying?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    16. Re:The price of exploration by SimplyCosmic · · Score: 1

      Kinda missed that "Only if you count the useless miles that the shuttle takes on its circuitous route" comment in his post, didn't you? ;)

    17. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kinda missing reading comprehension skills aren't you?

    18. Re:The price of exploration by gorillasoft · · Score: 1

      NASA operates on a shoestring budget

      ~ $15 Billion is quite a shoestring.

    19. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not when you consider the distance between departure and destination points.

      A launch and landing at Kennedy will take you a few hundred meters from launch pad to runway for a few days' travel. I guess it counts for something that the kids could play in the back seat during the ride.

      Heck, give me an automated materials science platform any day! You could buy many of those for the cost of a single shuttle flight, and make each a purely commercial venture too.

      A shame the frickin' shuttle blocks out that particular market at taxpayer expense.

    20. Re:The price of exploration by AftanGustur · · Score: 1


      Actually, broken down on passenger miles, it's the safest way to travel, on or off this planet...

      I absolutely love this way of bluffing with statistics..

      If, for example, we count accidents per road/year as a indication of road safety, I suggest the governament just extends the driveway to my parking around the country, as a way to reduce accidents, since there has been no accident at all there for the past 40 years).

      This book shuld be a mandatory reading for every person on this planet (who can read).

      --
      echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb572CCB9AE9DB03273snlbxq' |dc
    21. Re:The price of exploration by Amiga+Trombone · · Score: 1

      NASA operates on a shoestring budget that is so microscopic compared the Department of Defense or virtually any other government agency it's pathetic. As a former employee, I can tell you firsthand that the public, and pardon my expression, ignorant opinions of most of the US population (read: voters) are -way- off-base. Compare the annual budget of NASA to, say one Naval warship, or one fleet of Army communication vans, or virtually anything DoD.

      That might actually be a good rationale for folding the space program back into the military. The military gets such a large chunk of the federal budget (49% IIRC, but don't quote me on it) they could easily triple the amount of money budgeted to NASA, and it would still come out of the petty cash drawer.

      What the military wants, the military gets.

    22. Re:The price of exploration by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 1

      yeah, that's what we need, 'cause we all trust the military to do good science, right?

    23. Re:The price of exploration by TillmanJ · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The one thing you are missing is that the Department Of Defense is a constitutionally legitimate enterprise for the government. According to a strict reading of the constitution, NASA shouldn't be funded with public money for anything that doesn't have direct military application.

    24. Re:The price of exploration by CommandNotFound · · Score: 1

      Compare the annual budget of NASA to, say one Naval warship, or one fleet of Army communication vans, or virtually anything DoD.

      But the difference here is that we can park one of these carrier groups off the coast of some country and either exert enormous political pressure or wage an air war within days. Our DoD budget recently gave everyone who has CNN a spectacular display of where our tax dollars are going as it defeated an entrenched enemy within a couple of weeks. NASA has failed to do the same.

      The shuttle program sucked up so much money that NASA became an unprofitable trucking company, rather than a blue-sky research and exploration group. I thought the more-cheaper-faster Mars program was a success, even if two of the craft were lost. The Sojourner cost not much more than a couple of shuttle launches, and excited a nation again. NASA is still lost and directionless, with an expensive albatross around its neck (Shuttle fleet).

      I never worked for NASA so maybe I'm one of those "ignorant taxpayer/voters" that used to pay your salary, but I do know that from age 7-13 I read Odyssey religously and gradually lost interest when the only NASA press was (a) yet another secret Air Force satellite was launched on STS-xxx, or (b) STS-yyy: how do moths mate in zero gravity? The rehashed Viking articles were much more inspiring.

      I see your point, agrounds, but here's the rationale from the peanut gallery.

    25. Re:The price of exploration by gorillasoft · · Score: 2, Interesting

      (49% IIRC, but don't quote me on it)

      It's closer to 25%, actually.

    26. Re:The price of exploration by Christopher_G_Lewis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Purpose of NASA - Aerospace exploration and development.
      Purpose of DoD - Defending the Nation.

      Basically, when the sh*t hits the fan, I'd much rather have a small Navy cruiser then a couple of Space Shuttles.

      Interestingly, the DoD's web site shows the 2002 budget at $371 billion, with just over 2 million employees. Walmart's budget/revenue is $227 billion w/ 1.4 million.

      That's a *LOT* of employees.

      DOD

    27. Re:The price of exploration by mikerich · · Score: 2, Informative
      So you're comparing one obscene budget with another? I have no problem with NASA's budget (especially since I'm not an American), its just being wasted on pointless exercises such as the Shuttle and the ISS.

      According to the General Accounting Office (PDF document) a single Shuttle launch costs $759 million. I live in the real world, so to me, that still seems like an awful lot of money.

      It then does around about 5.3 million miles.

      So that's $143 per mile. To do what?

      So far NASA hasn't come up with a good explanation why these are sound investments in the future. I'm sure that it could attract more support if it were to be open and say that the Shuttle is a statement of national virility and an essential part of the flag waving exercise.

      But to claim that the Shuttle or the ISS are vital for industry or medical research is fatuous, and preparing for the manned Mars missions - well that would be just another black hole for flag waving.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    28. Re:The price of exploration by Codex+The+Sloth · · Score: 1

      Increasing understanding is more important than money.

      Noble words. Increased understanding of what? The effects of weightlessness on ? The only financial problems NASA has is the amount they spend on the shuttle versus the amount they spend on useful things like deep space probes.

      Personally, I'd rather have a pointless war (Antartica anyone?) than throw more money down the rathole which is the space shuttle.

      --
      I am not a number! I am a man! And don't you ... oh wait, I'm #93427. Ha ha! In your face #93428!
    29. Re:The price of exploration by agrounds · · Score: 4, Informative
      ~ $15 Billion is quite a shoestring.

      Think so? Let's compare and contrast that amount (the sum total) against 1 (one) B2 Spirit Stealth Bomber.

      B2 Info

      Hrmmm.. how many bombers do we have at 1.16b a piece? How many do we really need? Keep in mind that this doesn't even remotely account for the support infrastructure like the NASA budget did.

      Thus we arrive at the moral dilemna. Let's see, we can fund science and space exploration, learning about our planet and ourselves in the process... or we can produce machines whose only viable purpose is to destroy human life and their surroundings. How much is just -one- of those snappy laser-guided missiles that we seem to be so fond of shooting at other humans?

      Cruise Missle

      $600,000 a pop to kill a handful of humans? I suppose I should be honored to be senselessly slaughtered by such expensive weaponry! Except I'm too [expletive] dead to appreciate it.

      How about this? Let's go for the -BIG- picture for DoD:


      DoD Budget

      It's a problem of priority. There are some of us that feel that advancing human knowledge is worth more than producing more machines of warfare. What a senseless waste. Perhaps Darwin was on to something.

    30. Re:The price of exploration by Jagasian · · Score: 1

      You just equated a rocket scientist to a piece of white trash. I am sorry, but the rocket scientist at NASA contributes far more to society than the guy selling discounted Britney Spears albums at Walmart.

      Lets structure society so that we keep our rocket scientists.

    31. Re:The price of exploration by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Why should we trust an entrenched bureaucracy to do 'good science'?

      The 'good science' of the past was done by people who did it out of the spirit of discovery, not because their Union Settlement guaranteed a 4% pay raise each year. Not because the funding for their project came in smoothly yet again.

      People who think 'science' would just wither away if the government wasn't regularly seeding the field with our tax dollars understands little about the history of science.

    32. Re:The price of exploration by crazy+al's · · Score: 1

      But the difference here is that we can park one of these carrier groups off the coast of some country and either exert enormous political pressure or wage an air war within days. Our DoD budget recently gave everyone who has CNN a spectacular display of where our tax dollars are going as it defeated an entrenched enemy within a couple of weeks. NASA has failed to do the same. So. A made for TV war is sooooo gooooood, eh? That is how we resolve our issues? We take a group of Military Industrial Complex cronies, who set up the political situation in the mid-east to start with, to sell chemistry sets to small-time petty dictators, to pack our hard earned dollars into little holes in the sand, and compare that to what I would suggest is a more glorious course - the exploration of the universe?

      --
      Crazy Al's House of Intertubes - where we make up in volume what we lose per bit...
    33. Re:The price of exploration by gorillasoft · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Just because the DoD has a larger budget does not mean that NASA's budget is not also very large. $15 billion is one-fourth of the entire one year budget for the entire state of Texas, which has one of the largest budgets of any state in the USA. If you still want to tell me that $15 billion is a shoestring budget, then you'd better start worrying more about what little the states have to work with and less about NASA. You have a warped perspective on this if you truly think $15 billion is not a lot of money.

    34. Re:The price of exploration by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Hey, they got us to the moon and have been operating nuclear-powered vehicles with a very impressive track record.

      Anyway, space exploration isn't about science. It's about exploration & human achievement.

    35. Re:The price of exploration by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Sorry. The rocket scientist is just burning up resources, in fact he's burning up MORE resources than the WalMart employee.

      Put it this way: If we wait a hundred years before doing a lot more space exploration it will still be out there. Right now we're creating a huge belt of space junk ringing the planet. For a parallel example, think about what we'd have left if infinite funding had been provided to primative archaeologists around the year 1900 to excavate the Egyptian ruins. They burned and/or sold for fertilizer literally tons of cat mummies they excavated back then, because they were 'unimportant.' If they'd dug it ALL up we'd have jack shit to explore now with our better methods.

      Ultimately, 'science funding' is about people ('scientists') who are too chickenshit to get off the damn campus and enter real life. Waiting a few generations to proceed with exploration will ruin their plans for a new powerboat to soar around the lake on, but it won't stop knowledge from slowly rolling forward.

      I'd not weep to hear the whole bunch at NASA had been fired. Outer Space isn't going anywhere, and the 'urge' to explore is more like a sex drive than an imparative to seek out knowledge.

    36. Re:The price of exploration by timeOday · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One can be "for" space exploration - and even NASA - and "against" the space shuttle. Just think how many unmanned and "big dumb rocket" manned missions could be bought with that Shuttle and ISS money.

    37. Re:The price of exploration by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Only if you count the useless miles that the shuttle takes on its circuitous route

      Insightful? WTF? Mission goals. Maybe you should edumacate yourself. Why should orbital miles be deemed useless? That's where the real work is done. Microgravity. 17,500 mph. Extreme thermal gradients. Orbital debris. Vacuum environment. It's not a safe place to be and you vote to discount that mileage since they're useless? Wow.

    38. Re:The price of exploration by Christopher_G_Lewis · · Score: 1

      whoa, wait a minute...

      Obvious white trash jokes aside, don't knock Walmart.

      In just 40 years, Walmart grew from a single store to the largest company in the *world*. They basically perfected just-in-time inventory, and are a role model for *any* modern retail corporation. Their IT department is absolutely incredible.

      Just to indicate how much they are growing, they plan to open almost 300 stores *in the next fiscal YEAR*.

      And while NASA obviously has some of the most intelligent people in the country working with them, and I'd never knock Rocket Scientists (my brother was one for Raytheon :-), I'm quite sure that NASA has it's fair share of white trash. It is a government agency...

      Walmart corporate info

    39. Re:The price of exploration by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      > Basically, when the sh*t hits the fan, I'd much
      > rather have a small Navy cruiser then a couple of
      > Space Shuttles.

      Bre'tac: "Do you have ships for defense of your planet?"
      Jack: "Uh... We have Space Shuttles"
      Bre'tac: "And these 'Shuttles'... Are they powerful weapons?"
      Jack: "Not exactly..."

    40. Re:The price of exploration by TopShelf · · Score: 1
      Where do you think you are? This is /., where succesful corporations are to be villified, not praised.

      Having worked for a company that sold to WalMart, I can testify to their incredible operational performance, but they can sure be a pain in the a$$ to sell to...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    41. Re:The price of exploration by john82 · · Score: 1

      No, you made that leap on your own. But while you were at it, you also managed to lump everyone who works for Wal-Mart as "white trash". That includes a lot of every day folks who raise families, pay their taxes, etc. Lot of retirees (including not a few veterans) work at Wal-Mart too. Going to lump all those folks on the short side of one rocket scientist? And his daily contribution to society is... what? I'm not sure this is an argument you want to make. You took a slap at the DoD in a Guns vs Butter sort of argument and then missed the obvious correlation between one rocket scientist and someone's Mom at Wal-Mart.

      On the other hand, if you want to talk about contribution to society I'll take the rocket scientist over Britney Spears any day.

    42. Re:The price of exploration by Christopher_G_Lewis · · Score: 1

      but they can sure be a pain in the a$$ to sell to...

      I've heard that they basically set the price you sell to them. And if you don't agree, they just stop carrying your product, effectively cutting your total sales in *half*.

      Talk about a company with a lot of power...

    43. Re:The price of exploration by Capt.+DrunkenBum · · Score: 1

      Now if there were just some way to get all those Britney Spears albums loaded on the Shuttle. Now there is a project I could really get behind.

      --

      Not everyone deserves a 320i

    44. Re:The price of exploration by BigBir3d · · Score: 1
      Increasing understanding is more important than money.
      You mean like cancer, or AIDS, or how many other deadly diseases. Funding for research is always a issue. How about we have a better understanding of ourselves, and how we work, before we pollute the solar system?
      However, if the shuttle was cancelled the money would just be pissed away on politicians perks and pointless wars, so we should fight tooth and nail to keep it.
      I assume you have proof (besides X-Files plots)?

      Why not become a powerfull political figure and do your best to fix this broken system of ours? WBM is a right, but so is action.
    45. Re:The price of exploration by Theaetetus · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Only if you count the useless miles that the shuttle takes on its circuitous route.

      Good point. Another good point: I bought a car several years ago, drove it around for 100 thousand miles, and eventually traded it back in to same lot where I bought it. Discounting the trade-in price, it cost me about ten grand.

      So, 10 grand, for a net displacement of 0 miles (that whole 100 thousand mile circuitous route), so it's an infinite cost-mile ratio, right?

      [/sarcasm] Point being that those miles in the middle are pretty damn important, too.

      -T

    46. Re:The price of exploration by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      The military gets such a large chunk of the federal budget (49% IIRC, but don't quote me on it)

      It's nowhere near 49%. In 2003, the DoD accounted for 16.9% of federal outlays, 10.6% of net public spending, and just 3.5% of gross domestic product. In 2001, the government spent 3x more on welfare, Social Security, etc. than it did on defense (54% vs. 18%).

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    47. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're not talking about the shuttle there though, we're talking about cars. And the shuttle would be slightly safer; more hours off the ground without an accident.

    48. Re:The price of exploration by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      The Shuttle is more likely to have an immediate benefit from the research done onboard than a deep-space probe will.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    49. Re:The price of exploration by weeboo0104 · · Score: 1

      $600,000 a pop to kill a handful of humans?

      That sounds like a challenge! I need to start playing the lottery again!

      --
      It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men. -Frederick Douglass
    50. Re:The price of exploration by Zoop · · Score: 1

      Only if you count the useless miles that the shuttle takes on its circuitous route.

      Well, those circuitous routes are pretty much the whole reason to be up there, so it would be kinda silly to discount them.

    51. Re:The price of exploration by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      Price is just the beginning. They have very strict guidelines on packaging, barcodes, ASN's, delivery times etc. In the event that you fail to meet a requirement, they charge the supplier back on a per-incident basis. For instance, if you send a shipment that doesn't have their PO number on the shipping label, they'll charge a heinous fee for the inconvenience you've put them through. While this practice enables tremendous efficiencies within their supply chain, it's a dicey proposition for suppliers who are already operating on a razor thin margin...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    52. Re:The price of exploration by cardshark2001 · · Score: 1
      Only if you count the useless miles that the shuttle takes on its circuitous route.

      Well, those circuitous routes are pretty much the whole reason to be up there, so it would be kinda silly to discount them.

      I'm pretty sure his point is that the risk of catastrophic failure and/or explosion whilst orbiting is practically nil. Barring a meteor, he's right. And there is pretty much nothing that can be done about small meteors at this point.

      The dangerous part is going up and coming back down, and the shuttle has a pretty dismal record with that.

      --
      WWJD? JWRTFA!
    53. Re:The price of exploration by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
      You went places and did things at those places on each car trip. For most shuttle missions, there is no point in going round and round the world. If it were physically possible to hover in zero-g at a stationary point 200 miles above the earth, they would do that instead. It would require 80% less energy to get there than to go into orbit.

      Travelling millions of miles in orbits at 18,000 mph is just a dangerous energy-wasting implementation detail that we unfortunately have to put up with due to physics. It is not the main point of the vast majority of missions. (Even if your mission involves scanning large parts of the planet, it would be better to move at a much more leisurely pace when doing so.)

      It just doesn't make sense to count the miles traveled in orbit as having some kind of intrinsic value. (Other than maybe that time-dilation experiment they did with the atomic clock on board.)

    54. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are invoking images of Galileo, Kepler, Brahe, Newton, etc., they all had benefactors (kings, governments, etc.) that paid them for their work.

    55. Re:The price of exploration by Cyclometh · · Score: 1

      NASA's proposed budget for FY 2004 is $15.7 billion dollars. The military's budget request for FY 2004 is $399.1 billion dollars. It costs 3 times as much to make on B2 bomber as it does to launch the space shuttle once. I'm tired of hearing people bitch about how expensive our space program is when we spend over 26 times as much on our military. You can't tell me we can't afford to run our space program in the face of numbers like these. Reduce the military budget by 4 percent and you could double NASA's.

    56. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -NEWSFLASH-

      Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT.N), the world's largest retailer, raised it's outlook on first quarter earnings Wednesday by invading the country of Iraq. Wal-Mart spokesman Tom Williams stated that the occupation of the middle-eastern country will decrease Wal-Mart's transportation costs by lowering fuel costs and also provide an additional source of revenue. The first Wal-Mart gas station is expected to open in Greenville, SC August 2003.

    57. Re:The price of exploration by The+AtomicPunk · · Score: 1

      Why can't we fight tooth and nail to stop politicians from spending our money ?

      oh, wait, that would mean being informed and voting... sorry. :)

    58. Re:The price of exploration by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      I was thinking more along the lines of Ben Franklin, who lived in a democracy.

    59. Re:The price of exploration by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      And with that line of reasoning, in a few billion years we'll all be extinct. The rocket scientist is doing one of the most important things humanity can be engaged: Getting off the planet.

    60. Re:The price of exploration by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

      I believe what the original poster was saying that NASA might get adequate funding if it weren't for the general stupidity of the federal budget, not that NASA was causing the deficit. Quite the opposite really, they're hurting dearly because of it - after all, who cares about scientific progress when there are evil, evil, evil people to kill, right?

    61. Re:The price of exploration by 5KVGhost · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's a problem of priority. There are some of us that feel that advancing human knowledge is worth more than producing more machines of warfare. What a senseless waste. Perhaps Darwin was on to something.

      Yes, perhaps he meant that people who go defenseless would soon be dead but for the efforts of those who don't. Heck, even the United Federation of Planets needs Starfleet.

      Your argument presents a false dichotomy. It's the same meaningless non-debate as when people complain about all that money "wasted" on the space program when have farmers going bankrupt/children starving/people out of work/etc.

      And it's especially ironic considering that the technology behind space exploration has largely been driven by the very practical needs of those those bad ol' warmongers and their twisted priorities.

    62. Re:The price of exploration by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Purpose of DoD - Defending the Nation.

      Riiiight. Given our recent actions, I rather think the purpose of the Department of War is conquest, colonialism, and proving that the President has a large willie.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    63. Re:The price of exploration by TC+(WC) · · Score: 1

      Travelling millions of miles in orbits at 18,000 mph is just a dangerous energy-wasting implementation detail that we unfortunately have to put up with due to physics.

      How the heck is that energy wasting? If there were some way to just float there, I might agree with you, but as it stands, it's no more energy wasting than the energy in an airplane's thrust that ends up countering the force due to gravity rather than creating a forward vector...

      "Hey, all this flying sure is energy wasting... let's see what happens if we don't use wings next time and skip all the energy wasting lift!"

      It just doesn't make sense to count the miles traveled in orbit as having some kind of intrinsic value

      I, personally, would consider not crashing to Earth a rather important intrinsic value of those miles...

    64. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, those space miles are exactly the reason why the other 400 miles are flown at all.

    65. Re:The price of exploration by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1
      I, personally, would consider not crashing to Earth a rather important intrinsic value of those miles...

      It's an important value, but it is an extrinsic value. Not crashing into the earth is the primary goal; going around in circles isn't the primary goal.

    66. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "hey'll charge a heinous fee for the inconvenience you've put them through"

      I wish I could do that with everybody who sells to me (personally), but mostly it's the other way around for the small guy.

    67. Re:The price of exploration by jelle · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For example, the space program gave you $10/month satellite TV, live footage from all over the world, medical advances, GPS and detailed maps, detailed weather information, early-warning hurricane preduction, and a lot of knowledge of the place that this planet floats around in, etc, etc.

      It's not the 'return' on a per flight basis, but the return on the series of developments that nasa accomplishes that is added to society.

      Just like for DOD, you don't look at the effect of one cargo plane, or one jet fighter, but at the DOD as a whole.

      If you 'demand' that nasa justifies itself on a per flight basis, then you're basically asking for near-sighted short term micromanagement. Look that up and you'll know why that is bad.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    68. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a comparison.

      To put it another way, the texas state government blows the entire NASA budget in only three months.

      But then again, the average Texan may not care if there is life on Mars, as long as it doens't come down here with bigger guns than they themselves have.

    69. Re:The price of exploration by TC+(WC) · · Score: 1
      Something doesn't need to be a primary goal to be an intrinsic value... In this case, it's somewhat easier to show that it is indeed intrinsic by showing that it isn't extrinsic...

      From Websters

      extrinsic

      \Ex*trin"sic\, a. [L. extrinsecus; exter on the outside + secus otherwise, beside; akin to E. second: cf. F. extrins[`e]que. See Exterior, Second.] 1. Not contained in or belonging to a body; external; outward; unessential; -- opposed to intrinsic.


      How is not crashing to Earth external to the miles travelled and, by extention, the velocity maintained in orbit? I'll point out that it definitely isn't unessential...

      I would consider the consequences of circular motion to be quite intrinsic to the distance travelled maintaining the circular motion.
    70. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know citizens of the Lone Star State may not realize this, but space is more than four times larger than Texas.

    71. Re:The price of exploration by hobbesmaster · · Score: 1

      Remember that NASA is primarily 3 things each taking about a third of the budget:
      1) Manned spaceflight
      2) Unmanned spaceflight
      3) Aeronautical research

      $15billion is nothing in the context of the Federal government and the fact that most of it isn't even going to the shuttle program. $15 billion isn't going to the shuttle, its going to landing probes on Mars/comets/etc, putting satellites in Orbit, and researching new aircraft/aircraft equipment.

    72. Re:The price of exploration by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Sorry. We're not going to happily wave goodbye and cough at the plume of exhaust you pump in our face.

      We're part of the planet. You're not an 'individual' who can up and leave any time you want. Until you can encapsulate the whole planet or build a tank big enough to drag a whole chunk of it off with you, you're stuck here too. So stop shitting on Earth, please. This ain't no 50's Space Western, and you're not going to beam up to your rocket ship and leave.

    73. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What immediately beneficial research is that? Useless microgravity manufacturing? Spider webs? Ant farms? The elementary school projects that get sent up as PR? The only aspect of a LEO environment offered to an experimentalist that can't be found or created at sea level is a lack of gravity. That's it. Everything else is pure astronomical science that can be done with... uh, near-space probes.

    74. Re:The price of exploration by Jagasian · · Score: 1

      Did you have a hard time in school? Sounds like it. I am sure that professor was a real A-hole. It is all going to be ok. It is not your fault.

    75. Re:The price of exploration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Newton didn't live in a democracy??? What was that whole parliment thing about after all? Oh, you mean the democracy of the US, not Britain, but Franklin spent basically all of his life living abroad or in the *colonies.* He was pushing 80 when the Constitution was being drawn up. So what the hell do you mean anyway?

      Maybe you mean during the 19th century, the golden age of the experimentalist. The time when our national research museums were set up by Congress. The time when essentially all scientific research was done by (government funded) universities or directly by the government itself. You couldn't have meant the 20th century which is where our current model of scientific support was established by Vannevar Bush (G.W's granddaddy).

      Science has, and always will be done primarily by the goverment. Anything contributed by companies and independently wealthy people are few and far between because there aren't that many wealthy people who want to spend their time tinkering with science, and companies are looking out for their bottom line (the Golden Age of Bell Labs and that it couldn't survive tight budgets shows this).

      You fault someone for their lack of historical knowledge regarding scientific funding, but in the end you really meant Franklin (who was independently wealthy, by the way) and only during the last 250 years (which was a time where scientific progress relied very heavily upon government funding anyway). You take a pretty condencending attitude for someone who seems to have very little understanding of the history of the Western scientific enterprise yourself.

      So I suppose what you are saying is that if we cut out government funding that science will march on because Bill Gates and retired NBA players will devote their lesiure time to hunting out the top quark.

    76. Re:The price of exploration by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      No. Clearly, if we eliminate all government funding, science will stop dead in it's tracks.

    77. Re:The price of exploration by mikerich · · Score: 1
      I think you meant to say the unmanned programme gave us most of those. The only one the manned programme could conceivably have benefited is the health issue - but I'm struggling to think of a single medical advance that has been brought about by the space programme.

      Apart from how to keep people alive in space which is something of a chicken and an egg problem.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    78. Re:The price of exploration by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Ever wonder why the Earth is overpolluted and underfed? Overcrowding. You're dismissing the one good solution to the majority of Earth based problems.

    79. Re:The price of exploration by Theaetetus · · Score: 1
      If it were physically possible to hover in zero-g at a stationary point 200 miles above the earth, they would do that instead. It would require 80% less energy to get there than to go into orbit.

      Sorry, no... To maintain orbit at 200 miles above the earth, you need to be going quite fast, and expending constant amounts of energy. That's why geostationary orbits have to be so high up - otherwise, they'd need to be constantly firing thrusters to maintain their artifically close 200 mile level.

      Additionally, once you're up there, it takes no energy to continue orbiting. They aren't going 18kmph just because they want to go fast, they're going that fast because that's the only way to be in orbit.

      Check out this orbital calculator.

      -T

    80. Re:The price of exploration by jelle · · Score: 1

      No I meant NASA, all missions i nspace manned, unmanned, and ground-based projects.

      For example, the manned Apollo project made geosynchronous orbit satellites a lot easier to do because it resulted in a tremendous advance in knowledge about how to launch rockets.

      The shuttle has similarly resulted in a large advance in materials and structural engineering that make many other technological advances possible.

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
  3. End Manned spaceflight? by Verteiron · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Fine. Now does he have a good idea for what to do when the next dinosaur killer comes along? The longer the human race is confined to this planet, the less likely it is we're going to survive as a species.

    Of course, helping delay extinction won't put money in his pocket, so I suppose that's a lost cause...

    --
    End of lesson. You may press the button.
    1. Re:End Manned spaceflight? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How manned space shuttle flights will save us from next dinosaur killer? The fact is that if "dinosaur killer" will hit earth within the next 500 years, we're doomed. Luckily the changes are quite small.

      Another fact, that many aren't willing to acknoledge is that manned spaceflights are very ineffective way to conduct research. I'm in favor for reducing manned space flights if this means that NASA and Russian space agency can conduct more useful research with their limited budgets.

    2. Re:End Manned spaceflight? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When the next dinosaur killer comes along, we're all going to die, and a useless near-Earth orbit exploding bus won't make any difference one way or the other.

    3. Re:End Manned spaceflight? by KillerHamster · · Score: 1

      How about merging NASA with the Department of Homeland Security to defend against killer asteroids and space aliens?

    4. Re:End Manned spaceflight? by murdocj · · Score: 1

      There are a lot of things that could wipe out the human race: nuclear weapons, bioweapons, pollution, etc. Focusing in on something that happens every 50 million years or so seems kind of foolish. Especially since the cost of establishing a self-sustaining colony on another planet is going to be... well... astronomical. What are chances that a Mars colony could survive if it was going to get zero support from Earth?

      I like the space program as much as anybody, and I'd love to see humans on Mars, but not at the cost of ignoring critical problems on Earth.

    5. Re:End Manned spaceflight? by druske · · Score: 1
      Now does he have a good idea for what to do when the next dinosaur killer comes along?
      No problem, the dinosaurs are already extinct!
    6. Re:End Manned spaceflight? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Now does he have a good idea for what to do when the next dinosaur killer comes along?"

      We don't need to worry about that. All the dinosaurs are dead already. ;)

    7. Re:End Manned spaceflight? by amorsen · · Score: 1

      I will be on this planet. My family will be on this planet. My friends will be on this planet. Tell me again why I should care whether a few hundred people on Mars stay alive?

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    8. Re:End Manned spaceflight? by Criton · · Score: 1

      Unfortunetly that all to true the longer we stay confined to one planet the less chance we have to survive as a species. As for shuttle problems the govrenment needs to set aside 10 billion to redesign the STS sytem and build new ships based on the latest technology other stuff that should be presued is a cargo only shuttle system where the orbiter is replace by a pod of SSMEs and a huge cargo module such a craft would have a lifting power equalt to the old saturn 5 rockets yet would cost the same per launch as a shuttle probley less as the shuttle's main cost is whats called touch labor or hands on spacecraft maintaince. Also they should bring back the X34 and DCX. A near term solution if money is short and prsent shuttle counldn't be made safe would be to ready the X34 and titain or delta 4 to be man rated in a crash program or bring back the old apollo capsule for a short time and use the shuttles unmanned. Soyuz is a good craft but the apollo is much larger and can be modified to carry more crew members of course this new capsule would be larger than the old one and include stuff the old apollo never had such a newer computers N2 O2 atmopshere and a proper WCS.

  4. Texas Education by Cyclopedian · · Score: 5, Funny

    There are two schools of thought in Texas:

    1) Edukayshun (phonetic manglings).
    2) Mathematical Miscalculation.

    I think they are planning on adding a third one in 2004:

    3) Piracy Through Accounting

    -Cyc

    1. Re:Texas Education by Bendy+Chief · · Score: 1

      Well, one thing's for damn sure, it won't be sex education. :P

    2. Re:Texas Education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, there's plenty of dumb rednecks in our state, but I bet your state has trailer parks, too. Not all of us live there.

      Now, go back to your double-wide and troll somewhere else, a$$h0le.

    3. Re:Texas Education by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


      it won't be sex education.

      Actually they have sex ed in Texas but they stagger the classes with days they do drivers ed; it's too hard on the horses otherwise.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    4. Re:Texas Education by Shamashmuddamiq · · Score: 1
      Actually, I believe that Texans put "Texas Pride/History" at the top of that list. All else is considered tripe. It's incredible how many of my fellow Texans can't locate Illinois on a map (and those that can were most likely not born or educated in Texas).

      I used to want to put a bumper sticker on my car that said "Thank God I'm not a (real) Texan". Then I thought that might not be a good idea. Normally a Texas driver will run you off the road simply because he's oblivious to what's going on around him. When he's angry, he runs you off the road on PURPOSE!

      --
      ...just my 2 gil.
    5. Re:Texas Education by paranode · · Score: 1
      Don't let that schmuck make you think that Texans support his viewpoint. I can tell you that most people here don't feel that way.

      In fact you'll probably find more liberals who are in line with that kind of thinking and Texas isn't very liberal. ;)

    6. Re:Texas Education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't let them get to you. It's just sour grapes over getting stuck with a second-class state.

    7. Re:Texas Education by colonwq · · Score: 1

      Here Here!

      I am from Florida and am now in Houston. These people drive worse and any old person in an RV

      :wq

      --
      -- Phase 1: Collect under pants Phase 2: ? Phase 3: Profit
    8. Re:Texas Education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't tex with Messmas!

    9. Re:Texas Education by esperantulo · · Score: 1

      We here in Texas used to hate yankees because they won the Civil War. Now we hate them because of their prejudicial views of our state. In New York they've made Urban Cowboy into a musical.

      In case any of you see it, let it be known that Gilley's burned down 15 years ago, and in order for that show to reflect the Pasadena of today it would have to be re-named Vaqueros Urbanos.

      I've lived in Houston my whole life (31 years so far) and have seen a horse on average about once every two years. Ten years ago, I paid 15 bucks to ride one on the beach in Galveston.

      About that time a soap opera sent people here to hold auditions for a part on one of their shows. I got my degree in theater so of course as an aspiring actor I went to the audition. There were hundreds of GQ guys looking their soap-opera-best who showed up hoping they might get a boost into the biz with out making the life altering gamble of moving either to L.A. or New York. The casting crew picked the one guy wearing a cowboy hat and stuck him in the show. That's so insulting. If we ever secede from the Union again it will be over crap like this.

      One good thing about yankee obtuseness is that it ticked three-time Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Edward Albee off so much that he moved to Houston, which allowed me to ferther my edukayshun when I wuz abel to take dat fine man's klass at da Unaversaty of Houston. So I reckin dat Texas edukayshun taint all dat bad.

      This rant isn't aimed at all yankees because I know all northerners don't look down on Texas. But the ones who do... man, y'all really chap my hide.

    10. Re:Texas Education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think they are planning on adding a third one in 2004:

      3) Piracy Through Accounting


      Woah, you're way behind. Don't you remember a little scandal having to do with Houston-based Enron?

  5. Well.. by JeffSh · · Score: 5, Interesting

    He has some good points. We do need to replace the shuttle. But, his campaign contribution lists kind of outline the whole "conflicting interests" problem that he has here.

    We already have a Senator Disney, might as well have a Senator Lockheed-Martin.

    Maybe we could start a group of citizens and buy our congressmen back?

    1. Re:Well.. by YetAnotherAnonymousC · · Score: 1

      We already have a Senator Disney, might as well have a Senator Lockheed-Martin

      I don't think this is a fair comparison. Unlike Disney, Lockheed-Martin actually does employ quite a few very smart engineers. Are the suggestions and proposals of Lockheed biased towards making themselves some money? Undoubtedly. But there are likely to be significant nuggets of quality aero-astro thought contained within. So, if you don't agree with the gentleman from Texas, it would be more effective to directly criticize the science of the arguments he's picked up, rather than making snarky comments about his contributors.

    2. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Maybe we could start a group of citizens and buy our congressmen back?

      Or how about you stop fucking voting for them, and make it clear that you disprove of their voting record and campaing financing. While you're on the subject, why not try to support groups who are attempting to get legislation which introduces campaing financing reforms?

    3. Re:Well.. by moc.tfosorcimgllib · · Score: 1

      Unlike Disney, Lockheed-Martin actually does employ quite a few very smart engineers.

      So Disney's "D" stands for Dumb? I'm sorry, but the "imagineers" are pretty smart as well. If disney were a company made up of complete idiots, they wouldn't have made it so Intellectual Property rights didn't expire, ever.
      Contrary to the majority of slashdot opinion, Disney does employ smart people. They also play hardball, use underhanded tactics, and know how to do both of those very well.
      Just because they constantly use underhanded tactics to further their own interests does not make them dumb.

    4. Re:Well.. by Bendebecker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe we could start a group of citizens and buy our congressmen back?
      Everytime we buy a Disney product, we help Disney buy our congressman. Remeber that the next time you buy "Snow white and the seven dwarves" on DVD.

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    5. Re:Well.. by Creep73 · · Score: 1
      Both shuttle accidents could have been avoided by good decision making. Everyone makes mistakes however it seems that NASA is more mission centered and less safety centered. Taking unneeded risks for the sake of the mission or the bottom line.
      If we had that safety record even in combat aircraft people would be appalled
      He is right about our bad safety record however I think he has the wrong focus. I have not seen anything that suggests that the equipment is faulty. I think it's more a problem with safety inspections or management decision making.
      A good question to get answered would be, "How many times have shuttles been grounded due to some technical mishap?"
      If they had a good record of grounding shuttles when problems arise I would be more forgiving.
      I think Barton honestly wishes to save lives and do the right thing however I just can't side with him in thinking that the problem lies with the equipment.
    6. Re:Well.. by YetAnotherAnonymousC · · Score: 1

      So Disney's "D" stands for Dumb?

      Straw man.

      No, I am not implying the Disney is in any way dumb. However, when Disney proposes some sort of regulation or law, it is entirely for their own benefit. As for benefiting civilization as we know it... well, maybe it will make some kids happy. When Lockheed, on the other hand, makes some sort of proposal, it is guided to some degree by the thinking of its engineers and may in fact be the sort of proposal that actually furthers human achievement. Will it make Lockheed a bucket of cash? Yes. But that doesn't mean the proposal's scientific assetrions should be discredited.

    7. Re:Well.. by Eagle7 · · Score: 5, Informative

      might as well have a Senator Lockheed-Martin.

      Disclaimer: I work for Lockheed.

      I don't understand your point... surely Lockheed has proposals and products that compete with the shuttle, but they also have thier fingers in the shuttle as well. they handle the external tanks, where I work we do the data processing computers, they do the thermal protection, they support shuttle missions, provide other shuttle support services, and do other shuttle related work.

      So yeah, they'll probably gain when NASA moves to the next-gen space exploration system. But they're by no means missing out on the shuttle action as it stands now. The thing about Lockheed is that they are very diverse... they handle IT for government sites (pentagon, bases, etc), they do package distribution for the US & UK post office, we do traditional rockets, they do air traffic control, airplanes, avionics, missiles, support services of all sorts - the list goes on an on. Go to the main Lockheed homepage and look at the list of products & capabilities. So you can't pull one proposal or project that Lockheed has, and say that they want the shuttle to die because of that.

      The politics here are a hell of a lot more complicated than $14,000 in campaign contributions. I don't understand them all, to be sure... but neither do you.

      --
      _sig_ is away
    8. Re:Well.. by moc.tfosorcimgllib · · Score: 1

      So your basic argument against this is: Disney's only goal is to make money while Lockheed's goals are to further the advancement of man AND make money?

      I'll let it drop before this becomes a flame war. I don't agree with Disney, I think they aren't heading in the right direction. My point was only to show that Lockheed Martin's main interests are lining the pockets of their investors.
      The bid ot build the space shuttle for the government was open, Lockheed was lucky enough to win it. It could have easily been Boeing who made the shuttle.

      The shuttle was paid for by the USA, not out of the kindness of Lockheed Martin's heart.

    9. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ho ho ho! That is pretty funny. LM doing their work to benefit civilization??? Now, that should be modded as Funny.

      Lockheed, and the other big contractors, look out for themselves. The ones doing the scientific work are putting in proposals for government-funded scientific work like other scientists do. The rest of the work Lockheed and others do is driven by their bottom line because that is money (internal research money) that they spend out of their own pocket, and they only spend it on things that either improve their current position, or help them in the future. For instance, they'll spend millions of dollars out of their pocket to put together a proposal for the next generation warfighter or whatever because that has the potential of getting billions in return. Make no mistake about it, they aren't spending that money so that the US will feel safer with a new fighter.

      Lockheed (and others) are no different than Disney. They employ hundreds of lobbyists, dump money into political coffers all over the country, and act *entirely* for their own benefit. The handful of scientists and engineers they have working on NASA instruments is a pittance compared to the thousands they have working on billion dollar defense projects.

    10. Re:Well.. by nhavar · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think the real point should be that we shouldn't have questions about conflict of interest with our senators. We shouldn't be concerned with the $14,000 of "hard money" and the $X,XXX,XXX of "soft money" and the "favors" that the senator receives from a company and the "networking" that takes place.

      The reason we shouldn't be concerned about this is because it shouldn't exist. Under our constitution the People and The PRESS were the only entities afforded freedom of speech. A multinational and "diverse" corporation was not given this freedom. So even if you falsely assume that signing a check is some form of freedom of speech, corporations can be (and should be) limited in this regard.

      The ONLY people giving money to campaign finance should be the PEOPLE. If Joe CEO of Corporation X likes Mr. Smith for senator then he should give some money to help get that candidate some visibility. If the individual employees of the Corporation also like the same candidate then hey more power to them. But Corporation X should not be the one signing the check, the UNION for Corporation X should also not be the one signing the check, it should be the individuals within that corporation/union who feel strongly enough about candidate Smith to help him become visible to people outside his normal sphere of influence.

      I get tired of hearing about how much it costs to get air time and flights and booking conference halls. All crap. If you do a good job at a local level then your reputation will get spread easily enough. If you need to spend millions and millions of dollars to campaign then it might just be that you're doing something wrong.

      While Lockheed might not gain "significantly" to shareholders gain is gain. If the shuttle gets shut down and Lockheed gets more contracts for private space flight, foreign contracts, and/or shuttle redesign contracts - it's all gain no matter how small. While they lose out on one thing they gain in other ways. Hence people look to the money trail and question every little statement that a senator makes - no matter how heartfelt, honest, or thoughtful it may be.

      Just about everyone I talk to mistrusts the senators and it's usually for the same reason. The Money Trail.

      --
      "Do not be swept up in the momentum of mediocrity." - anon
    11. Re:Well.. by YetAnotherAnonymousC · · Score: 1

      So your basic argument against this is: Disney's only goal is to make money while Lockheed's goals are to further the advancement of man AND make money?

      No. Note again what I said, I will highlight:
      When Lockheed, on the other hand, makes some sort of proposal, it is guided to some degree by the thinking of its engineers and may in fact be the sort of proposal that actually furthers human achievement.
      Do I think Lockheed cares that it will further human acheivement? No. But the nature of the business that they are in is such that the best solutions often will be the ones that advance our technology. Thus the "may," not will.

      I'm not meaning to sounds flamey; apologies if I did. I'm simply saying that I don't put Disney's suggestions in the same category as Lockheed's. It has nothing to do with the business intelligence of either company, nor the lack of nobility in their goals. It's the nature of their businesses. I should have phrased it better in the beginning.

    12. Re:Well.. by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      The space shuttle a product of "USA", United Space Alliance, which is a joint venture of Boeing and Lockheed Martin.

    13. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Remeber that the next time you buy "Snow white and the seven dwarves" on DVD.
      But I haven't even bought it on DVD for the first time...
    14. Re:Well.. by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      That chart told me that a mere 1.8% of his contributions come from Lockheed. Statistics can show anything in the right context.

      Perhaps he doesn't want shuttle parts raining down on the houses of his constituents. That seems more likely to me that such a policy decision being influenced by a mere 1.8% of his campaign finances in a non-election year.

    15. Re:Well.. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Every time you buy a Disney product, you're buying a share in the entity called Disney. Not necessarily a voting share (although if enough people don't buy a particular DVD their 'vote' is clearly heard down at Disney headquarters), but a share nonetheless.

      So all you Disney haters are up against a bigger 'foe' than you thought. People largely like the Disney product line. What do you have except rhetoric to compete against it?

    16. Re:Well.. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      The People and The Press are the only entities guaranteed freedom of speech?

      Hmmm, I have this feeling that a lot of corporations own printing presses. Goodness gracious, it even seems that most news organizations are incorporated!

      I guess we could ban all news dissemenation that doesn't travel over a peer-to-peer common carrier form of medium.

      Journalism could be taught at the 4th grade level, since it would become a core knowledge thing, and not a 'profession.'

      However, that isn't how things are today. Don't you think your utopian constructs are a little ridiculous?

    17. Re:Well.. by nhavar · · Score: 1

      Yes the people and the press are the only ones guaranteed freedom of speech. Read the constitution and constitutional law. Corporations have been stopped several times from "free speech". And yes I understand the idea that the PRESS is owned by a corporation... DUH. Not all corporations own a press outlet. Whether or not they have a "printing press" doesn't necessarily identify them as a press entity.

      and there the hell does this come from? " guess we could ban all news dissemenation that doesn't travel over a peer-to-peer common carrier form of medium.
      OR
      Journalism could be taught at the 4th grade level, since it would become a core knowledge thing, and not a 'profession.'"


      I don't thinkt that I implied in any way that news/media should be shut down. I fairly simply stated that if a candidate needed to spend millions of dollars in advertising that they were probably not doing a good enough job to get FREE PRESS (via word of mouth, journalistic reporting, et al).

      So what you're saying is that it's ridiculous to dream and want better than what we have right now. Don't you think your apathy is a little ridiculous? It's just a dumb idea to think that we can hold people to a higher standard and expect some simple rules right? It's nothing utopian or high minded it's just a simple set of rules that could be enforced if it didn't effect the senators pocket books so gravely.

      --
      "Do not be swept up in the momentum of mediocrity." - anon
    18. Re:Well.. by M-G · · Score: 1

      The space shuttle a product of "USA", United Space Alliance [unitedspacealliance.com], which is a joint venture of Boeing and Lockheed Martin.

      More accurately, the USA manages the operations of the shuttle, plus many other launch systems. Rockwell was the one who built the shuttles (although many subcontractors, such as General Dynamics, Grumman, Fairchild, and McDonnell Douglas built major components).

      Rockwell and Lockheed Martin were managing different parts of shuttle operations, and when NASA proposed moving to a single contractor, they formed USA. Rockwell's share of USA became Boeing when they sold their aerospace and defense business.

    19. Re:Well.. by cameldrv · · Score: 1

      Lockheed is a partner with Boeing in United Space Alliance, which is the primary shuttle contractor since they essentally privatized the program a few years back. I really don't think it's in their interests to have the program cancelled.

    20. Re:Well.. by nege · · Score: 1

      HA! THat wouldnt work. Remember, these people's JOBS is supposed to be that of representing YOU (and we pay them for this already btw). The fact that they dont do that now only shows that if you go give them more money, they will still take their other contributions and vote against you, the people. Think this is a democracy? Think again - there is a word for rule like this. Oddly enough it starts with the name of a planet....

    21. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point being that Lockheed undoubtedly will make more money from a contract to build a shuttle replacement (or through greater use of Lockheed-made unmanned launch vehicles) than they currently gain from their partial support of the shuttle.

      Lockheed does have a diverse business, sure, but compare the revenue of Lockheed-Martin Systems with Lockheed's aerospace division. I remember very vividly the talk in the business sections of how Lockheed would be in quite a bit of trouble if they weren't thrown a bone over the Joint Strike Fighter contract; Boeing at least has a civilian aircraft division as well (in fact, as their primary business).

      This may be paranoia, true, but there should be no doubt over whether this congressman works for the people or for a corporation.

  6. Why are we always nitpicking? by ihatewinXP · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Disclaimer: I am not trolling.

    But how is it that we have had troops (US gov. employees) all over the world doing the most dangerous things for decades but 7 astronauts are unreasonable losses? They knew what they were getting into, I assure you, just like any soldier. Thousands have given their lives for science and would gladly do so again. These scientists/adventurers/gov. employees were willing to die for the embetterment of the human race - why should cowards decide where the brave may go?

    if the problem is kids being horrified at school watching the space shuttle then put the feed on delay.

    --
    ---- The real Slashdot is still here. You just have to browse at -1 to read the comments.
    1. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by TheOneEyedMan · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Looking at the ratio of workers lost to total number of workers in being an astronaut and being a US soldier, I bet that being a soldier is much safer. The US army might be safer then being a fireman.

      --
      Reality is that which refuses to go away when I stop believing in it. --Phillip K. Dick (remove SPAM to email)
    2. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by CobaltTiger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sure it's completely unrelated to the cost of putting 7 astronauts in space vs the cost of putting 7 troops in a foreign country

    3. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by haedesch · · Score: 1

      Unless you are a helicopter pilot that is :-)

    4. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thousands have given their lives for science and would gladly do so again.
      damn zombies...

    5. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by krumms · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But how is it that we have had troops (US gov. employees) all over the world doing the most dangerous things for decades but 7 astronauts are unreasonable losses?

      Without trying to trivialise death, it must be said that this is a brilliant point. Soldiers, people with the dual purpose - at least from a government standpoint - of killing and being killed. The U.S. has just come out of a war in which at least 79 American soliders were killed. Yet, a politician has the balls to stand up and say what seems to be, "It's okay to die for your country, just make sure there's a gun in your hand."

      A truly disgusting man, with little more in mind than the lining of his own pockets.

    6. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by pr0t0plasm · · Score: 1
      Name three (3) significant scientific discoveries made through any manned space flight program.

      --
      - - - Patent applied for and deliver us from evil
    7. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by pubjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But how is it that we have had troops (US gov. employees) all over the world doing the most dangerous things for decades but 7 astronauts are unreasonable losses?

      An excellent point. The answer is I guess, some people are more important than others. It's like when a pretty white schoolgirl gets kidnapped, it's frontpage news and the country is in shock. But if the same thing happens to a coloured guy, then nobody gives a damn. Or when you read how successful the war with Iraq was because there were only 200 fatalities, and you realise that they're just counting the Americans.

    8. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by jmacleod9975 · · Score: 1

      Did you really just use the "word" embetterment. God good, what have we come to? In all the ways you could try to emulate George W. Bush, please try not to emulatify his misusenenment of our language.
      Thank you.

    9. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by ihatewinXP · · Score: 1

      "Name three (3) significant scientific discoveries made through any manned space flight program."

      ok..

      1. Velcro
      2. Tang
      3. The pen you can write upside down with

      Thats just a start, im sure there is more.

      --
      ---- The real Slashdot is still here. You just have to browse at -1 to read the comments.
    10. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by mobets · · Score: 1

      I'll start...

      Velcro

      --

      It was me, I did it, I moved your cheese
    11. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by ThaReetLad · · Score: 1

      OK sure, the astronuts knew what they we're getting into, but there are cheaper extreme sports and the government doesn't usually foot the bill for base jumping. If people are willing to risk their lives, well great, but we owe it to them to make it as safe as possible, and the government owes it to taxpayers to see that money isn't wasted on an aging design. Taking your military example, Soldiers know what they are getting them selves into, but they'd not be happy if they were sent to war in tanks which were designed 20-30 years ago, or asked to fly wwII aircraft against modern fighters, just because the people holding the purse strings said they were brave cannon fodder. Thats the kind of attitude which saw soldiers sent "over the top" at the battle of the Somme into the face of machine guns

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    12. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by ThaReetLad · · Score: 1

      none stick frying pans?

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    13. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Until recently, American astronauts were soldiers...

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    14. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, what is it? What is the ratio of the total cost of the U.S. military to personnel versus ratio of the total cost of NASA to personnel?

    15. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by pubjames · · Score: 1

      Did you really just use the "word" embetterment.

      It reminded me of that Simpsons episode here they keep saying "enbiggen".

    16. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by nfk · · Score: 0

      Looks like he caused some embitterment.

    17. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by xagon7 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Velcro

      Astronaught Ice Cream

      Extreme, high temperature ceramic heat shields

      Tang

      Microwave Ovens

      MANY studies on humans living in confined spaces for extended periods of time.

      Bone loss from weightlessness for extended periods of time.

      The moon is NOT made of cheese.

      The United States can do Anything it sets its mind to do.

      Deploying and repairing the Hubble space telescope, which alone is worth the cost of manned space flight.

      Composite materials such as carbon fiber.

      And many many more.

    18. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by jmacleod9975 · · Score: 1

      Actually, just to be cautious I looked it up. What do I know, maybe it is a word, and everyone is giving "W" a hard time for no reason. Dictionary.com gave me embitterment as a possible match. I had to laugh at least a little at that.

    19. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by King+Babar · · Score: 5, Insightful
      But how is it that we have had troops (US gov. employees) all over the world doing the most dangerous things for decades but 7 astronauts are unreasonable losses?

      First, one could question how reasonable or unreasonable the size of the US military is. (Or one should be able to; these days even a hint that we should adjust the forcepool brings with it the accusation that you are a traitor.) Second, for me it's not the loss of the astronoauts' lives per se that makes the manned space program unreasonable. As you mention, the risks are concrete, obvious, and difficult to explain away, but people volunteer. The unreasonable loss is the loss of funding and opportunity to do better science, even space science, in the US. The expenditure of cash on the problem of how to keep a manned space program going when every launch makes you cringe with its "make-work" and PR mission content is just scandalous. People who think that *this* kind of thing will help us fight off near-earth asteroids or bring us closer to lunar colonization are really and truly just not thinking very critically. I would go so far as to argue that the people who are most interested in the eventual manned exploration of space should be the people who should be *least* interested in supporting the status quo.

      --

      Babar

    20. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tang is a significant scientific discovery?

    21. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 3, Insightful

      1. The fact that we humans can do it.

      Don't need 2 & 3 after that.

    22. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by MikeLRoy · · Score: 0

      Velcro was invented in the 1940s (not discovered) by George de Mestral, a Swiss man who one day noticed burrs stuck to his pants after a hike with his dog. He examined the burrs, realized how their hooks attached to things, and created a method of fabricating hooks and loops mechanically to create a fastening system.

      Yes, velcro is used in space, but not discovered in or invented for it.

      Tang was first brought to market by General Foods in 1965, based on their Jello mixtures (people used to drink jello rather then let it set sometimes). In 1969, nasa selected tang as a drink for the gemini space program.

      As for the pen, well, the russians used a pencil :-).

      --
      -Michael Roy Some people are like Slinkies. Not really useful, but you can't help smiling when you see one tumble down
    23. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by nfk · · Score: 1

      Actually, I did exactly the same thing; checked for embetterment in dictionary.com and it suggested embitterment.

    24. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      These scientists/adventurers/gov. employees were willing to die for the embetterment of the human race - why should cowards decide where the brave may go?

      I'm quite sure ~1/60 catastrophic failure rate is far above the design goal. The folks riding the shuttle had felt the odds were far better than that in their favor, I'd think. The circumstances of the Challenger disaster were quite different - that one could easily have been avoided, and should have been. So, perhaps a better estimate is 1/113.

      That the foam could fall off was a known problem. I guess now we know the potential consequences. The shuttle is also vulnerable to meteorite and space junk strikes (as almost anything would be). Perhaps there should be an "emergency kit" so the astronauts have a chance at fixing the damage. I'm not sure what kind of glue can replace carbon-carbon though...

      The question is - what to do now? The shuttle is an enormously complex device, and every part must be meticulously maintained. I'd think a goal for the next "space truck" would be vast simplification, self-inspection, self-repair...?

      In the meantime, the shuttle program should probably go forward - but more attention will have to be paid to flightworthiness and safety.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    25. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microwave ovens were not invented for the space program.

      Velcro was not invented for the space program.

      Composite materials were not invented for the space program. Carbon-carbon may have come from missile programs. Does that make the $4 trillion spent on nuclear delivery systems a good thing?

      Tang was not invented for the space program.

      The slogan 'if they can put a man on the moon, why can't they...?' is a liability from the space program, not a benefit.

    26. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes I'm amazed at what the U.S. considers unacceptable, and acceptable losses. Well over a million combatants were lost at the Battle of Stalingrad, and yet we talk of our great losses, in thousands (perhaps even tens of thousands ?) on the beaches of Normandy.

      We didn't mind how many ppl Saddam gassed as long as they were Iranian -- that conflict also ran over a million casualties -- but we are frightened he might kill a handful of Americans, so we invade.

    27. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      As for the pen, well, the russians used a pencil

      And the Americans got it for free from a private company. Nice, huh?

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    28. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by pr0t0plasm · · Score: 1
      Studies of physi/psych/olgy in space only matter if we're going to send people in to space, in which case we'll want to study their physi/psych/ology... it's a circular argument.


      Many composite materials have certainly come from the aerospace sector. How many of them required putting a person into orbit to synthesize?


      See Mike L Roy above re velcro and tang.


      What sort of zeitgeist does it demonstrate that the US elects to burn billions of dollars and the lives of real people for no tangible purpose?


      With as much money as was spent on hubble, would they have figured out an automated deployment scheme if manned flights were unavailable? What other applications might such controls technology have had? Might it be more valuable than logs of ant farm behavior in space?

      --
      - - - Patent applied for and deliver us from evil
    29. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by TillmanJ · · Score: 1

      That really doesn't require more than one successful flight, now does it?

    30. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Sorry no. PTFE's first industrial use was in the Manhattan Project to protect piping from uranium hexafluoride.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    31. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by AzrealAO · · Score: 1

      So did American's until the Space Pen was sold to them for a couple of dollars each. Now both American's AND Russians use Space Pens. Keeps all that nasty graphite out of the electronics, and out of the astronauts/cosmonauts lungs.

    32. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by clambake · · Score: 1

      I would go so far as to argue that the people who are most interested in the eventual manned exploration of space should be the people who should be *least* interested in supporting the status quo.

      I think you are right, but we DO support teh status quo simply because we feel that it's either this or nothing at all. If NASA's budget were cut to zero tomorrow, how likely would a new space agency's budget get approved? Would it be a matter of years, decades, or would it never happen?

    33. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Brian+Stretch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or when you read how successful the war with Iraq was because there were only 200 fatalities, and you realise that they're just counting the Americans.

      Or when you read how terrible the war with Iraq was because there were a few thousand Iraqi fatalities, and you realise that they're ignoring the many thousands of Iraqis per year that Saddam Hussein killed.

    34. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by shawn(at)fsu · · Score: 1

      Wow, I'm amazed that we were able to bring the race card in to issue with a topic that was about the shuttle. That was better than connecting the Marx brother to Kevin Bacon.

      The United States has lost two shuttle crews and one Apollo crew on the pad. So in 30 to 40 years we lost 17 people IIRC, I do not personally think that in unacceptable. Lets be honest space is dangerous, and I think it is unreasonable to think that travel to and from space will become routine any time soon. Even then, driving to the corner store is routine for most of us and it's not even safe. If you afraid of the risks don't do it but don't make the choice for others who want to take the risk. Is it expensive? Yes. Can we expect to make actually monetary returns on the investment? Probably not. But it must be done.

      Space ahs been claiming lives every since Giordano Bruno was burned alive by the Inquisition and it will continue to do so.

      --
      500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
    35. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Kintanon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      79 casualties? That wasn't a war... that barely qualifies as a bad traffic accident. A nightclub burned down and killed more people than that! That's fewer people than fit on a greyhound bus!
      Remember your history books, where fatalties were measured in thousands?
      War today is no big deal for the US, we're afraid of loss of life. Our entire society is afraid of death of the idea that we might die. We try to shelter our children from it with euphamisms, we paint death as the worst possible outcome, as something to be feared and hated.
      Is it any wonder that a nation so obsessed with itself, so narcissitic, wouldn't want to see death in spectacular form like a shuttle explosion? That's what REALLY shocked our nation about the WTC attacks. It pointed a big finger at every US citizen and said, "You too are mortal!" and we didn't like it.
      When we stop pretending death doesn't exist for us maybe we'll learn to live with it and accept that all men die, and everyone deserves the chance to choose the manner of that death.

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    36. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      Indeed. Until recently, American astronauts were soldiers...

      Armstrong was a civilian. I don't think 1969 qualifies as "recently" in the context of manned spaceflight.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    37. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by FatAlb3rt · · Score: 1

      Hey! Wait a minute, these apples look nothing like those oranges.

    38. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The current situation is so bad that 'nothing at all' would be better. At least it wouldn't bloat the deficit, and some fraction of the NASA employees who are actually competent might contribute to some private effort.

    39. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by thelexx · · Score: 1

      So now it's our job to go around the world enforcing our sense of ethics on all the petty dictators? Or just the ones with strategic value?

      --
      "Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world." - Alan Greenspan, 1999
    40. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "But how is it that we have had troops (US gov. employees) all over the world doing the most dangerous things for decades but 7 astronauts are unreasonable losses?"

      Life is cheap. Space shuttles are expensive.

    41. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by krumms · · Score: 1

      I think you're trivializing the subject.

      79 casualties? That wasn't a war... that barely qualifies as a bad traffic accident.

      Getting off on a bit of a tangent there. My point is that ten times the number of people died in a single war than have died in the last sixty-odd shuttle launches.

      Do the math, you Texan politician.

    42. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by gorgon · · Score: 1

      Zero-ing out NASA's buget would kill a lot of good science. I admit that the manned space flight program may not do that much that is scientifically interesting (but then a gain that's not its point. Nevertheless NASA's umanned programs do a lot of important science in space and here on Earth, so destroyinn NASA would be a major mistake.

      --

      And I'd be a Libertarian, if they weren't all a bunch of tax-dodging professional whiners.
      Berke Breathed
    43. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by aiabx · · Score: 1

      1,2 and 3) Everything discovered by the Hubble Space Telescope?
      -aiabx

      --
      Just this guy, you know?
    44. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by aiabx · · Score: 1

      It's a perfectly cromulent word.
      -aiabx

      --
      Just this guy, you know?
    45. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by EvanED · · Score: 1

      >>With as much money as was spent on hubble, would they have figured out an automated deployment scheme if manned flights were unavailable?

      They could have put it up just fine, but when they discovered that it was fucked the chance that they could have done something with machines is very small.

    46. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that is funny.

    47. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by EvanED · · Score: 1

      >>The circumstances of the Challenger disaster were quite different - that one could easily have been avoided, and should have been.

      Hindsight is always 20/20... I'll have to wait for the final report to come out, but for a while, Columbia's investigation looked a little like the Challenger's: NASA was warned about a problem, didn't fix it, crash. It's not as severe as the Challenger's poor joint design, at least from the perspective I have. But who knows... maybe in 10 years people will look back and say "they should have seen it coming." I doubt it, but you never know.

    48. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Un1v4c · · Score: 1

      "and you realise that they're ignoring the many thousands of Iraqis per year that Saddam Hussein killed." Yeah, because I'm sure that was keeping you up at night... :rolleyes: Any excuse to watch things go boom on TV...

      --

      I gave myself to Jesus, but now he never calls
    49. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone remind me again how many people Gorge W personally executed while he was governor of Texas.

    50. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by sean23007 · · Score: 1

      Or when you think about the thousands of Iraqis Saddam Hussein killed, and you realize that you're ignoring how many of them the United States incited to rebellion with the promise of support which never materialized.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    51. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by pfdietz · · Score: 1

      Then they would have launched the backup (they did have another mirror, made by another company, that was just fine.) Having done that, the first one would still have been usable for things like UV photometry.

    52. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by EvanED · · Score: 1

      Then why didn't they do that in the first place, instead of undertaking a hugely complicated and difficult operation to think up, design, build, and install the corrective lenses?

    53. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Kintanon · · Score: 1

      And it was even a tiny piddling war on the scale of wars in general. So that makes the shuttle loss even smaller on the scale of things.

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    54. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by beakburke · · Score: 1

      Yep, they didnt do a thing, and mean old Dubya just walked in and executed them, yep. That Bush personally had them all killed, had nothing to do with Texas's long standing death penalty. Which was there long before W was govenor.

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    55. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, nobody gives a fuck about coloured guys.
      So fucking what ?
      It is white man country, he created it and he will set the fucking rules.
      Don't like it ?
      Get the fuck out of here.

    56. Re:Why are we always nitpicking? by pfdietz · · Score: 1

      They could have done that if they had planned to build more than one from the beginning. Restarting production would have been more expensive.

  7. You forgot Creation Science by kahei · · Score: 1


    Remember, folks, if it has to have the word 'science' specially added to it, it's probably not a science. On the other hand it probably is taught in Texas schools.

    Just kidding, folks, I know there's lots of great stuff in Texas.

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
    1. Re:You forgot Creation Science by roca · · Score: 1

      You mean like Computer Science?

    2. Re:You forgot Creation Science by Larsing · · Score: 1

      Exactly!

      It's an art!

      (says an MSc CS & Eng)

      --
      Ethics is what you say you do. Morals is what you actually do.
    3. Re:You forgot Creation Science by orim · · Score: 1

      Well, CS is like Architecture... many ways to get it right, even more ways to get it wrong. Which branch of that huge tree you pick, that's a matter of
      a) education (your knowledge of the underlying methods/tools)
      b) style

      --
      "If you could only see what I've seen with your eyes..." - Roy Batty
  8. What is an acceptable risk? by I'm+a+racist. · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just wondering, what do people here feel is an acceptable risk?

    I would easily say that 1/62.5 is acceptable. In fact, I'm quite impressed that it's not 1/2. It's a really amazing accomplishment to do it at all. Back in the early days (even well into the Apollo program) it was pretty much given that this is a major risk to the lives of the astronauts.

    Could it possibly be that we've just gotten soft, and started to take space flight for granted (which would be good in it's own way)? Is it just that the fucking baby-boomers have no spine? If so, will this only get worse in time? For example, I just heard on Howard Stern this morning that the average person doesn't really consider someone an adult until around 26 years old. Are we just becoming less and less responsible and, consequently, less willing to accept the consequences of our actions (including death)?

    Or, as stated in the /. writeup, is this just another DC windbag looking to make some cash for his cronies?

    In any case, 2 crashes in 20 years is a very very good record. You'd be hard pressed to make the airline industry perform so well. Sure, the people on board the shuttle are worth more than those aboard commercial flights and the shuttle is worth more than a plane... still, it's quite impressive.

    --


    Down with Saudi Arabia!!!
    1. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Thag · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Let's put this in perspective. If one out of 62.5 airplanes crashed, that would be, what, about two plane crashes per major airport per day?

      Yes, this is a real problem.

      Jon Acheson

      --
      All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
    2. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

      The thing is, you can't run the world through statistics.

      If 1 in 10 people get in a car crash per year, that doesn't really indicate to you that if you crash once, you don't have to worry for a while or that if you haven't crashed in 9 years, you better work out your will.

      So long as the government adequatly funds the NASA team and allows them the cash to keep the shuttle fleet at high levels of maintenance, then I think the odds of 'crashes' will be much lower.

      So basically, my point is, the so called 'risk' of crash shouldn't matter, because there are some drivers who never or rarely crash because they're given adequate training and equipment. I think the shuttle was damaged when it exploded, and I'm sure the scientists will find a fix for that threat. Trial and error, people. Our record is just going to improve. No reason to stop now because we're scared.

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    3. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by bellings · · Score: 1

      I would easily say that 1/62.5 is acceptable.

      I would easilty say that 100% losses are acceptable, as long as it's you on the missions and not me.

      --
      Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
    4. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by I'm+a+racist. · · Score: 0

      Try comparing them based on mileage per capita and/or mileage per ton.

      Also, let's not forget, the environment in which the shuttle functions is far more extreme than any commercial aircraft. You can't compare a regular NY-->London flight with a trip into orbit.

      Then, just factor in some of the extra capabilities (which, in safety terms, are really liabilities), such as deploying equipment in vacuum.

      Sure, the shuttle's not perfect. It is certainly not cost effective. But, I would say that it has a rather outstanding safety record.

      --


      Down with Saudi Arabia!!!
    5. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 0

      I would go up on the shuttle if there was only a 50:50 chance of making it back, what do other slashdotters feel that there cut off point would be? (Poll please!)

      --
      Beep beep.
    6. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by bellings · · Score: 1

      Try comparing them based on mileage per capita and/or mileage per ton.

      Well, the Shuttle takes off at the Kennedy Space Center, and lands at the Edwards Space Center. It really doesn't go very far.

      But seriously, the shuttle travels about 200 useful miles -- 100 miles up, and 100 miles down. The fact that it happens to travel a half million miles in the wrong direction while it's doing that is more of a design flaw than a feature.

      --
      Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
    7. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Dr+Caleb · · Score: 1
      How about another perspective...Let's get a commercial aircraft to enter the earth's orbit at mach 12 and see what the failure rate is then.

      The only comparison in operations between the Shuttle and commercial avaition is the landing, during which the Shuttle has never failed.

      --
      "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." Mark Twain
    8. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i would still volunteer to ride the shuttle.

      1/62.5 seems an acceptable risk to me for the chance to explore, and i would be willing to put my life on the line to have a chance to ride the shuttle into orbit. although i would prefer to have the chance to walk on the moon.

    9. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      It is not a design flaw you fool, it is done to save a ton of money on fuel and on heat shielding.

      Airplanes could save some mileage and time by flying at 10ft above the ground, but for safety reasons, they first fly up to a safe cruising altitutde. When we calculate their mileage, we do NOT subtract out the height.

      So he was right, we should be calculating accidents per mile traveled, not accidents per flight or accidents per year.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    10. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by mikedaisey · · Score: 4, Interesting


      That's an incredibly specious arguement--if space travel scaled to the point that air travel is at, we would naturally expect the rate of failure to decrease--it would have to, as we wouldn't expand to that point until it had.

      It is a real issue, but bad analogies don't help with illuminating anything.

    11. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by ThaReetLad · · Score: 1

      The acceptable risk is the lowest achievable risk. If people are willing to risk their lives for humanity, then humanity has the moral duty to make it as safe as we possibly can. Otherwise we're just taking advantage of brave people and don't deserve their dedication.

      --
      You can't win Darth. If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine
    12. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by EisPick · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just wondering, what do people here feel is an acceptable risk?

      You can't weigh risk without looking at the benefits. And the lack of benefits is the biggest problem the Shuttle and ISS programs have.

      The Shuttle is not cost-effective for commercial space applications. The science conducted on the Shuttle and ISS is a joke.

      As an American tax payer, I'm outraged that billions of my tax dollars are being spent on a pork-barrel jobs program for aging engineers at NASA and bloated defense/space contractors.

      There just aren't enough commerical or scientific benifits to justify spending more money and lives on manned space flight. It's time to shut down the shuttle program, abandon the ISS, and refocus a much smaller NASA on orbiting telescopes and unmanned exploration of the solar system.

    13. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by turgid · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point entirely.
      Manned (personned?) space flight is dangerous. There are risks and some people choose to take those risks, because they believe that the potential benefits outweigh the risks.
      The point about the space shuttle is that it's more dangerous than it needs to be in other words, the risks are unnecessarily large.
      The space shuttle is a poor design. It should be replaced. It should have been replaced by now, but research into new vehicles keeps getting terminated.
      If the USA is serious about manned space flight, it needs to put it's will, courage, money and sweat where it's mouth and get on with it.

    14. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by donscarletti · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Just wondering, what do people here feel is an acceptable risk?

      Shooting up a crew of seven to do what an unmanned lifting rocket could do for a 20th the price, or simply to dick around on a space station for a few months is simply a stupid risk to make. Yuri Gargarrin proved that humans could exist in space, that was we need to know until we think of something worthwhile to actually do up there. Perhaps the Russians found the first worthwhile thing to do with people up in that stupid domain of nothingness: provide entertainment for tourists for money. But now, because of the shuttles being suspended, the Russians need to use their soyutzs to ferry people to and fro from that stupid floating junkpile we call the ISS and they don't have any in reserve to do usefull things like make money.

      You'd be hard pressed to make the airline industry perform so well

      ROTFLMAO! That's why pilots and flight attendants have a 30 - 80 day (depending on the length of flight) average lifespan? And don't give me no crap about how the space shuttle flys further in a trip, because all that goes wrong happens on takeoff (Chalanger) and landing (Columbia), just like a plane.

      Don't get me wrong, I am all for scientific discovery, but everything useful that can by done with humans in space was done in the sixties, now space "research" seems to be just a way to subsidise wothless contractors and risk people's lives, not that there arn't things worth dying for, it's just drumming in the point repeatadly that humans can live in space is hardly one of them. Maybe the money spent on maintaining those "reusable" monstrocities that cost more to maintain than any disposable rockets in existance (except maybe saturn V) could be spent in theoretical, non-dangerous, non-wasteful research by our friendly accedemics to find out how humans in space might actually benifit us as a race

      --
      When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
    15. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Anonymous+Canard · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I would easily say that 1/62.5 is acceptable. In fact, I'm quite impressed that it's not 1/2. It's a really amazing accomplishment to do it at all. Back in the early days (even well into the Apollo program) it was pretty much given that this is a major risk to the lives of the astronauts.

      Strangely enough, I had never considered combining the first and second failed shuttle missions into a single statistic. The space shuttle program is a system, with a failure rate that varies over time, not a single 20 year long experiment. I would rather say that the failure rate at the time of 51L was a little under 10%, and that the system now has a failure rate of a little over 1%, although good statistics don't really apply to such small sample sizes. Still I would hestitate a long time before replacing the known failure rate of a 20 year old system, with a new and unproven system which still has all of its bugs intact. Nor is NASA interested, if I guess rightly.

      In part I think that this is what annoys Joe Barton among others. It isn't that NASA is too risky, but too conservative. There are no new systems coming on line, and the old system isn't sexy any more. In its current state the STS is incredibly manpower intensive, and a lot of the reliability of the system depends on the training and full staffing of the shuttle program. If NASA were less risk adverse, they might be able to reset and design a new system, which over twenty years could approach the reliability of STS, but at a fraction of the cost in time and manpower.

      But thinking that way will make the system less reliable, not more; at least until the bugs have been worked out.

      --

      --
      BitTorrent in C -- LibBT
      http://www.sf.net/projects/libbt
    16. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by bigpat · · Score: 1

      You bring up an important point. There is risk in anything and our society seems hell bent on eliminating all risk at the expense of reason. I won't argue against the space shuttle on risk grounds alone as long as nobody is forcing these folks to go into the Space Shuttle, then the risk to their lives is there's alone (excepting the risk of loss of a valuable individual to the group)

      But this should be a cost(including lives and resources) benefit analysis. Earth orbit is not an unexplored frontier anymore, we have been sending people there for 40 years, we can see it from the ground and it has been used for productive purposes almost from the beginning. If NASA were to close up shop, it would still be explored. Nasa is sending people into orbit largely to do life sciences experiments on them. The program is very expensive and people die. So the question as I see it is: Should we be sending people into space using as much of our common resources as it takes with as much risk for the benefit we are recieving?

      If this was a mission to Mars, then yes, but until then the answer has to be no. I can't even remotely begin to see how someone can reason otherwise... please someone explain to me the great benefit for the American taxpayer of putting people into earth orbit at such great expense. They are not bringing back resources, or building any practical infrastructure, or even exploring an area with the potential of future expansion. The Science that they are doing is largely life sciences about the effects of low G environments. These effects are largely understood to be detrimental to human and other life, which is all that really needs to be understood for future exploration, basically we will just have to minimize or eliminate exposure to low G much like exposure to radiation. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand this point.

      Sure I would want to go on a shuttle ride given the risk alone, but that doesn't mean it is right to be taking people's money to do it.

      Risk be damned, I want my money spent either openning a new frontier or paying off the public debt here at home.

    17. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Alioth · · Score: 1

      In any case, 2 crashes in 20 years is a very very good record. You'd be hard pressed to make the airline industry perform so well.

      That statement has me gobsmacked it is just so wrong. The airline industry is *orders of magnitude* better than the Shuttle. Even Aeroflot and Asiana are orders of magnitude better than the Shuttle's record.

      Ignoring that - your earlier comment about people not considering someone an adult until they are around 26 + the general risk-averse culture is something I'm well aware of. I spent 7 years in the US, and I could never get used to still being treated as a child even though I'd left my home country and moved abroad. I found it a bit bizarre to be referred to as a "kid" at age 23 after having being treated as an adult back home since 18 years old. By the time I was 28 and still being looked at as a "kid" by many it had gone from bizarre to plain just patronizing.

      I think the way people are referred to in the news is very telling: at home, if an 18-year old makes the news, they are described as a man or a woman - in the US, they are described as a teenager. It seems to be lost on many that if you're responsible enough to die for your country as an 18 year old, you should be treated as responsible enough to buy a beer!

    18. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Thag · · Score: 1
      Try comparing them based on mileage per capita and/or mileage per ton.


      In other words, your orginal argument, which was based solely on losses per flight, doesn't hold water. Now you're changing the conditions of your argument and hoping I don't notice.

      Also, let's not forget, the environment in which the shuttle functions is far more extreme than any commercial aircraft. You can't compare a regular NY-->London flight with a trip into orbit.


      Sure I can, particularly on things like "number of flaming deaths," which is a statistic that is equally relevant to either type of flight. Because if I die, it doesn't matter to me how long the flight was.

      Then, just factor in some of the extra capabilities (which, in safety terms, are really liabilities), such as deploying equipment in vacuum.


      No, for this argument, those factors are irrelevant. Airliners require extra capabilites over buses and trains, but it is perfectly relevant to see what your chance of dying on a given trip is on a bus vs a plane.

      Sure, the shuttle's not perfect. It is certainly not cost effective. But, I would say that it has a rather outstanding safety record.


      "only 14 flaming deaths. Buy now!"

      Jon Acheson
      --
      All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
    19. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Fermier+de+Pomme+de · · Score: 1

      As if Barton's comparison of the shuttle to combat aircraft wasn't bad enough now you are comparing the shuttle to the pringles cans with wings that pass for commercial aircraft? Yup these things all fly but other than that you are comparing apples to oranges.

      It is just a little more difficult to get the shuttle up into orbit than it is to get a conventional aircraft to its cruising altitude. The machinery is more complex and not suprisingly less reliable when taken as a whole. I do think that a next generation platform should be aggresively developed but the hand waving and b.s. "stats" that are being thrown around don't really add any value to the discussion.

    20. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      people on board the shuttle are worth more than those aboard commercial flights...

      ... sure, and 2800 burocrats working in the WTC are worth more than 3500 civilians from Afghanistan and about 3500 civilians as well as over 15000 soldiers in Iraq (the pentagon doesn't tell you these numbers!).

      So 1 white is worth more than 8 arabs?

    21. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1

      Feynman

      Spacecraft are not like airliners. They're not as safe. But people still use them; they're used less often than airliners, and they do more work when they are used.

      But yes, the Space Shuttle does need to give way to newer and better spacecraft. If anyone still knows how to build them. Perhaps the Russians and Germans can help.

    22. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by bellings · · Score: 1

      So he was right, we should be calculating accidents per mile traveled, not accidents per flight or accidents per year.

      That was my point. The shuttle travels about 210 miles per mission. It just happens to go a half million miles out of its way to get there.

      We certainly should not be counting the half million extra miles it has to travel, since those have absolutely nothing to do with its purpose for existing. They're just a design decision made to make the 210 miles it travels easier to do.

      --
      Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
    23. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Comparing this to the Airline industry isn't that great of a comparison. There are thousands of flights everyday without an incident, so the numbers just don't compare. Although the value of the space flights (not monetary) are greater than any one of those thousands of airplane flights everyday.

    24. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      In any case, 2 crashes in 20 years is a very very good record. You'd be hard pressed to make the airline industry perform so well.

      Jeezus, are you trolling?

      It seems to me that even if you fold the airlines and NASA each into a frightfully complicated risk polynomial that factored in lives, money, cargo, miles (not counting orbits) and energy, then the shuttle's ~1/63rd failure rate is waaaaay too high. Another way to put it is: how many more billions do we have to pay NASA to bring at least the astronauts back alive? Yet another way: I don't see the sense of spending $5 billion (?) just to have a vehicle go ka-boom and kill 4-8 highly trained people every 60-or-so flights.

      The 1986 failure could have been survived by an escape system. Either the astronauts could egress from the intact compartment, or the compartment itself could have been made into a chuted landing pod. But that wasn't done. Only now do we have some sort of escape system, which still doesn't work in the event of a launchpad explosion.

      The 2003 failure could have been avoided simply by listening to the engineers who purportedly know about the equipment they have been studying. The shuttle lives on the ability to re-enter, and on top of that, a shuttle's airframe can't survive a tumble *. But that wasn't done either.

      If the airline industry operated with such a flagrant disregard for due diligence in saving lives and producing equipment with graceful failure modes, their executives would be lashed by the Congress inside of a month.

      To sum up ... it's not a matter of risks and flights-per-failure ... it's just that NASA allowed another shuttle to be destroyed, and has further besmirched the supposedly fine reputation of the rocket scientist. In this case, the rocket engineers themselves have been shamed ... since both failures were known problems that could have been fixed by further engineering. Yes, I realize that some of that is due to system design at the outset. But engineers can only do so much with a busted system; in the shuttle's case, a terrible lack of a rescue/survival system.

      * Tumbling happened in both cases. The 1986 explosion didn't destroy the shuttle; it broke apart in the airstream once the explosion made it tumble. The entire airframe disintegrated ... it wasn't a case of just the tail and wings tearing off. NASA has explained from this happens once the shuttle tumbles at Mach something-or-other -- which is a region the shuttle passes through twice every voyage. They say it flies like a brick, but it certainly doesn't survive the airstream like one. The 2003 event seemed to produce a tumble once the end data was analyzed ... and once that happened, burn damage to the wing was irrelevant .. the shuttle disintegrated and the pieces had to survive re-entry on their own.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    25. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by greenguy · · Score: 1

      Sure, the people on board the shuttle are worth more than those aboard commercial flights

      WTF? Who are you to decide which people are "worth more" than others?

      --
      What if I do the same thing, and I do get different results?
    26. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by homer_ca · · Score: 1

      Bad argument. You are comparing a mature commercial industry to manned spaceflight which is more or less still experimental. To be fair you should really compare it to the aviation in the 1910's or jet flight in the 1950's. They lost a lot of planes and test pilots.

    27. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, the people on board the shuttle are worth more than those aboard commercial flights

      You elitist idiot. Worth more to who? - you? society? Maybe if the one on the commercial flight is YOU, THEN the shuttle crew is worth more. NOT if it's me or one of my loved ones. Did you even read what you wrote before you posted? Howard Stern is your source for facts? I thought there was a minimum intelligence level to become an eletist pig - guess not.

    28. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by aiabx · · Score: 1

      A comparison to the Apollo system would also be appropriate, where we had 2 major accidents (1 fatal) in 11 or so manned flights. If you feel like quibbling, we can leave out Apollo 1 because it failed before launch, but still...
      -aiabx

      --
      Just this guy, you know?
    29. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by EvanED · · Score: 1

      >>But seriously, the shuttle travels about 200 useful miles -- 100 miles up, and 100 miles down. The fact that it happens to travel a half million miles in the wrong direction while it's doing that is more of a design flaw than a feature.

      What?! Dude, you got it backwards. The *useful* milage is that half a million miles. That's where the satellites are deployed. That's where the experiments are conducted. That where the photography is taken. That's where satellites are retrieved and fixed.

      The 200 miles up and down are the *least* useful miles on the whole trip!

    30. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Cyclometh · · Score: 1

      Why aren't you focusing some of that outrage on where the money really goes? NASA's budget for FY2004 is only $15.7 billion dollars, while the military's budget for the same period is $399.1 billion dollars.

      You can make the argument that the space shuttle program is inefficient in its context, but if you're going to be outraged as a taxpayer, get outraged about the things that are really soaking your wallet. Scrap one B2 bomber and you could launch the shuttle 3 times. THAT's an outrage.

    31. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by bellings · · Score: 1

      So, you're arguing against the space elevator?

      The half million miles is the useless miles. The purpose of the space shuttle is to get stuff 100 miles up in space for several days. The half million miles it happens to travel to do that just happens to be how the shuttle was designed to fulfill its purpose.

      I have absolutely no idea what value "travel a half million miles" has to the space program. If that's their goal, they should just put the astronauts in a Toyota to drive around a test track for a few years. People should also admit how useless a space elevator will be, since it doesn't do any of that "travel a half million miles" stuff, but instead just does useless job of lifting stuff into space.

      --
      Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
    32. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by EisPick · · Score: 1

      I agree that the Pentagon wastes more money in a nanosecond than I make in a year. But we do need national defense, so we can't solve the problem of DOD wastefulness by padlocking the doors.

      On the other hand, we do not need a manned space program. We can solve that problem by just pulling the plug.

    33. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by EvanED · · Score: 1

      If I thought that it would work reliably, without breaking, without falling down, and was capable of everything the shuttle fleet is, I'd be all for making it and greatly reducing the role of the shuttle. However, while I am not at all qualified to make any reasonable judgements on it, I have the slightest that creating such an elevator would be more trouble and cost more than keeping the shuttle going.

    34. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Cyclometh · · Score: 1

      I disagree. We do need national defense, but the argument against manned space exploration seems mostly these days to be "it's expensive", expressed in terms of outrage that anyone would dare to waste hard-earned taxpayer money in such a profligate manner. The hypocrisy annoys me, because if you want to find ways to save money, you can definitely still achieve a good national defense without the amount of money we spend now.

      I further disagree that we don't need a manned space program. Research and exploration are two things that the human race must do in order to thrive. We have no real frontiers left on this planet, and in my opinion, we need a frontier like space to push into, to fire the imagination and drive human development further. We ignore our own needs at our peril.

      Also, it is a fact that right now the species' eggs are all in one basket, so to speak. If we don't want to go the way of the dinosaurs the next time this planet finds itself on the back side of the 8-ball in the cosmic pool game, we better get our shit in one bag and start finding other places to live.

      And frankly, 15.7 billion dollars a year doesn't seem that much to me when stacked against the rest of the federal budget. And not all of that is the space shuttle program; much of it is devoted to unmanned missions and research that don't have anything directly to do with the shuttle program.

      I've heard it quoted that space shuttle missions cost about $759 million per, although I'm sure that's different on each mission. Still, at that figure, the 113 missions flown by the space shuttle program come out to $85.7 billion- since the shuttle program began. The Air Force's total budget for next year alone is over $95 billion dollars. The aircraft procurement budget for FY2004 is going to be about $16.5 billion, an amount that not only decreased by 3 percent from last year, but is still over a billion dollars more than NASA's entire budget!

      I'm not saying that we should start slashing military budgets willy-nilly, but if you want to look at how this nation organizes its priorities, you need look no further than the budget. I reject any argument that says space exploration is too expensive until we get our military budgets under control.

    35. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by bellings · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm positive that the space elevator will not fill the incredibly important "travel a half million miles through space" role that the Shuttle currently fills.

      Instead, it will simply lift stuff into space, which according to you isn't what the shuttle is designed to do at all.

      So, it's impossible for it to replace the Shuttle.

      --
      Slashdot is jumping the shark. I'm just driving the boat.
    36. Re:What is an acceptable risk? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why pilots and flight attendants have a 30 - 80 day (depending on the length of flight) average lifespan?

      WTF are you talking about? Drugs are bad M'kay.

  9. If... by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

    If Texas Rep. Joe Barton was in charge of all human exploration, we would all still be in Africa or even worse, we would have decided that some of us dying on land was NOT acceptable and so we would have all had to return to the oceans.

    --
    There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
    most of us won't be able to afford it.
    -- Lemmy
    1. Re:If... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...uhm.. wel.. he's from texas right?

    2. Re:If... by pfdietz · · Score: 1

      No, because real human exploration isn't dependent on government programs. Humans didn't spread out of Africa under command of some god-emperor, they spread out due to multitude of local individual decisions.

      The fact that manned spaceflight is concentrated in a bureaucracy shows it isn't really exploration, just a pale imitation.

  10. I've always said that by mrpuffypants · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    the best way to kill a bug on your nose is with a sledgehammer....

  11. Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) by AbdullahHaydar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From this link:

    "Barton's moment in the sun, up until late last year, was his advocacy of the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC)."

    So, apparently, this guy's not all bad...(although, apparently, that was politically motivated as well...)

    --


    Suicide Booth: You are now dead! Thank you for using Stop and Drop, America's favorite since 2008.
    1. Re:Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) by mjolnir_ · · Score: 1

      Another excellent example of congressional pork masquerading as a high-level commitment to major scientific research investment.

      Why? The SSC would be billions of dollars' worth of construction and logistics, not to mention the jobs created, tourism, and most of all, prestige for the region that landed it.

      Never mind that the US already had an advanced functional particle accelerator at Fermilab in "scenic" Batavia, IL, with an existing infrastructure and culture. Never mind that the SSC could have been built faster at less cost had it been constructed at Fermi.

      So careful about using the word 'advocacy.' Barton was 'advocating' that the US Govt spend a few billion dollars in his district, not some Illinois (most likely) Democrat's.

      -mj

    2. Re:Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) by sbaker · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No - it doesn't prove that at all. He's a Texas politician - and the SSC was built in Waxahachi Texas. (I live just a few miles from the large *semi*-circular hole in the ground that is the remains of that project. Do you still wanna bet that he had no vested interests in the project?

      --
      www.sjbaker.org
    3. Re:Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) by dr.badass · · Score: 1

      "Barton's moment in the sun, up until late last year, was his advocacy of the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC)."

      Um...that wasn't the one that could have (hypotheticaly) created a black hole that would have destroyed the earth, was it?

      Now that's what I'd call "a moment in the sun".

      *poof*

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
  12. What about... by mizidymizark · · Score: 0, Funny

    Tang. I mean if the shuttle program is stopped, will there still be the ever present supply of Tang still be available?

    1. Re:What about... by brakk · · Score: 1

      And what about those pens that write upside down?

      Don't take away my pens, Joe!

  13. Well... by larko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "The fine gentleman from Texas displays his outstanding grasp of statistics and engineering stating that 1 failure in ever 62.5 flights is NOT acceptable." I don't think there's any need to call him stupid just because you disagree with him. That is, the fact that he thinks 1 / 62.5 is too big does NOT mean he thinks that it's not small.. it just means he either places less value on space exploration or more value on human safety than you do. 1 death per 62.5 roller coaster riders is much too high... I'm not sure where I stand on space exploration right now myself - I think it's very interesting, and there is certainly the possibility of it being essential to our survival as a race - but the fact is that people are dying and whenever that happens we have to consider our priorities in terms that cannot, perhaps, be described with things you learn in high school math.

    1. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ..there is certainly the possibility of it being essential to our survival as a race - but the fact is that people are dying and whenever that happens we have to consider our priorities..

      Thats known as "Short Term-ism" and is almost always a bad thing. If people never did anything slightly dangerous on the basis that they may be hurt then we'd still be flinging mud at each other. After all, fire kills thousands of people a year, so we can't go messing with that dangerous fire stuff, can we?

      Space exploration can be dangerous, yes. However every astronaut and cosmonaut knows the dangers, just as a soldier knows the dangers of war. Its not like we're forcing people to risk their lives in space; they choose to do it because they believe in it. Why should we stop them from doing that? Driving to work carries more danger, statisticly, for an astronaut.

    2. Re:Well... by Alizarin+Erythrosin · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point of the statistic... it's 1 catastropic failure per 62.5 flights. That's, what, 7 people per flight? So 14 lost. 14 out of 875 or so flying (rough math), which is 1.6%. At 1 death per 62.5, which would be 3.07%, which is too high, I agree, if that were the actual statistic.

      Of course, my math may be way off, but we still hafta count the people who were on more then one flight, since they take that risk more then once, they still are a person who is flying on the shuttle.

      --
      There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
    3. Re:Well... by mikedaisey · · Score: 1

      "1 death per 62.5 roller coaster riders is much too high..."

      This is also a specious analogy--that WOULD be too many, but there are a lot more roller coaster rides made by more people every hour than go into orbit on the shuttle every year.

      This would be among the things you should have learned with high school math, which would enable you to speak about this and be taken seriously.

    4. Re:Well... by HeghmoH · · Score: 1

      Hi.

      We're not calling him stupid because he thinks 1/62.5 is too high. We're calling him stupid because 1/62.5 is the wrong number.

      --
      Mod down posts with a "Free Mac Mini/iPod" sig, they're spam!
    5. Re:Well... by larko · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean to use that analogy to talk about the validity of the statistics of the matter - I was trying to show that, depending on how much value you place on what your after, statistics are not valid measures of risk when used absolutely.

      Roller coasters are obviously not important to many people, and so 1 / 62.5 deaths is very much unacceptable. What if space flight is just as unimportant to this guy? All I'm trying to say is that a) don't judge his intelligence by his values, and b) we need to think about whether or not loss of life immediately is worth eventual gains from space exploration.

    6. Re:Well... by larko · · Score: 1

      Oh, lol :X

      I s'pose this is what I get for not reading carefully :p

    7. Re:Well... by larko · · Score: 1

      ..there is certainly the possibility of it being essential to our survival as a race - but the fact is that people are dying and whenever that happens we have to consider our priorities..

      Thats known as "Short Term-ism" and is almost always a bad thing. If people never did anything slightly dangerous on the basis that they may be hurt then we'd still be flinging mud at each other.

      I didn't mean "we have to consider our priorities" as "we shouldn't do it," I meant "we should consider whether or not it is worth it."

      What you said is known as a "fallacy." If people always did everything on the principle that they shouldn't NOT do things because they're slightly dangerous, we wouldn't exactly have come far either.

      Sorry, I don't mean to flame or whatever, but I think your logic is flawed. Considering the risks of a proposition is always important. I'm not suggesting that we never do things involving risk, but you seem to be suggesting that we never even think about it - and I disagree.

    8. Re:Well... by GrimReality · · Score: 1
      The fine gentleman from Texas displays his outstanding grasp of statistics and engineering stating that 1 failure in ever 62.5 flights is NOT acceptable." I don't think there's any need to call him stupid just because you disagree with him.

      As I see it, the poster (TheLoneCabbage) did not call him stupid. I think he agreed with the 'fine gentleman from Texas'. Yes, the poster disagrees with the 'fine gentleman from Texas', but that is for a different reason --his possible other motives.

      Also, larko seems to have a problem with stereotypes, and automatically labelled the poster's (TheLoneCabbage) comment as satire when he saw 'gentleman from Texas'. IMHO, you (larko) are the one who thinks the 'gentleman from Texas' is stupid--at least in your subconscious.

      Disclaimer: I have no personal enmity with larko.

      Thank you for understanding.
      GrimReality
      2003-05-09 15:36:18 UTC (2003-05-09 11:36:18-0400)

    9. Re:Well... by mikedaisey · · Score: 1


      I don't care about his values, particularly--I care that the analogy is a terrible one that clouds issues rather than clarifying them.

    10. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it's off by a few percent, big deal, it doesn't affect the argument!

      The real idiot is the person who discounts someone's statement because they get a number slightly wrong.

    11. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "1 death per 62.5 roller coaster riders is much too high..."

      Then again, there is a small difference between having a 5 minute bit of fun and exploring space, doing experiments in the name of science, and so on..

  14. No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by Thag · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Or, more accurately, NASA-controlled development of manned space flight.

    Given the huge amount of private-sector activity in the suborbital market currently, and NASA's pitiful track record in developing new launch vehicles, it's not at all unlikely that simply getting NASA out of the way will yield an economically feasable set of replacement vehicles in a shorter time frame for less money.

    Jon Acheson

    --
    All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
    1. Re:No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      There is a huge amount of private-sector activity in coming up with plans and neat picture of what thier suborbital systems will look like, someday. Maybe.

      You've got a bunch of people trying to Mercury out of the middle of the desert and suborbital flight.

      You've got the Japanese doing mini-Shuttle atmospheric tests and the Chinese making all kinds of wild claims about manned space, but they've not launched a thing with a person yet.

      So where is the private sector replacement for Shuttle?

    2. Re:No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by Binestar · · Score: 1

      Given the huge amount of private-sector activity in the suborbital market currently, and NASA's pitiful track record in developing new launch vehicles, it's not at all unlikely that simply getting NASA out of the way will yield an economically feasable set of replacement vehicles in a shorter time frame for less money.

      I doubt that this is true... shutdown NASA and you have alot of unemployed Rocket scientists, so you start up "WINN" (Winn Is Not Nasa) and you get alot of the same people in WINN as there were in NASA just from the fact that they are the people who know things about space exploration.

      The big shakeup needs to come in Management and the philosophy. Open space up to more commercialism at a lower price. NASA has the technology to offer Suborbital flights as well as the capability to do orbital flights as well. Get the price down to something that your average BigWig in business will be able to afford, and start making some money to go towards development.

      Do I think this will happen? No, not with NASA, but these new commercial ventures that are starting out are showing that it truely is possible to get inexpensive launch vehicles built and working.

      Lets just hope it is inexpensive enough that I can afford a ride someday. =)

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    3. Re:No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by Thag · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The big shakeup needs to come in Management and the philosophy. Open space up to more commercialism at a lower price. NASA has the technology to offer Suborbital flights as well as the capability to do orbital flights as well. Get the price down to something that your average BigWig in business will be able to afford, and start making some money to go towards development.


      I agree, but NASA is absolutely NOT the right group to do this. NASA is a bureaucracy, an organization that is first and foremost a political organization. As such, it rewards political ability, NOT efficiency, and NOT forming a workable plan.

      I mean, how many of its primary design goals did the shuttle meet? Almost none: it wasn't reusable enough, didn't lower launch costs, never flew nearly enough. Tell me, who got fired?

      Jon Acheson
      --
      All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
    4. Re:No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by Guppy06 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Given the huge amount of private-sector activity in the suborbital market currently,"

      Absolutely none. There's a few dozen companies talking about this and that, but that's all it is: Talk. The Chinese have done a heck of a lot more with manned spaceflight than the US private sector has.

      "and NASA's pitiful track record in developing new launch vehicles,"

      Compard to...? Who else uses a launch vehicle capable of making repairs in space?

    5. Re:No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      --I agree, but NASA is absolutely NOT the right group to do this. NASA is a bureaucracy, an organization that is first and foremost a political organization. As such, it rewards political ability, NOT efficiency, and NOT forming a workable plan.---

      by your logic, any organization is a bureaucracy. the hot dog vendor on the street is a bureaucracy that rewards political ability NOT efficiency.

      please stop spewing garbage.

    6. Re:No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by LifesABeach · · Score: 0

      1 failure in every 62.5 flights

      i can not help but wonder if the fine senator's comments couldn't be 'a diamond in the ruff'. for example, the logistics of a manned space flight to the moon are now defined. therefore a manned flight to mars can be calculated. if nasa cannot go to the moon, or mars, should business wait?

      maybe its time, maybe there are enough resources in enough hands so that *maybe* people do not have to rely on nasa for answers. and just what new answers has nasa given us this past generation? business can easily coordinate with nasa by launching outside of the u.s., or in the u.s.. as for the 'military secrets' of space flight, well, even the north koreans can launch.

      so, lets look at space; what can space offer business, that we can't get on earth already? i think unlimited amounts of energy would be the very least. real estate would no longer be any kind of issue. commute time? how about in minutes. product logistics delivery? just wait within 24 hours and send it down.

      could it be that its time to repackage nasa so that those interested would consider nasa as an advisor in future space commerce?

      could it be that the fine senator from texas for all the wrong reasons, could be right?

    7. Re:No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So where is the private sector replacement for Shuttle?

      Closer nearby timewise than the NASA replacement for shuttle, unless they just unmothball and retrofit one of their old Big Dumb Booster designs.

      What NASA doesn't have is a space program. It has (or had, in its heyday) brute force backed by implausibly huge resources.

      It's like doing architecture using a bazillion slaves, log-rolled sleds, and earth ramps. It works, but it's not really a technology. There's little you can learn from it if you actually want to up the deployment scale, drop the price, or achieve repeatable results with reusable tools.

      What the new private space companies are doing, in this analogy, is more like the invention of bricks and mortar. It won't do anywhere near as much yet, but it's the right way forward.

    8. Re:No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by Thag · · Score: 1
      "Given the huge amount of private-sector activity in the suborbital market currently,"


      Absolutely none. There's a few dozen companies talking about this and that, but that's all it is: Talk. The Chinese have done a heck of a lot more with manned spaceflight than the US private sector has.


      Ever heard of the X-Prize? Currently, you have Armadillo, who have sent up several test vehicles, and Scaled Composites, who demoed their vehicle and have flown the first stage, and XCor, who are flying their first test vehicle...

      Please update your information.

      "and NASA's pitiful track record in developing new launch vehicles,"

      Compard to...? Who else uses a launch vehicle capable of making repairs in space?

      NASA has not developed a successful new man-rated launch system in the last 35 years, despite billions of dollars spent. Note that I list Shuttle as unsuccessful, because although it flew, it achieved almost none of its primary goals (cheap, safe, frequent space launches with rapid turnaround).

      Jon Acheson
      --
      All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
    9. Re:No, End NASA-controlled Manned Space Flight. by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Ever heard of the X-Prize?"

      Yes, I've heard quite a lot of talk about the X-Prize. That was kind of my point.

      "Currently, you have Armadillo(...), Scaled Composites(...), XCor(...),

      "Test vehicles" this, "first stage" that... Were they full-scale vehicles? Could somebody have ridden in the vehicle right now? Has there been anything more than a thesis paper, flashy computer graphics and a few thousand dollars spent at the local model rocketry store?

      China has sent up empty Shenzhou capsules that, for all intents and purposes, could have carried a taikonaut into space. Ignoring the differences between "low earth orbit" and "sub-orbital parabola," has anybody in the private sector anywhere done anything remotely similar?

      "NASA has not developed a successful new man-rated launch system in the last 35 years,"

      And who has? Are you referring to the Soyu^H^H^Hhenzhou, perhaps?

  15. agreed... by joebeone · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I know this might be hard for the Slashdot crowd but the Rep. is right.

    Columbia and Challenger were not destroyed because of an O-ring or a piece of foam... they were destroyed because NASA as an organization failed [astron.berkeley.edu]. We need to fix NASA before we continue to launch shuttles... which have become glorified construction and grocery delivery vehicles as opposed to exploratory or R&D craft.

    1. Re:agreed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The purpose of sending missions to space is to gather information.
      It is a valid question to ask wether sending people instead of sensor packages and robots is cost effective.
      I don't care about the dead personnel as a few lives are a nominal sacrifice. What I do question is wether the equipment to support them is a burden that could be replaced with better things.

    2. Re:agreed... by xdroop · · Score: 1
      Disagree.

      When the groceries you are delivering are the International Space Station, you need something reliable. Think about this: would you want to build a science station in another state, completely suported by nothing more than three Formula 1 cars? No, you use tried and true Chevy/Ford/Toyota trucks.

      Yes, we absolutely should have an R&D vehicle program, but that program can't support other programs on top of it.

      --
      you should read everything on the internet as if it had "but I'm probably talking out of my ass" appended to it.
    3. Re:agreed... by YetAnotherAnonymousC · · Score: 2, Funny

      No, you use tried and true Chevy/Ford/Toyota trucks.

      That's what I'm waiting for before I go into space: The Ford F-950 Space Shuttle Heavy Duty (King Ranch edition, with comfortable all-leather interior). =)

    4. Re:agreed... by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      Columbia and Challenger were not destroyed because of an O-ring or a piece of foam... they were destroyed because NASA as an organization failed.

      Interesting link. However, as it pointed out, nothing could have been done to save the crew even if the shuttle had been imaged after launch. What we might have had was an enormously painful ordeal watching them die slowly.

      The only organizational failure was (perhaps) an insufficient emphasis on eliminating the foam shedding problem. I do remember hearing shortly after the disaster that this main fuel tank was an older model, not the newer version that largely eliminated this problem.

      So, from that perspective, perhaps it was a budget-related problem.

      I personally favor going on with the shuttle missions. As others have pointed out, those involved know the risks. Grounded shuttles wouldn't be $1 billion space vehicles, they'd be monuments to our failed resolve.

      Eventually it would be great to get private enterprise into the space business. It should come once they figure out the ...PROFIT! step. ;-)

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    5. Re:agreed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The purpose of sending astronauts into space is to consume federal funds. All the justifications are rationalizations used to conceal this fact.

    6. Re:agreed... by joebeone · · Score: 1
      The only organizational failure was (perhaps) an insufficient emphasis on eliminating the foam shedding problem.

      That's a doosey of an organizational failure and exactly what happened with the O-rings on Challenger. There are definitely signs of production pressures in Columbia as well... and the Shuttle is always an R&D effort.

    7. Re:agreed... by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      That's a doosey of an organizational failure and exactly what happened with the O-rings on Challenger.

      No. With Challenger, there was a "do not launch" suggestion from engineers (too cold).

      No one suggested scrapping the Columbia mission due to the fuel tank condition.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    8. Re:agreed... by AxelTorvalds · · Score: 1
      What about taking a project that has been a failure in every way and forcing it in to practice and the absolute billions of dollars and the lives it has cost?

      The shuttle was supposed to be a cheap way to get in to space, it's by far the most expensive way right now and it's got a reliability problem.

      The failure is that NASA was never accountable for the claims made about the shuttle that never were true and they have kept with the program, spending billions of dollars building new shuttles.

    9. Re:agreed... by joebeone · · Score: 1
      There were recurring anamolies in both tragedies...

      O-ring erosion was not part of the design... NOTHING is supposed to hit the Shuttle during launch and there had been repeated damage to thermal tiles in earlier flights do to foam.

      This is part of what Vaughan talks about when she talks about "normalization of deviance"... unpredicted anamolous behaviour of the craft that is not in line with engineering requirements and the deviant behavior being accepted as routine. If both of these problems were given the attention they deserved--especially realizing that they could be very serious if mangified--then we would not have had these particular launch failures.

    10. Re:agreed... by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      What about taking a project that has been a failure in every way and forcing it in to practice and the absolute billions of dollars and the lives it has cost?

      It has not been "a failure in every way". Seen any shots from the Space Telescope lately?

      The shuttle was supposed to be a cheap way to get in to space, it's by far the most expensive way right now and it's got a reliability problem.

      More to the point, it is the only manned vehicle we have right now. Should we really put the entire manned space flight program on hold?

      The failure is that NASA was never accountable for the claims made about the shuttle that never were true and they have kept with the program, spending billions of dollars building new shuttles.

      Worse yet, NASA has spent billions developing new vehicles, none of which were built. Don't get me wrong, I think NASA should be overhauled, and preferably replaced by private ventures. However, I don't think it's acceptable to halt our manned space program in the meantime.

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
  16. I think he missed an important distinction... by Bendy+Chief · · Score: 1
    Was the Columbia disaster not preventable? I distinctly remember it being mentioned on television and the Internet that engineers witnessed the wing damage incident and chose not to ground the flight. It was a bad call, in retrospect, but that doesn't make the shuttles fundamentally unsafe.

    I think the poster was right about Rep. Barton and Lockheed-Martin.

    1. Re:I think he missed an important distinction... by program21 · · Score: 1

      The wing damage happened as the shuttle was lifting off. At that point, there's not much you can do except wait for it to reach orbit.
      Once it got there, the engineers looked at the video and concluded it wasn't a problem; even though it seems they were wrong, there wasn't anything they could have done. Columbia was the oldest of the shuttles and couldn't reach ISS, the crew didn't have the material or the expertise to repair any damage, and it would have taken at least 2 weeks to get another shuttle into orbit to help.

      --
      This has been a test. Had this been a real emergency, we would have fled in terror and you would not have been informed.
    2. Re:I think he missed an important distinction... by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      The foam fell off during launch.

      No Shuttle has ever aborted a launch and at that point if I remeber right would have meant an orbit and re-entry, which if the foam did cause this, would have lead to Shuttle's destruction anyway.

      It's not as if the foam fell off, they looked and it and said "Fuck-it, lets light this candle", shoved the crew in and launched.

    3. Re:I think he missed an important distinction... by fixmaster · · Score: 1

      *every* mistake is preventable in retrospect,
      making mistakes however is unpreventable...

      There's no room in the drug world for amateurs.

    4. Re:I think he missed an important distinction... by Bendy+Chief · · Score: 1
      OK. NASA's website has some decent info about the whole incident, but it's not terribly well organized into a clear hierarchy; ie. a timeline prior to launch. They have one prior to breakup, but that doesn't do us a lot of good regarding this discussion.

      I'm well aware that you can't just turn around and land when you have however many millions of pounds of thrust below you. Must have sucked to be those engineers.

    5. Re:I think he missed an important distinction... by mikerich · · Score: 1
      The wing damage was caused during the ascent to orbit - so the craft was already well on its way.

      The collision was only recognised when the Shuttle was in orbit. But even then, the experts concluded that the damage was superficial and the vessel would survive re-entry.

      If they had seen something during ascent (and they didn't) I suppose they could have either ordered an abort and returned the orbiter to Kennedy or sent it on a TransAtlantic hop to Dakar. But they have never performed such an abort and that would have risked the crew as well.

      What I'm getting worried about is that the implication coming from the investigation team is that the foam shedding problem was not new and that the Shuttle team knew the foam was impacting on the tiles and causing damage.

      But they figured that the Shuttle was clearly surviving the damage which meant that foam impacts weren't as serious as first thought and that the Shuttle didn't need to be absolutely perfect to fly.

      And if it took a bit more damage that clearly meant it was a little bit more resilient.

      Now stop me if this sounds familiar, but this was the same condemnation laid at NASA after Challenger. With Challenger NASA continued to issue launch waivers for the Shuttle even though launch conditions were outside their own constraints. NASA came to the conclusion that if everything went alright that meant the constraints were wrong. IIRC it was Feynmann who said they were playing Russian Roulette with their ships. When a small problem occurred, NASA didn't spend enough energy fixing the problem, they trivialised it.

      And now it looks like they've done it with Columbia.

      A bloody tragedy.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    6. Re:I think he missed an important distinction... by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      You can't ground the flight once it's already in orbit, which is when they discovered that Columbia "took a hit".

      Too late. Done with. If it turns out that NASA screwed the pooch with regards to the External Tank, then yeah, they got a problem.

    7. Re:I think he missed an important distinction... by AzrealAO · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are several abort scenarios, which is why the shuttle can't take off if weather over any of the backup landings sites is bad.

      The problem is that the foam strike wasn't found until some time after the launch (several days actually, if I remember correctly)

  17. 1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by steelerguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is obviously not a shortage of astronaughts wanting to go up in the space shuttle. It is not like we are strapping space monkies into the shuttle and sending them up against their will. These are smart educated people, who train hard to be astronaughts and are willing to give their lives to go into space and be pioneers. If they choose this risky business then so be it, I applaud them.

    I'm not saying there is no room for improvement in the shuttle program, but some bozo politician from Texas should keep his word hole shut, when it comes to issues like this. When people are probing the frontiers some are bound to die. He should look at the history of the state he represents, it was not a bunch of sissy frontiersmen who wanted to stable the exploration and charting of Texas.

    1. Re:1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I couldn't care less about the lives of the astronauts. They are making (hopefully) an informed decision when they ride the shuttle. I do, however, think the possibility (probability?) of losing an orbiter (at several billion taxpayer dollars a piece) every 50-60 launches is unacceptable.

      We should license the Soyuz design from the Russians and fly those until a shuttle replacement can be built.

    2. Re:1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by NonSequor · · Score: 1
      I would tell you that you are being far too callous, but it is apparent that you don't care about that.

      What you might care about is that we might not be able to afford to build a new shuttle every 50 or 60 flights. The shuttle program is already vastly more expensive than it was intended to be. We can do better than the shuttle and I think it may be worthwhile to consider grounding the shuttle until we have a more cost-effective replacement. Hell, we might even be able to be competitive in the satellite launch market again.

      --
      My only political goal is to see to it that no political party achieves its goals.
    3. Re:1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by duffbeer703 · · Score: 1

      You're a real ass.

      Was it acceptable for General Motors to continue selling pickup trucks that burst into flames in minor collisions to save money rather than redesign the fuel tanks?

      There have been previous incidents where heat-shielding tiles were damaged by ice or other debris at takeoff... yet no procedures were in place to inspect critical heat tiles for damage.

      The shuttle was originally intended to replace expensive booster rockets and save money. The only problem is, the shuttle has been frozen in time since the late 70's and the cost of sending conventional rockets into space has dropped dramatically.

      If you want to compare this congressmen to a wild-west frontiersman, you should put history in perspective. In the 1870's, the US Army was still using civil war era breechloading rifles, while the cowboys and indians were using repeating rifles that kicked the shit out of soldiers on a regular basis.

      The shuttle is that obsolute breechloader -- get rid of it.

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    4. Re:1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Is delivering crews and parts to the IIS "exploring the frontier"? Is putting some grade-school experiment in space actually doing exploration? Is sending John Glenn back into space somehow a valuable scientific endeavor?

      Hell, when was the last time the shuttle left the solar system, which would probably be about the minimum it could do and still be considered exploring?

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    5. Re:1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by tony_gardner · · Score: 1

      Clearly the solution is to upgrade all the astro-naughts to astro-ones.

      This upgrade should licenced under the GPL, and free (as in beer). Come to think of it I think I'll follow that upgrade path too. Off to the pub!

    6. Re:1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by DeadScreenSky · · Score: 1

      I am not sure if we should be looking for ethical advice from someone who would say statements like this:
      He should look at the history of the state he represents, it was not a bunch of sissy frontiersmen who wanted to stable the exploration and charting of Texas.

      What, like there was no one living in Texas already at that point? Should NASA start promoting murderous greedy thugs to leadership positions? Is that the 'lesson' of Texas' history?

      --
      There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion. -- Francis Bacon
    7. Re:1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is obviously not a shortage of astronaughts wanting to go up in the space shuttle. It is not like we are strapping space monkies into the shuttle and sending them up against their will. These are smart educated people, who train hard to be astronaughts and are willing to give their lives to....

      Hey, lets send H1B's up

    8. Re:1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we need shuttle-lite.

      1/10 the calories, and when it blows, it's not too much to pop another in the microwave.

    9. Re:1 accident in 62.5 flights IS acceptable by sean23007 · · Score: 1

      Well, look at it this way: Texans pride themselves on the geographic size of their state, and outer space is probably big enough that it might be able to Mess With Texas. ;)

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
  18. How about Soyuz, then? by yoz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Russian Soyuz spacecraft has made 1500 successful launches in a life of over 30 years. Several hundred of those have been manned, with only one catastrophe.

    Unlike the Shuttle, the Soyuz is not a reusable craft. The Shuttle was designed to be reusable to cut down on the cost of manned spaceflight - the irony being that the cost of the two lost Shuttles is greater than all the money spent on Soyuz craft so far.

    More information here.

    1. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by skillet-thief · · Score: 1

      So it turns out that the real reason we decided to build a reusable spacecraft, is that it is more like car: you can just jump in your shuttle, fly up to the stars, then come home and park it in front of your house.

      It's the American space dream.

      --

      Congratulations! Now we are the Evil Empire

    2. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well Soyuz has two problems:
      1. Russia doesn't have enough money to build lot of them.
      2. US is unwilling to buy Soyuz spacecrafts from Russia.

    3. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Several hundred of those have been manned, with only one catastrophe. Two catastrophes involving loss of astronaut life (one dead on Soyuz 1, burned up on reentry, and three on Soyuz 11, depressurised in the upper atmosphere). One catastrophe involving loss of ground crew on an appalling scale (Nedelin). And one spectacular cock-up involving a supply ship and a space station, which thankfully was survived by all concerned, including the station. Oh, and they buggered up their last landing on return from Station. Landed five hundred miles or so off target.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    4. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by plopez · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree with the soyuz solution. There is nothing a shuttle can do that soyuz + iss can't, and then some. THe fact that it landed 300 miles (the number I heard) off target and the crew survived means it is robust. If the shuttle had 'landed' that far off course it would have killed everyone inside. We could have several ready to go in case of an emergency on the iss.

      The shuttle was driven by pork barrel politics, where the largest number of contractors got a piece of the pie. As such it is a gold plated turkey.

      If we added the shuttle budget to iis + souz development, we would have a great combination.

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    5. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by spakka · · Score: 2, Informative

      Soyuz 1, burned up on reentry
      Nitpick: Crashed due to parachute failure, but didn't burn up. (Still not great for the occupant).

      One catastrophe involving loss of ground crew on an appalling scale (Nedelin)
      This accident predates the Soyuz program by several years.

    6. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      For one, the cost of living in Russia is much lower, for a long time a scientist with a doctorate education didn't get much more pay than any field of work that required no degree, a more accurate comparison may be by man-hours.

      It is true that the Shuttle is too unsafe but I think it does a lot more in a mission than a Soyuz could.

    7. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by dfenstrate · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unfortunately, the soyuz, at a 7.5 ton payload capacity, has only a fraction of the shuttle's 25 ton capacity.

      The current state of affairs is that only the shuttle fleet can get so much material into space in one shot. Russia had a few heavy launch projects in the works, but i think they've all been canned due to the dismal financial state over there.

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    8. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      There are quite a few cost-effective designs for heavy lifters. Once you take the humans out of the picture you can save a LOT of money. The shuttle iis a VERY expensive way to get anything into orbit.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    9. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by mfrank · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you need the heavy lift capacity to put up ISS parts. You'd have a good point if the ISS wasn't even more of a waste of money than the shuttle.

      A Saturn V equivalent could put up four times as much as a shuttle for less money, if it was well-designed. There's just no compelling need right now for putting up large payloads.

      The shuttle was built to service a space station. The ISS exists solely to justify the shuttle. They can't do science with only three people aboard. The US manned space program is nothing more than a tautology :)

    10. Re:How about Soyuz, then? by Criton · · Score: 1

      The soyuz has an exelent saftly record but can only carry 3 people and little cargo. It's well suited to be a fairy craft as thats what the present version were designed for from the outset. Now nasa can learn a few things from the russians on what to do to the shuttle one loose the hydrizene Nitrogentetraoxide RCS and use something easier and cheaper to work on like lox and kerosene. Two a cargo shuttle think shuttle stack minus the orbiter also an orbiter LEO payloads of 100+ tons can be achived. An unmanned shuttle orbiter could carry 80,000lbs. vs 60,000. Also they need to build a mini shuttle same presurised volume and thus crew size as the old shuttle but no cargo bay. Again the russians have experiance here as in 1994 they almost built a shuttle half the size of STS but would have been dirt cheap to run it was called MAKS.But their partners in europe backed out. Too bad as it had a payload of 9tons more than soyuz and would have costed $978 a pound for it to launch cargo.

  19. is $13,800 a lot of money? by bongoras · · Score: 1

    Am I misreading this chart? It shows Lockheed-Martin as the top contributor @ $13,800. I can't find anywhere that says "figures represent 100's of thousands of dollars" or "figures in millions" or anything like that.

    If a Congressman can be bought for a pissant sum like $13,800 that is truly scary.

    Of course... it's also possible that he's honest.

    nahhhh.

    1. Re:is $13,800 a lot of money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, if that's all it takes, why doesn't slashdot buy it's own congressman? Just start a collection.

    2. Re:is $13,800 a lot of money? by philipdl71 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, don't forget too that Lockheed-Martin and the aerospace industry make millions on every shuttle launch. They are all for keeping the status quo. The shuttle is an expensive cash hog which costs $500 million dollars every time it launches. A more scaled down piece of technology less grandiose could be launched for much less, not to mention the fact that grounding the shuttle flights costs the aerospace industry money right now that they could be making.

      The implication that $13,000 has anything to do with that congressman's decision is absurd. If one were to believe that kind of money had an effect on him he would be pushing for continued launches to keep the aerospace industry making money off of their cash cow.

  20. Welcome to the world of the government by BoomerSooner · · Score: 0

    Good luck. You'll need it.

  21. Senator Byrd by AtariAmarok · · Score: 2, Funny

    If we can get it so that the shuttles are built, launched, and landed in West Virginia, and renamed as well (i.e, "Senator's Bird"), we can get the program more than adequately funded as a pork program by Senator Robert Byrd.

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
    1. Re:Senator Byrd by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please mod this up. If the editors don't get why this is really clever, here's a good place to start.

      In other words, it's funny--laugh!

  22. I'm surprised at the source by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Given that Joe Barton represents the state of Texas, home of NASA, this is a major surprise.

    Most Texans (and especially Houstonians) take extreme pride in the space programme. You only have to look at the name of Houston's NBA and MLB franchises - the Rockets and the Astros - to see how synonymous the words "Houston" and "space" have become. ("Houston" was even the first word spoken on the moon.)

    But lets look at the rationale behind this "frank" admission.

    The longer the shuttle fleet is grounded, the more likely it is that the fleet will be put through a series of expensive upgrades and overhauls. Furthermore, the more likely it is that serious amounts of money will be spent on looking at the next generation of NASA manned orbiters. (There's no way that George W. Bush, the former Governor of Texas, will want to go down in history as the President that mothballed NASA and destroyed a national symbol of pride - that's not the way he wants to be remembered.)

    And just who'll benefit from all that extra money pouring into space research? Why, astronautical and aeronautical engineering companies, oil, power and chemical firms, big and small, especially those that are based in (yes, you guessed it) Texas.

    Is grounding the shuttle fleet for the next ten years a good idea? Well, I don't have all the facts but the failure rate does suggest that the programme does need to be more closely examined.

    Is a new orbiter the best way forward? Again, I'm not on the NASA payroll so I'm not the most informed individual but I'd argue that we need a reusable platform for getting to and from the International Space Station now, and a more modern, flexible and efficient replacement ASAP.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    1. Re:I'm surprised at the source by Palshife · · Score: 1

      Heh, you cant possibly be from Houston, not when you spell program like that ;)

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    2. Re:I'm surprised at the source by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Rep Barton doesn't represent Texas, he represents the 6th District which is near Dallas.

      He represents Fort Worth, Arlington and Ennis.

      The Shuttle was built in California, the companies that run the Shuttle ground program are from Washington and Colorado and California. The company that builds the boosters is in Utah. And all the Shuttles are worked on in Florida and California. Replacement for Shuttle will most likely be built in California.

      I don't think it's fair to point at Texas for all of this.

      Lockmart Space stuff is in California, Florida, Colorado, Texas.
      Boeing Space stuff is in Missouri, California, Florida, Washington

      Can't blame it all on Texas

    3. Re:I'm surprised at the source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree that Houston takes a lot of pride in their NASA roots, but I'm afraid they can't take credit for naming the baskteball team. The Rockets were originally from San Diego (1967-1971) Not sure why they where called the Rockets, but it was also the same year that the Seattle SuperSonics entered the league...

    4. Re:I'm surprised at the source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He represents major cities that were nearly hit by the Columbia debris. I have to wonder if he's been getting letters from constituents about that.

    5. Re:I'm surprised at the source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are, of course, correct but the fact that the Rockets name was kept even after the franchise moved from San Diego to Houston has a lot to do with the space link that the name carries.

      After all, a lot of US sports franchises have moved over the years (not something I generally approve of, but a reality nevertheless) and a great many of them have changed their names once they've settled in their new homes.

      A few I can think of off the top of my head:

      Dallas Texans (AFL/NFL) became the Kansas City Chiefs;
      Houston Oilers (NFL) became the Tennessee Titans;
      Cleveland Browns (NFL) became the Baltimore Ravens (the league let Cleveland "keep" the Browns name);
      Quebec Nordiques (NHL) became the Denver Avalanche;
      Washington Senators (MLB) became the Minnesota Twins;
      Washington Senators (MLB) became the Texas Rangers (the second time a team called the Senators left Washington); and
      St Louis Browns (MLB) became the Baltimore Orioles.

      Of course, many teams that have moved have retained their original nicknames.

      But, in the Rockets case, their new town fit their name better than anywhere else could, so they kept it. And, since their uniform redesign in the mid 1990s, the Rockets have played up the space connection even more, through the rocket and other elements on their jerseys.

    6. Re:I'm surprised at the source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So the New Orleans Jazz kept their name because of the strong jazz and blues heritage in Utah?

      Just a few off the top of my head (for the ones who kept their names):
      Charlotte Hornets (NBA) -> New Orleans
      Minnesota Lakers (NBA) -> Los Angeles
      Vancouver Grizlies (NBA) -> Memphis
      Boston Redskins (NFL)-> Washington
      Cleveland Rams (NFL) -> Los Angeles -> St. Louis
      Boston Braves (MLB) ->Milwaukee -> Atlanta
      Philadelphia Athletics (MLB) -> Kansas City -> Oakland
      Brooklyn Dodgers (MLB) -> Los Angeles
      New York Giants (MLB) -> San Francisco
      Chicago Cardinals (NFL) -> St. Louis -> Phoenix -> Arizona
      Baltimore Colts (NFL) -> Indianapolis
      Atlanta Flames (NHL) -> Calgary
      Minnesota (North) Stars (NHL) -> Dallas
      Baltimore Bullets (NBA) -> Washington

      Note that for their first year, the St. Louis Browns were actually the Milwaukee Brewers (the present-day Brewers started their first year as the Seattle Pilots).

      I also don't think that it is too unusual that if your nickname is the Rockets that you have a picture of a rocket on your jersey. I wouldn't necessarily attribute to playing up the space connection when it is already in the name.

  23. Soldiers aren't worth as much. by nuggz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Face it, the US population doesn't care about soldiers lives.

    If you die, in service, your family might get enough for a funeral.
    If you happen to be in an office building that is the target of a high profile attack (Sept 11) your family will get millions.

    It's sickening.

    1. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Troll

      "Face it, the US population doesn't care about soldiers lives."

      That's why the US pulled out of Somalia, because the population didn't care that American soldiers were being drug through the streets.

      That's why the US Central Command was hesitant about using soldiers on the ground in Afghanistan, because they *knew* Americans didn't care about how many soldiers died over there.

      "Surviving spouses of veterans who died after Jan. 1, 1993, receive $935 a month. For a spouse entitled to DIC based on the veteran's death prior to Jan. 1, 1993, the amount paid is $935 or an amount based on the veteran's pay grade."

    2. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you die, in service, your family might get enough for a funeral. If you happen to be in an office building that is the target of a high profile attack (Sept 11) your family will get millions.

      It's sickening.

      Sign up for a job where the objective is to kill people who are trying to kill you and every day you are still alive should be a blessing.

      And somehow it's sickening that people who should know fully what dangers their job entails get less tv time than people who are trying to work in a non-dangerous work environment? Sounds fine to me - "another person who expected to die, died" doesnt sound like news.

    3. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by duffbeer703 · · Score: 1

      $935/month? Big whoop. Plus every soldier does not qualify for that.

      The families of multi-millionaire bond traders who died in the WTC got several million in government funds and charity.

      --
      Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    4. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      "Plus every soldier does not qualify for that."

      No, thats for soldiers who die in a combat area or in combat.

      The families of the window washers who died in the WTC also got several million in government funds and charity.

      So did the kids who lost parents in the WTC.

    5. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Jubedgy · · Score: 2, Informative

      There's something called SGLI...Service Group Members Life Insurance. For ~$20/month, you get ~$250k coverage. That should pay for a nice little funeral (assuming you're announced KIA and not MIA).

      It's not a million bucks, and you have to pay for it, but imho it's easily affordable and (more importantly) worth the expense.

      --
      Si hoc legere scis nimium eruditionis hebes
    6. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by sbaker · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > If you die, in service, your family might get enough for a funeral.
      > If you happen to be in an office building that is the target of a high
      > profile attack (Sept 11) your family will get millions.

      If you die in service - you were a volunteer who knew (or should have known) that this could happen. You get paid good money for taking that risk. Your family know that this could happen - and you impose that risk on them when you choose to sign up.

      If you work in a supposedly safe office job - or working in a restaurant or cleaning an office building, you do not expect to die that way. Your family has a reasonable expectation that this kind of thing won't happen.

      And (struggling to get back on-topic) if you are an astronaut - you and your family should certainly be aware that there's a one in fifty-ish chance of you not surviving a mission.

      There is a difference - I don't know if it's enough of a difference to explain this disparity - but you can't utterly discount it.

      --
      www.sjbaker.org
    7. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      The same problem with results from magazine surveys is at work on a larger scale with respect to the September 11th lawsuits.

      Specifically I am speaking about self-selection. In magazine surveys you only get responses from people outgoing, self centered, or interested enough in the subject matter to respond to the survey. In other words, the type of people who respond to the survey are the only ones who get their results counted. They end up speaking for everyone.

      In the September 11 disaster the lowest common denominator of people and their lawyers set the bar for payment. Some of the famalies were not even satisfied with the huge ammounts of money they were offered and sought even more.

      These same individuals care enough about themselves to get paid off of their dead family members, but not enough about their country to be concerned about the benefits of a dead, injured, or even retired soldier.

      The real secret, though, is that the soldiers in the military have self-selected themselves as well. These are the people in the population with enough integrity not to whine and complain like little children when things are out of balance. They live, work, and fight to defend the country that they love.

      Other things are secondary if not inconsequential.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    8. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Sinical · · Score: 1

      Oh, bullshit.

      All active duty personnel are enrolled in Servicemembers' Group Life Insurance (SGLI). If you die while in active duty, your family immediately gets $250,000. Can you see that number? *I* don't have $250k of life insurance, and I think very few people do.

      Servicemembers' Group Life Insurance The following are automatically insured for $250,000 under Servicemembers' Group Life Insurance (SGLI): active-duty members of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard; commissioned members of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Public Health Service; cadets or midshipmen of the service academies; members, cadets and midshipmen of the ROTC while engaged in authorized training; members of the Ready Reserves; and members who volunteer for assignment to a mobilization category in the Individual Ready Reserve. Individuals may elect to be covered for a lesser amount or not to be covered at all. Part-time coverage may be provided to members of the Reserves who do not qualify for full-time coverage. Premiums are deducted automatically from an individual's pay or are collected by the individual's service branch.

      From Here

      This is in addition to various burial benefits and (I believe) a pension to the survivors of the deceased for the remainder of those people's lives.

      Stop promulgating lies about shit you know nothing about, and frankly, fuck you for indicating that the servicemen and women of the United States armed forces aren't the best cared for in the world. Eat a dick.

      Also This

    9. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      "If you work in a supposedly safe office job - or working in a restaurant or cleaning an office building, you do not expect to die that way. Your family has a reasonable expectation that this kind of thing won't happen."

      Good point. Except people had attempted to destroy that building before.

      Set that aside, and consider this. Should not everyone in the US now have a reasonable expectation that if they work in a large office building in a metropolitan area that they might be killed in this same manner?

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    10. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by M-G · · Score: 1

      The families of the window washers who died in the WTC also got several million in government funds and charity.

      Actually, they didn't. They way the federal payout was structured, people with higher current incomes and higher future earnings potential were valued at a higher rate than the window washer or busboy in the restaurant.

      The funny part is that during this process, a lot of people were aghast at how values were placed on different lives. Except that this process happens every day in the courts for wrongful death lawsuits. If someone who earns $500,000 a year is killed, their family is out $500K a year. If someone who earns $40,000 a year is killed, they're out $40K a year. So compensation for a wrongful death is based on those numbers. Funny that while people think this is horrible and unfair, they have no problem with such valuation being placed on a person while they're alive (in the form of what their time is worth).

      What gets me annoyed is not the fact that different people got different settlements, but the fact that if you were 'lucky' enough to be killed in the WTC, your family is taken care of by the feds and charities. But if you die in a car crash, get killed in a robbery, etc., your family is on their own. In reality, the money the feds allocated to the victims of Sept. 11 was nothing more than another bailout for the airlines, since as a condition of receiving that money, you had to waive your right to sue.

    11. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Keebler71 · · Score: 1

      As a military officer, I can say that my job is not to kill people. Our military is primarily a deterent. By maintaining a strong military, we hope to avoid war. The later half of this century has been one of the most "peaceful" (with regard to percentage of deaths due to war) in the history of man. Every once in a while, some idiot says basically the same thing you just did... that it is my job to die for my country. It is not my job to die for my country. My job is to make sure the other guy dies for HIS country.

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    12. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by deragon · · Score: 1

      If I recall correctly, the red cross received alot of money after 911, so much that initially, they decided to take some of it and give it to none 911 victims, but to other people who terribly needed the money.

      But then, there was an outcry from the population. People gave to the red cross for the 911 victims and wanted the money to go only to them. The red cross reversed their decision and all the money went to the 911 victims. I find it sad, because probably many families already had some life insurances (unless they are not covered for terrorist attacks...) and they could have lived well afterward even if they got less money. Other people still need the money.

      --
      Remember the year 2000? They promised us flying cars. They delivered the PT Cruiser...
    13. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by claes · · Score: 1

      Well clearly then, your job is to kill people.

    14. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by CreationLtd · · Score: 1

      Our military is primarily a deterent. By maintaining a strong military, we hope to avoid war.

      As is evidenced by the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq. The US military is not primarily a deterent. It is a tool for enforcing US self-interests and global control.

      The US military by acting essentially alone without bothering with declarations of war or articles of surrender hasn't been a force for defense since 1945.

      The later half of this century has been one of the most "peaceful" (with regard to percentage of deaths due to war) in the history of man.

      As is evidence by the millions who have died at the hands of Pol Pot, Hutu militia, and others bent on genocide. All the while, the US military is busy "defending" the US against the hordes of Panamanians, Somalis, Afghans, and Nicaraguans.

      "Our military is primarily a deterent". Ha. Like drinking Drano is mostly a purgative.

      It is easier to fight for one's principles than to live up to them. -- Alfred Adler
      - CreationLTD

    15. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, you Eurotrash retard, those guys in the building weren't expecting a plane to crash into them. Soldiers know they will be shot at. See the difference?

    16. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Face it, the US population doesn't care about soldiers lives.

      Correction : The US Government (an increasingly distinct entity from the US populace) doesn't care about soldier's lives. The payout in case of death is low because that makes it cheaper to run wars. The military knows that people are going to die in even the quickest war -- they'd might as well cut their monetary losses.

      I nearly asked a recruiting officer at my school once (I chickened out, I admit it, but he's a big scary "Patriot"-type), after a friend asked (mockingly) about the death benefit, how many barrels of oil that would be.

      It's sickening.

      Yes, it is. God Bless America, and the evil people who lead it.

    17. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm... I've seen many arguments that while Euroamerican war has generally gotten less deadly for combatants (WWI > WWII > Korea > Viet Nam > DS-I> DS-II), it has gotten much worse on civilians. Germany really started the deliberate strategic targeting of the civilian population with its Zepellin and Gotha bombers over London. Civilian casualties obviously peaked in WWII (think: Dresden, Berlin, Tokyo, Osaka, Nagasaki, Hiroshima), but Viet Nam was rough on civilians as well (from both sides, not just Americans. The VC/NVA did some bad stuff to Vietnamese villages who didn't want them around, either).

      Some have argued that if you are in an area of conflict, it is safer being in the military, on either side, than it is to be a civilian in the middle...

    18. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Keebler71 · · Score: 1
      Everything I have read has indicated exactly the opposite. I did a quick google search of the major wars the US has been invoved in since WW2. I usually went with the highest site ranking for which I could find a number. Note that I didn't choose numbers to prove my point, at least one of the sites was blatantly anti-US but I used their numbers anyway. I also tried to restrict the scope to direct civilan casualties as estimating civilan deaths from secondary war-time effects (i.e. no power, poor medical care, etc.) is extremely prone to propaganda and difficult to ascertain. None-the-less it is a real concern but beyond this scope.

      WW2 Civilian Deaths ~30 million

      Korean War Civilian Deaths ~2 million

      Vietnam Civilian Deaths (both sides) less than 400,000

      Gulf War I 13,000.

      Yugoslavia~500

      Afganistan ~3000

      ~2500

      Clearly the number of civilian deaths is dramatically "improving". What most people don't seem to realize is that the philosophy of warefare has fundamentally changed over the course of the century. During WW2 civilians were not avoided as they were seen as an integral part of the war effort, and because there was no way to avoid them if you wanted to (due to inaccurate weapons). In modern day, we have the later, and disagree with the former. Of course, if you are one who believes that the US intentionally kills civilians, then nothing that I say will convince you otherwise.

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    19. Re:Soldiers aren't worth as much. by Keebler71 · · Score: 1

      I never claimed that the US military was a deterent to all war... just that the US military has successfully detered any foreign power from attacking the US directly. Of course there have been proxy wars. And as I recall, it was never the "Hawkish" politicians who said we shouldn't be involved in Camboda or Africa atrocities...

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
  24. Ah Ha! by Greyfox · · Score: 1

    Joe wants Lockheed Martn to make a DRM enabled space shuttle that runs on gasoline!

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  25. Shuttle Politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From what I know, Joe Barton just said today in the AP article that he is in favor of just grounding all of the remaining fleet of shuttles left whatsoever. He said something like :'If we have to restart robotic spaceflights for the next five or eleven light years, then let it so be it.' But the fine gentleman from Texas who was there too displayed his outstanding grasp of a pile of statistics in microsoft excel 4.1 with a 21 inch projector and also the engineering stating which proved that 10 failures in ever 62.5 flights is acceptable. This is what I heard. Personally? Personally, I believe this may have more to do with Joe's friends (myself being one of them) than how much attention he paid to his math teachers (which I happen to know, and they did't like Joe very much).

    My 2 cents.

    1. Re:Shuttle Politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why rush it?

      According to his maths in another 187.5 million flights, the shuttle fleet will be destroyed again.

  26. I hate to say it by Timesprout · · Score: 2, Interesting

    But he might have a point for discussion anyway. I think its a bit foolish to talk about excessive risk when you basically strap yourself to several thousand tons of explosives, if the astrounauts are prepared to do it then I salute their courage.

    I think of more prevalence is whether the shuttle is value for money. Its main reson for current existence seems to be the ISS which is turning into a money pit of epic proportions which now we cannot afford to abandon, thus ironically safeguarding the shuttle. I was staggered to read how cheaply John Carmack at all were planning to achieve sub orbital flights. Not a particularly balanced comparrison I agree but I would be in favour of NASA and the other spaces agencies for that matter investing a bit of time and effort with these independent efforts to develop more innovative and hope fully cheaper solutions.

    Also if they could do it ASAP please because I really want to take a space flight before I am consigned to the great NULL.

    --
    Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
    What truth?
    There is no dupe
  27. Whew! by Mr.+Fusion · · Score: 1

    For a moment there, I thought we'd stop reviewing those Shuttle PC's every single time they come out.

    Or have I been around too long?

    -Mr. Fusion

    1. Re:Whew! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah.. It's about space shuttles and flaming one of these weird red neck politicans... No subtle /. commercial this time... move along...

  28. Tokamak Parallels by Baldrson · · Score: 3, Informative
    From the Space Daily article:
    So that's where those very low cost-per-flight numbers came from. They were never real.

    From Robert W. Bussard's letter to Congress regarding the Tokamak fusion program:

    Each of us left soon thereafter, and the second generation management thought the big program was real; it was not.
  29. Nitpicking further by akadruid · · Score: 5, Interesting

    'Commercial Fishing' is actually the world's most dangerous job, closely followed by 'Timber Cutters and Loggers'.
    Being a Soldier, Fireman, or Astronaut is not even in the Top 10.
    Airline Pilots and Railroad Signal Operators are in there though.
    Astronauts have a lot more in the way of glory and probably money than fishermen too.
    You ask people who Neil Armstrong was. I bet a lot more people know that than know who Neil Kinnock was.
    source

    --
    "Those who cast the votes decide nothing; those who count the votes decide everything." (attrib. Joseph Stalin)
    1. Re:Nitpicking further by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 1

      There was a show on Discovery about the top 10 dangerous jobs. The comercial fisherman part was amazing. Those guys who fish off the coast of Alaska for crabs routinely get mamed or even die. I guess the lure of the job was that you could make ~75k and only work 6 months or so of the year(albiet 24/7 most of the time).

    2. Re:Nitpicking further by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      Being a Soldier, Fireman, or Astronaut is not even in the Top 10.

      I'd qualify that to state the "Being a US or NATO Solider..."

      3rd world countries that are continually in some BS civil war may well have vastly different odds.

    3. Re:Nitpicking further by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about deep sea welding? I recall hearing that deep sea welding was extremely profitable (5 figures for a few weeks) because it was dangerous and because you could only do the job for a few years before doing some serious damage to your health.

    4. Re:Nitpicking further by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 1

      I thought it was "Crack whore trainee"?

    5. Re:Nitpicking further by TillmanJ · · Score: 1

      > I bet a lot more people know that than know who Neil Kinnock was.

      Would that be the 'Welsh Windbag', once leader of the British Labour Party and now a commisioner for the new Fortress Europa?

    6. Re:Nitpicking further by vondo · · Score: 1
      Do you think they considered "Astronaut?" Doubtful. They also don't have "President of the United states" which has lost 4? people to "accidents" in less than 220 man-years of work.

      That'd be 10 times higher than commercial fisherman. For astronauts, we've lost 17 in in about 50 years. One every three years (and that's just on the vehicles, doesn't include test pilot crashes). So if you assume that 150/100000 rate for fishermen is per year, I figure we'd have to have 220 astronauts in the program to reach the same level of fatality. Anything less than that, and being an astronaut would be more dangerous than a fisherman. Closer to 700 when comparing to coal miners.

      I don't know the size of our program, but I'd put 220 as already too high. Conclusion: This study didn't consider jobs with just a few people working them.

      BTW, if the 150/100000 is over a career, being an astronaut is even more dangerous, relatively speaking.

    7. Re:Nitpicking further by weeboo0104 · · Score: 1

      You ask people who Neil Armstrong was. I bet a lot more people know that than know who Neil Kinnock was

      What about Cowboy Neil?

      --
      It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men. -Frederick Douglass
    8. Re:Nitpicking further by akgooseman · · Score: 1

      The money is nice, but it's the lifestyle most of us like. Nothing pumps up your adreneline like busting into 50 foot seas, while you're 25 feet above the deck tieing down an 800 pound crab pot. I would guess that blasting off the face of the planet into space is a big motivator for many of the astronauts.

  30. Erm. by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    CS is a branch of mathematics. I'd be hesitant to call it a 'science' because it only deals with man made things. Although CS can reveal 'fundamental' truths, it's mostly done through mathematical profs. There's also very little 'experimentation' going compared to physics, biology, sociology.

    CS certainly doesn't use the scientific method.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:Erm. by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's also very little 'experimentation' going compared to physics, biology, sociology.

      Most of what CS people do is experimentation, if not all.

      True, we don't often use the scientific method in the same manner, but that's because our work has more practical applications than research applications, so you don't see much algorithm research since they'd rather have us spitting out games and OSs.

      Everytime I compile, it's an experiment. I have variables and consequences, and I have to draw a conclusion every time and base my next actions off of that.

      We use mathematics to create our experiments, but say, there is no equation for Internet Explorer. It gets to complex to map out an entire program of serious magnitude.

      So I think we're very much scientists, ableit untraditional.

      But that's just my biased viewpoint.

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    2. Re:Erm. by patter · · Score: 1

      Applied science like engineering maybe. When you spend your days 'suckholing' grant money from governments or writing papers with your results, you'll be doing what scientists do...

      Designing or Building bridges isn't science either, mind you ignorance of science would make it rather dodgy. So, I'd really call it applied science.

      Umm, if running a compiler is an 'experiment'.. well that says something about the method of software design you're employing -- hope that was a joke :).

      --
      -- If at first you do succeed, try to hide your astonishment. -- Harry F. Banks
    3. Re:Erm. by Have+Blue · · Score: 1
      there is no equation for Internet Explorer.
      Sure there is. An insanely complicated equations that transforms the computer's RAM and state of the keyboard, mouse, and network input buffers into the new state of the RAM and the state of the framebuffer.
    4. Re:Erm. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      CS certainly doesn't use the scientific method.

      The word "science" predates the scientific method. It has other meanings besides "test hypothesises by controlled experiments". The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences isn't doing a lot of experiments, for example.

      Science can also mean an organized body of knowledge. That's the "Science" in "Computer Science".

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
  31. Astronauts were pioneers, not statistics. by TellarHK · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every one of those astronauts that died understood the risks. They understood the engineering behind the shuttle, and knew full well that they could pay for the experience or chance of being in space with their lives. Last time I checked, NASA was an all-volunteer organization where people fought like hell to get accepted into the astronaut ranks. Those 14 people volunteered, and not a one of them would want his or her memory reflected by the cancellation of something they spent their entire lives to achieve. (with the exception of McAuliffe, but I don't think she'd want it cancelled either)

    We shouldn't remember them as some goddamn statistical casualties, we should remember them as people so dedicated to the cause of human space exploration that they willingly laid down their lives for the furtherance of human knowledge. This guy's statements bring those 14 brave people down to the level of a goddamn statistic, and I hope

    Keep the shuttles flying as long as there are volunteers to crew them, and make every effort to bring them home. We have the technology now, we had it in the 1970's, all we need is the national will to do it right.

    1. Re:Astronauts were pioneers, not statistics. by turgid · · Score: 1
      Every one of those astronauts that died understood the risks.

      Did they? If they had realised that there was a significant risk of a piece of insulating foam causing a catastrophic failure and loss of all lives would they have gone?

      If NASA had understood this risk would they have let the shuttle fly?

      Of course not! That would be immoral, unethical, negligent and down right bad engineering practice.

      I realise that you Americans come from a gung-ho pioneering frontier culture, but times have changed, standards are higher, and so has engineering. This was a classic failure of engnineering management. This sort of thing has been largely engineered out of the UK civillian Nuclear industry. Why can't you guys do that too in your space industry?

    2. Re:Astronauts were pioneers, not statistics. by vondo · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Those 14 people volunteered, and not a one of them would want his or her memory reflected by the cancellation of something they spent their entire lives to achieve.

      So for that reason we should continue to spend billions of dollars and risk more lives?

      Keep the shuttles flying as long as there are volunteers to crew them, and make every effort to bring them home.

      As opposed to look at whether what we are doing up there makes sense in the first place?

      Ok, these people are heros, brave, and all that. Yes we should remember them as such and not as statistics. But to say that because these people are brave and willing to take the risks, we as a society have no responsibility to look at and change the situation is ludicrous.

      I think its been pretty well established that the science done by the manned space program and on the ISS is not worth anywhere near what we spend on it. So we have to ask ourselves what the prestige of the manned space program is worth, both in dollars and in human lives. Is satisfying our yearning for the last frontier worth the cost we are paying? Should we do it now, or develop a cheaper, safer way to do it 15 years from now? Maybe the answer is that it is worth it and we shouldn't wait. But let's at least be honest about the questions we have to ask and ask them rather than forging ahead blindly because it's the only thing we know how to do.

    3. Re:Astronauts were pioneers, not statistics. by TellarHK · · Score: 1

      So for that reason we should continue to spend billions of dollars and risk more lives?

      Nope. For that reason we should leave it in the hands of the astronaut corps to decide whether they think it's worth the risk. If the commanders say "We don't want to fly in this deathtrap." it will be fixed.

      Ok, these people are heros, brave, and all that. Yes we should remember them as such and not as statistics. But to say that because these people are brave and willing to take the risks, we as a society have no responsibility to look at and change the situation is ludicrous.

      Who said that? I won't even call them heroes, because I believe the term has been watered down - and badly, by American politics of late - but who ever said we didn't have to change the situation? We do need to change the situation, as the Challenger disaster proved (We fixed the O-rings) and as Columbia is proving (The external tank design needs to be rethought), but why should we stop cold when we're doing something like this? We're doing just what we should. We've put a hold on the STS program until we know what we're doing wrong, and how to fix it.

      I think its been pretty well established that the science done by the manned space program and on the ISS is not worth anywhere near what we spend on it. So we have to ask ourselves what the prestige of the manned space program is worth, both in dollars and in human lives.

      The lives were volunteered. Those astronauts made the decision years ago that the cost that truly mattered to them was worthwhile. They judged the cost versus the benefit and found it just. Is the money worth it? I don't know. Neither of us does. I have a feeling that eventually, it will be. Something big will come of it, and that something will be of value beyond comprehension. Someday in the future mankind may look at the US space program as a true turning point for humanity.

      Or maybe not.

      As long as we have people dedicated to going up, and people dedicated to putting forth the best effort possible to making sure the come back down alive, we should continue.

    4. Re:Astronauts were pioneers, not statistics. by mfrank · · Score: 1

      They're brave. But just what exactly did they die for? Studying ant farms?

      We need to get rid of the shuttle and get a real space program. That way if someone dies, at least it's for a good reason.

  32. Please.... by Neck_of_the_Woods · · Score: 1

    Stop pushing the limits until the limits come to you. Intersting, don't set sail across the Atlantic until you know you can make it. How do you ever find out you can make it?

    I realize that maybe the answer is no more manned spaced flights until the odds are brought into a safer level. The only question is if this can be done remote from start to finish to perfect the art of space travel?

    --
    Neck_of_the_Woods
    #/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
  33. No problem by Salsaman · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I am sure the Russians, Chinese, and the EU will step in to fill the gap if the US gives up on manned spaceflight.

    Plus there will probably be a few private companies doing the same thing over the next decade or two.

    1. Re:No problem by RealityProphet · · Score: 1

      I am sure the Russians, Chinese, and the EU will step in to fill the gap if the US gives up on manned spaceflight. Plus there will probably be a few private companies doing the same thing over the next decade or two.

      The Russian space program is broke. They can barely afford to launch what they have, nevermind research new and better spacecraft. The EU and the Chinese have no manned space programs. The Chinese don't even have an aerospace industry, for God's sake! Wake up!

      As for private industry: they have been belly-aching for YEARS about how expensive and inefficient NASA is. Yet, they can't seem to get a craft into the upper atmosphere for less than $100 mil, nevermind into orbit!

      Face it: space travel is difficult, it is expensive, and it is risky. The US is in no way going to give up on manned spaceflight. But if they did, I have severe reservations that the bodies you mentioned would pick up the slack.

    2. Re:No problem by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      I'm willing to bet that India will acheive manned spaceflight before Europe.

  34. A better stat by sammyo · · Score: 3, Funny

    Auto and plane stats are given as deaths per N miles. Now that would be an interesting and possibly more valid statistic. Shuttle deaths or even Space program deaths *per mile*!

    1. Re:A better stat by mike_mgo · · Score: 1
      This is often mentioned for comparisons to other modes of travel but I don't think it's valid.

      The risks of an accident for the shuttle are really on a per flight basis. The Columbia would likely have suffered the same fate whether it had been in orbit for one day or twenty. The distance that it traveled really had little impact on the outcome. The tragedy happened on reentry due to damage that was likely caused on lift-off. Both of these events are based on the number of flights it takes, not the number of miles it travels.

      In a car however an accident is as likely (roughly speaking) at any point during a trip. It's as likely to happen around the corner from your house as it is 500 miles into a road trip. I think this is true for most convential types of transport (except maybe planes, maybe those statistics should also be on a per flight basis, I don't really know).

    2. Re:A better stat by sammyo · · Score: 1

      Actually I think both of us are wrong.

      Or rather, neither statistic (per mile, per trip) are sufficient to make a valid comparison between 'modes' of transportation. Car accidents are much more likely within 5 miles of home (something like that, I'm not chasing references). And should it be vehicle miles, person miles, per overhaul? Perhaps a group of stats would give some insight into the comparison.

      I often say that one is safer on any plane than walking in a major city. But is that accurate? Not sure how to make a rigorous case.

  35. I didn't RTFA but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    What the hell,
    To me the shuttle just looks like a floored design. Basically it has consigned space to the doll-drums for the better part of 30 years. I think its right for it to be grounded, for good. However, I can not understand why anyone would what to replace it with another shuttle type design. I mean isn't it pork barreling that basically got us the dame thing to begin with and now the logic goes, we have to throw more tax payers money at a solution, this just dosn't follow.

    IMHO, the best thing to do know would be to just go back to using rockets, safe cheap and boring. Even the last soyuz capsul was able to survive a 9G reentry with out major harm to the crew - this is 1950 technology. I mean the shuttle may be cool and all but to me it just doesn't look like the right tool for the job.

    Of course I feel like I've just stated the obvious

  36. what?? by bob+dobalina · · Score: 1

    According to OpenSecrets.org this may have more to do with Joe's friends than how much attention he paid to his math teachers.

    Yeah, I can see what vested interests the National Association of Realtors and the National Auto Dealers Assocation have in keeping shuttle flights on the ground. They want us to stop flying a Yugo into space and upgrade to a Toyota so we can sell "earthfront property" in orbit. Blasted corporate lackeys!

    --

    B

    "I'm payin' taxes, but what am I buyin'?" -- James Brown

  37. You're missing the point. by Draxinusom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You're doing a risk-benefit analysis without looking at the benefit side. The risk to the astronauts would be acceptable if there were actual science being accomplished. I am not one of those profiteers who disdains "pure science," but any reasonable assessment of the shuttle program's scientific accomplishments has to conclude that sending old people into space and observing spiderwebs in zero gravity is not worth the tremendous cost in money and lives.

    If we did away with the shuttle program (which over the years has turned into a huge pork barrel for the shuttle contractors), we could replace it with many more cheap unmanned flights plus manned flights with focused objectives. There's no reason to send an astronaut into space, at huge expense, to perform experiments that could just as easily be done on an unmanned craft. Instead, we should be sending those astronauts to Mars, which will never happen through the shuttle program.

    1. Re:You're missing the point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I wonder if opinions in the US like this will change when China has a moonbase, the Japanese have their own space station, and India has men flying around in orbit on a regular basis? If you think it isn't going to happen, you aren't watching carefully enough.

    2. Re:You're missing the point. by Zirnike · · Score: 1
      "which over the years has turned into a huge pork barrel for the shuttle contractors"

      You mean it's not making money? Damn, and I thought EOS was a good simulation. :(

      --
      I'm not shy, I'm stalking my prey
  38. Why Politicians Are Shortsighted Idiots by Spencerian · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Let's look at basic facts of manned American flights to date.

    Project Mercury: 6 flights, no deaths.
    Project Gemini: 12 flights, no deaths, 1 abort.
    Project Apollo: 18 flights (including Apollo-Soyuz). 3 fatalities (non-launch-related), 1 abort (in-flight, no injuries)
    Project Skylab: 3 flights, no aborts.

    So, by the end of 1975, Americans have flown into space only 39 times. Thirty-nine. Barely enough to tempt fate, it seems.

    Space Transportation System: 113 missions, 14 fatalities (in-flight).

    Everyone knows that spaceflight is still very dangerous. In the case of a Shuttle, the odds just caught up. That's not a failure.

    In the Challenger disaster, NASA and its contractors failed, as they did with Apollo 1, to use their imagination properly to see the real numbers as real chances for catastrophe.

    In the Columbia accident, NASA didn't go the extra mile in determining damage on the orbiter, but all other decision making appeared on-target, IMHO. Not that there were many options that they could have presented to the astronauts to save orbiter and crew.

    The main problem with the Shuttle right now is to protect the critical tiles. Ice will always form on the orbiter's ET and all flights have returned with some ding damage from ice. Foam falling from the ET was obviously too much damage for Columbia to withstand.

    I propose an aeroshell that fits under the orbiter body where it mounts to the ET. It would be integral to the ET, and cover the RCC and underbody of the orbiter, including part of the nose. The only change in flight that would be required is for the orbiter or the ET to be given thrusters that push the ET forward (or orbiter to aft) to clear the aeroshell that covers the leading edges and nose.

    That, and perhaps we can rig a harness where we can place inept Congressmen under the STS exhaust to show them how things really work.

    --
    Vos teneo officium eram periculosus ut vos recipero is.
    1. Re:Why Politicians Are Shortsighted Idiots by TellarHK · · Score: 1

      That sounds like a decent idea to me. It wouldn't require as much testing or engineering complexity as redesigning the entire orbiter or thrust system, but could do a decent job protecting the craft from ice breakoffs. One thing I'd see not being wise though, would be to actually cover the orbiter at all. I'd leave the connections to the orbiter body as open as they are now, but simply create a different surface on the housing to attract more of the ice buildup in a way that will shear off earlier and more quickly. Possibly some sort of loosely connected metal sheeting that could be removed mechanically prior to launch? Or a positioning of the tank within the housing in a manner where there simply wouldn't be buildup on the sides facing the orbiter?

      Either this, or some sort of climate controlled housing like they had over the capsules for the "original" spaceflight methods, but designed simply to keep condensation from building at the tip of the ET, retracted before launch.

      I'm no engineer, but are there any that have opinions on these ideas?

    2. Re:Why Politicians Are Shortsighted Idiots by ckaminski · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Everyone knows that spaceflight is still very dangerous. In the case of a Shuttle, the odds just caught up. That's not a failure.

      And the odds caught up because the shuttle carries double the crew that any previous craft carried. Each shuttle has killed 2 1/3 times as many people as the only Apollo accident. What kind of ruckus are we gonna raise when the first 50 passenger spaceliner disintegrates on reentry?

      I'm very against this whole "risk averse" attitude America is so involved in. Risk is good, risk drives us to make things safer, but smartly, without emotion and without pandering by political puppets. Negligence on the other hand, is not a good thing, and it seems that NASA was very negligent in fixing this problem that they've known about for a while.

      I don't think the major issue people are going to have is that Shuttles are crashing and burning. What they are going to have a problem with is NASA lying and cheating, and putting lives at risk, those in space, and those on the ground. It's kind of like the Enron scandal all over again. Shitloads of media bluster, lots of politicians yammering and jabbering their flip-top heads, and in the end, NOTHING GETS DONE. Status quo.

      God I love this country.

    3. Re:Why Politicians Are Shortsighted Idiots by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      "I propose an aeroshell that fits under the orbiter body where it mounts to the ET. It would be integral to the ET, and cover the RCC and underbody of the orbiter, including part of the nose."

      Every pound that weighs will be something like 0.8 pounds less payload, since the shell will have to be carried most of the way to orbit. Given that the shuttle payload to the ISS orbit is small as it is, reducing it further is really not an option: for heavy missions NASA would probably have to compensate by running the engines at an even higher multiple of their design thrust, which is likely to be far more dangerous than flying the current shuttle design.

      Now do you start to see why these easy and obvious fixes _haven't_ been made? It is Rocket Science, after all...

    4. Re:Why Politicians Are Shortsighted Idiots by Spencerian · · Score: 1

      I agree, absolutely. There are tradeoffs to everything.

      For instance, what if NASA continued to paint the ETs insulation white as they did for the first two or so flights? That saved about 500 LB of weight, but could the paint had helped the ET foam from breaking off and striking the orbiter?

      It is rocket science, indeed. I believe protecting the orbiter is more important than the weight saving. What good is weight saving if the orbiter arrives in orbit with no way to return safely? So, sacrifice some of the payload capacity for some measure of protection. The alternative is increased chance of vehicle failure.

      Perhaps a full aeroshell underneath would be too weighty, but partial covers over leading edges and places where heat simply must not pierce would improve safety, IMO.

      --
      Vos teneo officium eram periculosus ut vos recipero is.
  39. If every space flight was guaranteed not to return by RhettLivingston · · Score: 4, Insightful
    you'd still have no troubles finding astronauts to fly them, though you might want to make sure they are more important than those we've taken lately. We seem to have totally lost our sense of the value of exploration as well as our sense of freedom.

    Those that go up aren't doing so blindly. They've made their choice as to the relative value of their lives to themselves without going versus the value to themselves of going. We should honor that choice by being proud of them for being braver than most, not by denying the choice to others.

    If someone were to come up with a plan for a one way trip to Mars that offered even a glimmer of hope for surviving, you'd have no trouble finding people who would rather live a few months on Mars than the rest of their lives on Earth. Time by itself isn't a reason to live.

  40. What the hell? by autopr0n · · Score: 2, Funny

    Could it possibly be that we've just gotten soft, and started to take space flight for granted (which would be good in it's own way)? Is it just that the fucking baby-boomers have no spine?

    Dude, are you saying people should risk their lives to do stupid little experiments with ant farms and shit? Come on.

    There's nothing wrong with taking a breather and trying to minimize risk. It's obvious these shuttle people are totally incompetent.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:What the hell? by lifey · · Score: 1

      But the worms DID survive! So now we just need to only populate shuttles with worms. Read the story here.

  41. Exploration by Lxy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Space exploration is why we send 7 people up there on a regular basis. We don't understand what's up there, we want to find out.

    Unfortunately, one of the things we don't have a handle on is how to do it safely. That's part of the exploration process. We obviously have a system that works, as we've returned many safely back to earth. In the case of Columbia, an unknown variable was introduced. We've never known what happens if a tile is struck with an object on liftoff. It's never happened before, and we had to react with information we knew to figure out if it was a problem. Sometimes the only way to learn is to find out.

    As for the 7 astronauts, this mission was hailed as one of the most successful in space history. The amount of research that was performed and the data was collected surpassed any previous missions. The astronauts love their work, so much in fact that they're willing to risk everything for it. For 7 people to sacrifice themselves for their research is truly an honor, and the world should see these 7 people as heros, not casualties.

    --

    There is no reasonable defense against an idiot with an agenda
    :wq
    1. Re:Exploration by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Space exploration is why we send 7 people up there on a regular basis. We don't understand what's up there, we want to find out.

      Well, that's fine and dandy, but since the shuttle never makes it above LEO (low earth orbit), there's not that much there to see that hasn't been seen before...

      So if you insist on sending people to LEO just because you can, why not do it safely and cheaply in a non reusable orbiter, carried on top of a old fashioned rocket.

      As others have mentioned the Soyuz has a remarkable safety record, and it was built and operated by the Soviets, not usually held in high regard in safety engineering circles (just look at the disaster waiting to happen that is the RBMK nuclear reactor, and the list goes on and on).

      And now that you have the international space station for extended stays, you don't even need a big vehicle you can camp in while doing whatever you want to do. Shuttle people to and from the space station in a simple cheap non-reusable craft, send the parts to build it by unmanned heavy lift rockets, and do something exiting with the money left over, such as exploring space. Something the shuttle has had very little to do with I might add. No interplanetary mission was ever lift off by the shuttle.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    2. Re:Exploration by jerryasher · · Score: 1

      Uh, we've long known what happens when a tile is struck on liftoff. Every single flight had tile damage that wasn't designed for and wasn't corrected in 20 years of flying.

      I believe all of our astronauts are heroes, but there is no contradiction in seeing these seven as casualties either.

      And to wonder if NASA never fixed the original shuttle problem (NASA's own management of shuttle problems) is not to dishonor any of our astronauts or most NASA employees.

      To ask questions is a patriotic and honorable duty, and to want and work for a better, and safer Space Program is a very honorable goal.

  42. Loss of Life? Riiiight. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If loss of life really we're the reason, the following things would also be outlawed / shut-down:

    Driving
    Helicopters
    Airlines
    Military
    Sex for those over 40
    Smoking
    Drinking
    High School (Columbine)

    What a crock. This whole thing is politically motivated.

    So what, we had an accident and lost an expensive vehicle and some highly trained personnel. I don't want to sound harsh, but we lose highly trained military personnel in helicopter accidents monthly (and usually more than 7 personnel), why not shut down all of that model of chopper?

    Just stop fighting already and build a space elevator.

    BA

  43. "the embetterment of the human race"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't forget the embiggening of the smallest man!

    1. Re:"the embetterment of the human race"? by Xebikr · · Score: 1

      Embetterment is a perfectly cromulent word.

    2. Re:"the embetterment of the human race"? by Drakonian · · Score: 1

      Damn, you beat me too it. I was sure this post would gain instant karma!

      --
      Random is the New Order.
  44. Re:End Manned spaceflight But dont end spaceflight by elwinc · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Very very few of the experiments that can be done in space need a human on site. Most of them can be done remotely, at much lower cost. Check out space station related issues of What's New .

    For example, the famous protein crystals were no better than earth-grown ones, and the flu drug came from an Australian crystal, not a Space Lab 1 crystal.. Other than spiders in zero G, very little research has been done on the ISS (International Space Station), and none of it needed human minders.

    For example, we could float about 10 more space telescopes for the cost of the ISS. And in fact, NASA repeatedly transferred money out of research to cover ISS cost overruns.

    Don't get me wrong, the shuttles and the space station are great for inspiring school kids, but they really soak up $billions that could go to research.

    As for shooting down Dinosaur Killers, what Bruce Willis movie have you been watching? An unmanned rocket that can send a robot to Mars can deliver a warhead to an incoming asteroid, and several ground based radars and space based telescopes can scan the skies much better than an astronaut looking out the ISS window!

    --
    --- Often in error; never in doubt!
  45. But... by Hayzeus · · Score: 1
    nternet that engineers witnessed the wing damage incident and chose not to ground the flight.

    Wouldn't it have been a little late at that point?

  46. just so you know by trybywrench · · Score: 2, Funny

    ... I am ashamed this guy is from Texas.
    Do I get to appear naked on the cover of Entertainment Magazine now or what?

    --
    I came to the datacenter drunk with a fake ID, don't you want to be just like me?
    1. Re:just so you know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but rest assured, I won't buy your CD.

  47. only half agree by zogger · · Score: 5, Interesting

    --I don't want them grounded, but I would like to see them all used for one more trip up, then left up there. Turn them into the first step of having a shuttle fleet between LOE and the moon and mars. It's the take off and landing to earth that beats on them bad, but they are fine once in orbit. They could be additions to the space stations, perhaps the cargo bays retrofitted before last launch to additional fuel tanks and better crew cabin areas, purposes like that. No need to waste them, just use them more efficiently. On the ground they would just be stupid tourist traps, up in space, still dang useful. I see little reason a shuttle couldn't have smaller boosters installed and a larger fuel tank filled once in orbit, then used for manned missions to mars and whatnot. It's that HUGE fuel cost to escape earth and reach orbit that is expensive and dangerous, so WHY keep doing that over and over and over again? A fraction of that fuel used once leaving from orbit would take you to mars. Launch them up there ONCE, then it's UP there and we got us "space rockets" then. We're reinventing the wheel every time we launch and re land one. OK idea when first proposed, now time to move on. I see it just exactly like they have done with B-52's, they have thought of so many uses for them that go beyond their original missions and specs. Let's just do some more creative modding with what we got and paid for already instead of throwing them away or continual beating on them.

    I've thought this for more than a decade now, seems a duh to me.

    Dumb rockets can carry cargo and occasional passengers up better, and we can land passengers better too, our old "splashdown" into the water worked quite well..

    1. Re:only half agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's that HUGE fuel cost to escape earth and reach orbit that is expensive and dangerous, so WHY keep doing that over and over and over again? A fraction of that fuel used once leaving from orbit would take you to mars. Launch them up there ONCE, then it's UP there and we got us "space rockets" then.

      Because then you have to accelerate the not inconsiderable weight of the tiles, the wings, the landing gear, and a lot of other stuff that would be useless in space.

      I've thought this for more than a decade now, seems a duh to me.

      "Duh" might be an appropriate comment from you, but not for the reasons you think.

    2. Re:only half agree by deblau · · Score: 1
      Turn them into the first step of having a shuttle fleet between LOE and the moon and mars.

      A good idea, but unfortunately impractical from an engineering standpoint. See the NASA STS overview for why.

      Here are a few more practical reasons why we can't use shuttles for trips to Mars:

      • Radiation. Shuttles fly in LEO, inside the Earth's protective radiation shield. When we leave it for Mars, we'll need heavy lead shielding somewhere on the ship to protect astronauts against sudden sun flares. Where does it go? (On the Apollo missions, the astronauts reported seeing flashes, which were caused by cosmic radiation. Even jaunts to the Moon are dangerous.)
      • Food. There isn't nearly enough food capacity on the shuttle for a trip to Mars. We're talking launch windows only every 18 months, and best technology puts us at 3-6 months to get there. Where are you gonna grow (or store??) 2 years worth of food on the shuttle?
      • Water. The average person should consume daily a number of ounces of water equal to half their weight in pounds (sorry for the Imperial units). A 176 pound (80 kg) astronaut needs to consume 88 ounces (2.5 kg / 2.5 L) of water per day (from whatever source). Multiply that by an 800-day mission and by the number of crewmembers and you see very quickly that you need a water reclamation system on board. Where does that go?
      • Psychology. NASA is undergoing extensive research into a problem which has been known in space for decades and on the ground for centuries: cabin fever. The shuttle is too small for extended missions.
      • Energy. The amount of fuel required to get to Mars (or the moon) is considerable. Yes, it's a lot easier to go from orbit to another celestial body, assuming you've got the fuel up there. That's a HUGE assumption. Tell me how you propose to get the fuel up there, and where it goes on the shuttle. Remember that the shuttle is going to be literally tons heavier than it is now, due to all the extra systems I've listed above (and many I've omitted) being included.
      Here's the executive summary: shuttles were designed for 2 week missions in low earth orbit, with some extra slack for unforeseen problems. There is no way on (or off) God's green Earth that they can be modified for a trip to Mars.
      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    3. Re:only half agree by sohp · · Score: 1

      Impossible, and it's been discussed over and over again in the various newsgroups whenever this week's "Shuttle To The Moon" thread starts up.

    4. Re:only half agree by luna69 · · Score: 1
      He didn't say actually take the shuttles TO Mars, he said "Turn them into the first step...", which is quite a diffferent thing.

      When you get down to it, his point is that we need to break free of the gravity well with something like a LEO infrastructure that could support Moon & Mars missions. Makes sense to me, even if the immediate proposal is unworkable. We really do need to establish something more in orbit than an overpriced chemistry set built into a multi-billion dollar bathtub.

      What do I mean? We need fuel storage depots, construction equippment, multiple Soyuz-style docking points for consumables and human delivery, housing for dozens of people, not 6.

      While I'm not sure about grounding the shuttle fleet, I do think that it's time to start thinking outside of the confines of gov't funded, massive overhead, short-sighted and negative-profit endeavors in space.

      --
      No gods, no demons, and no masters. Secular Humanism!
    5. Re:only half agree by deblau · · Score: 1

      I never said I wanted the shuttle fleet grounded, I just said they couldn't be retrofitted to make the trip to Mars. I agree that we need a LEO infrastructure, but I don't see it getting built any time soon. As far as profitable endeavors in space, there aren't too many in LEO per se. Nothing up there to harvest except radiation and hard vacuum. Maybe someone can put microgravity to commercial use, but I can't think of any manufacturing process using it that has any decent (say, less than 20 years) ROI with current space technology. If someone comes up with one, you can bet NASA won't be able to stand in their way.

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    6. Re:only half agree by luna69 · · Score: 1

      > I just said they couldn't be retrofitted to make the trip to Mars I understood this part of your reply. When you say that "there aren't too many [profitable endeavors] in LEO", I agree wholeheartedly. ...which I why I'm very much in favor of using both the financial and technological know-how currently directed towards NASA's efforts to study how peas sprout in micro-g to actually accomplish something up there ('up there' meaning beyond LEO). How much could $14B (sorry, too pressed for time to look up NASA's current budget) and thousands of engineers do if they were working in the private sector? I don't know, but I'm guessing a LOT more than they do now, working for a remarkable, but still top-heavy organization like NASA.

      --
      No gods, no demons, and no masters. Secular Humanism!
  48. This is what happens... by DaPhoenix · · Score: 1

    when you underfund an operation that walks the razor edge between safety and firey inferno. With enough human checks of equipment much of this could have been avoided, but I believe budget cuts and lack of funds (even though Robert F. Thompson states that the costs for the operation well exceeded what they originally proposed to Nixon) were mainly to blame.

    Good luck X Prize competitors

    --
    -- -=innocent ramblings from the mind of an insomniatic programmer=-
  49. Looking back by vasqzr · · Score: 1


    Hindsight is always 20/20

    Most any large disaster etc COULD have been prevented.

  50. So uhh... what are we making fun of again? by James+Lewis · · Score: 1

    I couldn't find statistics on shuttle flights, but assuming there have been 125, and 2 crashes, then what is wrong with his grasp of statistics? Perhaps over 20 years that error rate is acceptable, but I would hope that we can make space flight cheap enough where we'll have a lot more than 125 space flights every 20 years. To do that we need something that is cheaper and more reliable, and the shuttle doesn't look like it fits that description. Grounding it until we come up with a substitute might seem silly, but is anyone really arguing that we want to keep this dinasuar of a launch vehicle around? Perhaps if we did ground them there would be a lot more pressure to come up with a shuttle that was cheaper and more reliable...

  51. well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "may have more to do with Joe's friends"

    "404: Page Not Found"
    So he has 404 friends?

  52. How many times can we "explore" Earth orbit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If NASA had been in charge of early exploration, they'd have built a Queen Mary and sailed it in circles around Britain doing studies on how being at sea affects sailors.

    I don't understand how people can argue that the shuttle is about "space exploration". If NASA were really about space exploration, they'd be doing more unmanned planetary expeditions.

    Or what about another Hubble-type telescope? The knowledge gained for the cost of that program must be much higher than the shuttle program.

  53. Re:Shuttle Politics (there's a price) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The odds may not be against the androids when they will go on to their missions at space, but how is this much different when Indian explorers went out onto the Atlantic and discovered china? There were many lives lost as well then and the government wanted the project aborted.

    My point is that "Exploration" has always been a risky business in the past. I don't believe for a second that the robots who volunteer for a space mission are not programmed to accept the risks associated with it.

    They should get their priorities straight.

  54. Suicide Booth?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Suicide Booth: You are now dead! Thank you for using Stop and Drop, America's favorite since 2008.

    What's up with that sig?

    1. Re:Suicide Booth?? by AbdullahHaydar · · Score: 1
      --


      Suicide Booth: You are now dead! Thank you for using Stop and Drop, America's favorite since 2008.
  55. not worth the cost??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you want to argue monetary cost to the American tax payer fine you may have a legitimate opinion that needs to be discussed but who the hell sets the value of any given human's life. The individual knew the risk, he wasn't duped, or lied to. The individual chose to explore space and perform expiraments and be a basic scientist type guy. There is danger in that just as there is danger in being a soldier or a stunt man. For someone external to the program to decide that one in whatever is unacceptable is obsurd. Decide what you're willing to pay for and what the American public is willing to pay for but let the men and women who put their lives at risk decide what they're willing to pay for.

    Politicians invariably think they know better than the experts and they invariably fuck up any field that requires any type of specialized knowlege.

    BTW, just so my biases are clear, I'm a gun toting American conservative from the state of Texas who believes that the government is too involved in our day to day lives and needs to just do the basics. I believe we should let private industry do everything it possibly can and don't get involved unless public concerns at risk. I'm an open source developer and I still believe that Microsoft should basically just be left alone other than with regard to fraudulent tactics (i.e. lying/vaporware/etc.. but not letting them build their products the way they want is stupid). If you can't beat them in the market then you don't deserve to win. Actually I'd be a Libraterian if those damn hippies could every win an election. On the philisophical level they've got it right.

  56. Statistics by tmark · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The fine gentleman from Texas displays his outstanding grasp of statistics and engineering stating that 1 failure in ever 62.5 flights is NOT acceptable.
    You demonstrate your own ignorance of the issue by interpreting his comment as a statistical statement. It is not (unless your issue is the 1 in 62.5 statistic). Because the value of a human life and the value of the shuttle's missions are not unanimously quantifiable, his is a judgement, outside the realm of statistics. He is saying that he doesn't think a catastrophic failure 1.6% of the time is acceptable. You're ridiculing him by implying such a rate of catastrophic failure IS acceptable. Given the loss of life, I'd say YOU'RE the one with the <sarcasm>outstanding grasp</sarcasm> of things here.
    1. Re:Statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This politician is affirming that the loss of the astronauts' lives were not acceptable. Yet these astronauts accepted this risk.

      No one other than those whose life is at stake should have the right to determine whether or not the risk is "acceptable" or not. Not you, not me.

  57. How is it acceptable? by jazuki · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While one can quibble with the arithmatic, I don't think there's any getting away from the fact that 1 in 56.5 is a horrendous statistic for failure, particularly for a program with a mission cost of $640 million in current dollars.

    The story was, with all this expense (though NASA has been lying about the program expense from the very beginning, claiming it would be less expensive per mission than single-use rockets), you would be able to increase reliability and safety.

    It hasn't turned out that way. The Russian Soyuz single-use rocket, for example, has a far higher safety rating (no accidents on manned flights since 1971), and costs about 30 TIMES LESS per flight.

    There's something obviously wrong here, and you don't have to be an opponent of the space program to see it.

    And I'm very much a proponent of the space program as a whole, and want to see a concerted effort towards a mission to Mars. But I don't see how the Shuttle program gets us there. It's a boondoggle only justifiable with really really bad math (read NASA math).

    Thus, the biggest reason to be opposed to the Shuttle program: It's astronomic expense crowds out money for any meaningful space exploration.

    Even if it means a five to ten years hiatus in the manned space program (though Russian launch vehicles could still be used), I'm all for using the money to build a manned space program that actually makes sense.

    1. Re:How is it acceptable? by riptalon · · Score: 1
      The Russian Soyuz single-use rocket, for example, has a far higher safety rating (no accidents on manned flights since 1971), and costs about 30 TIMES LESS per flight.

      While they have not lost any cosmonauts since the redesign after the Soyuz 11 failure in 1971 and I think it is clear that the Soyuz spacecraft is far safer than the Shuttle, this isn't really proven. Between 1972 and 1999 manned Soyuz flights break down roughly like this:

      Soyuz 7K-T 31 flights (1972-1981)
      Soyuz T 21 flights (1979-1986)
      Soyuz TM 32 flight (1986-1999)

      There will have been a handful more TM flights since 1999 and one Soyuz TMA flight which was successful if slightly off course. So in all there have been about 90 manned Soyuz flights since 1972 with no failures, but this only proves than the mean failure is probably better than 1:90, which while better than the Shuttle is not outstandingly so. Of course the failure rate may be much better than 1:90 but there is no proof of that.

      However the Soyuz would win anyway since it is so much cheaper. One intresting point is the rate of change that the Soyuz has undergone since 1971. This appears very health in comparison with the US Shuttle. While keeping an example of a mature technology like comercial airliners flying for decades is desirable I would question whether the same is true for spaceflight. It still seems analogous to aircraft development in the very early years and therefore short design lifetimes seem called for since new and better designs should be just around the corner. Even if reusable spacecraft were a good idea in theory they are a huge road block to fast development while the technology is immature.

  58. Private Enterprise Is The Way To Go... by bc90021 · · Score: 1

    Anyone who is really interested should check out:

    http://www.nw.net/mars/

    Dr. Robert Zubrin wrote _The Case For Mars_ which outlines how we could be getting to Mars within the next ten years using the same technology that got us to the moon thirty years ago.

    The representative is probably right, but not for the reasons he thinks he is: the government is just holding us back too much in terms of space flight development. We need to get private enterprise involved.

    How? Have several CEOs study all the plans out there. When they find out that it is feasible, might actually *make them money*, and would advance humanity all at the same time, I am pretty sure they would all start writing checks!

  59. Long Term Benefits by Sergeant+Beavis · · Score: 1

    How about having humans on another rock when a so called "Dinosaur Killer" hits? How much greater will the survival of the human species as a whole be if we are able to populate two planets in the Solar System.
    There are other reasons for humans to leave Earth and go to far away places in space. To quote Captain Kirk, "Because its there." We are still children in the cosmic scope of things IMO. We are just learning to stand up. We are going to fall down alot until our legs get stronger.
    I completely agree with you that we need more focus on unmanned missions. They are most certainly more cost effective. However, we still need to, "Go where no one has gone before." (God, I'm gonna get slammed on the trek references)

    --
    There is nothing inherently safe about liberty. That's why so many people died protecting it.
    1. Re:Long Term Benefits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The bottom line is that the shuttle has a very hard time justifying its existence. What have we learned and where have we gone in the last 10 years that we haven't gone in the first 10 years with the shuttle? Once you compile your list, then remove the missions where the payload went up on the shuttle because it was mandated and not because it could not have gone up on a different ride.

      All the Star Trek reasons people are throwing around here for keeping the shuttle going don't match with reality. You'll get far more on the return for your money if you greatly scale back the humans in space program and move the money over to the robots in space program. Keep a very modest human program but do all your new development/deployments/etc. from un-manned missions. The bulk of what is being done on the shuttle is performing experiments that should be done on Earth anyway. If you want to argue the merits of the humans in space program from a political or national self-image angle, then fine; the "go where no man has gone before" argument (if you want to qutoe Kirk, at least use the non-PC version) just doesn't cut it.

    2. Re:Long Term Benefits by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      The Shuttle is neither an exploratory vehicle or a colonization vehicle. It's an expensive, accident-prone, maintenance-heavy bus.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    3. Re:Long Term Benefits by row314 · · Score: 1

      If people don't like Star Trek references, then how 'bout B5/JMS? Quoting from The Lurker's Guide to Babylon 5:

      Reporter: "After all that you've just gone through, I have to ask you the same question a lot of people back home are asking about space these days. Is it worth it? Should we just pull back, forget the whole thing as a bad idea, and take care of our own problems, at home?"
      Sinclair: "No. We have to stay here, and there's a simple reason why. Ask ten different scientists about the environment, population control, genetics - and you'll get ten different answers. But there's one thing every scientist on the planet agrees on: whether it happens in a hundred years, or a thousand years, or a million years, eventually our sun will grow cold, and go out. When that happens, it won't just take us, it'll take Marilyn Monroe, and Lao-tsu, Einstein, Maruputo, Buddy Holly, Aristophanes - all of this. All of this was for nothing, unless we go to the stars."

      ...

      jms speaks

      ...

      Sinclair's final speech there is the simplest truth about space exploration that I can think of...and the most compelling..and the most overlooked. As Henry Kissinger once said, "It has the added benefit of being true."

      I guess it really comes down to a simple question for each person to consider: "Should the human race grow, or die out?"

    4. Re:Long Term Benefits by Sergeant+Beavis · · Score: 1

      You are very much correct Stonehand, but my arguement wasn't about the shuttle in particular but rather manned spaceflight in general.

      The shuttle is basically a Mack truck with rockets and wings. However it, or it's replacement, is a requirement for long range exploration goals.

      --
      There is nothing inherently safe about liberty. That's why so many people died protecting it.
    5. Re:Long Term Benefits by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Ummm, dude, you're quoting an actor in a Science Fiction television program.

    6. Re:Long Term Benefits by Ian+Wolf · · Score: 1

      No, the scary thing is that the quote really belongs to a mountain climber. I believe it was Hillary, but I could be wrong.

      --
      "The words of the prophets are written on the Slashdot walls."
    7. Re:Long Term Benefits by pfdietz · · Score: 1
      How about having humans on another rock when a so called "Dinosaur Killer" hits?
      Why? Even after an asteroid impact, Earth would still be more habitable than any other place in the solar system.
    8. Re:Long Term Benefits by ColaMan · · Score: 1

      Yes..... it's just likely that it will be briefly UN-inhabitable if a moderate-sized rock hits.
      And there's the problem of defining "briefly".
      Briefly - is it 1 hour when there's some problem with earthly life support? is it 1 Day? 1 Week?
      It's no good for us here on the ground if things go bad enough to kill everything on earth for 20 minutes and then have conditions revert back to "normal enough to live on". Except for the two people on the ISS there'd be nobody left. At least they could hold out for a month or two and drop back down on a soyuz.

      I'd prefer 50 people on the moon, but don't forget the chicks :-)

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    9. Re:Long Term Benefits by pfdietz · · Score: 1
      Yes..... it's just likely that it will be briefly UN-inhabitable if a moderate-sized rock hits.
      No, even then most of the Earth's surface will still be more habitable. There will be water, and oxygen, and pressure. You can have massive stockpiles of food and equipment, and have them much more cheaply than on some other planet or in space.
  60. Someone should tell him... by Arsewiper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    More people die from the mistakes of politicians in one year than NASA could kill in the next 30 years of space exploration.

  61. Re:Shuttle Politics (save the money) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Save money on getting people up there (which is not very high anyway if you think about it for a second) and spend it on sending materials to set up a moon base. Once a community is up there, missions to fix satellites etc won't have to overcome such a large gravity well. It would make a good point to launch to other planets as well.

  62. Not a bad idea by prozac79 · · Score: 1

    I too think we should scrap the current shuttle program, but not because of the risk involved. There will always be risk in space travel due to the number of unknowns in an area that we do not know much about (relatively). I think it should be scrapped and the money that goes into the upkeep of the shuttles should go toward researching new technology in space travel. I've read countless times how the technology on the space shuttle is seriously outdated and keeping the parts in stock is becoming really difficult. There are a number of toxic components in the shuttle's design that we now have non-toxic alternative too. We have much better computer technology that can be integrated into a new shuttle design. What we need is to explore some of these new technologies that have come about in the past 30 years. We need to say that these baby steps were great, but it's time to embark on a new adventure of Apollo-like proportions. If that means grounding or scrapping the shuttle fleet for 10-20 years, so be it.

    --
    "Oh dear, she's stuck in an infinite loop and he's an idiot" -Prof. Farnsworth (Futurama)
  63. Grocery Delivery by Bugmaster · · Score: 1
    I disagree. I think the problem with shuttles is that they are not grocery delivery trucks. The Shuttle is extremely complex, fragile, expensive, and generally hard to use. This means that it (in its current form) will forever remain in the hands of NASA, because they are the only ones who can afford to use it.

    If we really want to be serious about solar expansion, we need a working orbital base. Note, I said "working", so the ISS doesn't count. Anyway, in order to build such a base (which, BTW, will yield massive practical benefits just by being there), we will need orbital trucks, grocery carts, tugs, bulldozers, etc. The current Shuttle can't help us there.

    --
    >|<*:=
  64. Damn Cadr�! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's the Cadré who want to stop all manned flight. They've been battling us for years from behind the scenes. At least now one of them has stood up to be counted.

  65. I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reentry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every time a shuttle crashes and has to be rebuilt, and new astronauts have to be trained, it takes money away from other projects that could be giving us NEW information about other planets, etc.

    People need to get over their sentimental attachment to the Shuttle program and be realistic about how best to spend the tiny amount of money we give NASA.

  66. NASA vs. Airlines by JonTurner · · Score: 1

    "In any case, 2 crashes in 20 years is a very very good record. You'd be hard pressed to make the airline industry perform so well."
    Not if the airlines flew less than a dozen flights per year! At any point in time, there are thousands of aircraft in the air over America but a shuttle launch happens, what, once every few months at best?
    In general, I agree with your post. Well said, and I agree that American's have gotten soft -- expecting complete safety and surety in every aspect of their lives. It's sad, really, because a life without risk is a life not lived.

  67. Barton's right. by An.+(Coward) · · Score: 3, Insightful


    Hate to say it, but I have to agree with Rep. Barton. Manned space flight, as it is currently practiced, is a joke, and has been since the seventies. The Space Age has apparently come and gone....there are children today whose parents were not even alive at the time of the last moon landing. Having once stepped on another world, we now seem to be content to simply play in our cosmic back yard.

    All our manned space activity has been devoted to a bloated hulking monstrosity of a vehicle that can manage far fewer missions at far higher cost than originally intended; for twenty years, until the ISS was finally built, it failed to serve the function it was designed for--ferrying equipment, construction materials, etc. into space. (And the value of the ISS is as dubious sa that of the shuttle itself.) We send it up two hundred miles, it circles around the earth a few dozen times, and it comes back down. If it doesn't blow up on the way up or burn up on reentry. The shuttle program has obstructed cheaper, more efficient, and more powerful ways of getting people into space. It has so hindered us that it would take us another ten years to rebuild the infrastructure needed to send us back to the moon.

    And for what? For PR? So schoolkids could have a real live astronaut growing their bean sprouts for them? So John Glenn could have one last moment of glory? The only worthwhile missions in my opinion have been those to service the Hubble telescope. Consider the adverse impact it has had on other, more valuable, unmanned programs, either because of the shuttle's drain on NASA's budget, or its inability to function due to delays and disasters--the delay of the Cassini program, the bare-bones funding available for Mars missions, the shame of being the only spacefaring nation unable to send a probe to Halley's Comet on its last visit, the failure to send a probe to Pluto when it would be most scientifically useful...

    The shuttle program is a parasite on the nation's science program, and it is a killer. Don't look at it as a 2% failure rate--two disasters out of 107 flights. It's a 40% failure rate: two of five vehicles catastrophically exploding, well within the limits of their expected usable life.

    I am by no means saying that we should end the space program. The Voyager program, the Hubble and Chandra telescopes, and other unmanned scientific missions have provided us with vast knowledge about the universe around us. The commercial space program has enriched our lives here on earth, through global communications networks, better weather forecasting, etc. But compared to these, our manned space program is lagging far behind. We can send people no farther than low earth orbit, and we have no worthwhile vision for what they should do once they get there.

    1. Re:Barton's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm truly sorry, but you're talking about something you know nothing about.

      Firstly and most fundamentally, NASA is about space exploration. Space exploration has taught us a huge amount about ourselves, most certainly our planet, the wider universe (Hubble as you mentioned, and many other programmes) and underlying physical concepts. Not only that, but NASA's work has produced real products, processes and understandings which have changed the ways we live (for this, please do a google search for 'NASA spin-offs' and see what turns up).

      Most critically, please appreciate that NASA isn't having problems due to poor spending of funds, but rather that there are not funds enough.

      - NASA's budget comprises less than 0.5% of the US governmental spending. At the time of Apollo, the budget was closer to 10%.
      - Of that, more than half goes on Earth-bound development, most especially in Aeronautics, the first 'A' in their acronym, from which we have all seen benefits through better cargo, passenger and light aircraft. Our car engines, in fact, are often designed on the back of understanding that came from NASA activity.

      Please make special note that a great deal of the activity in complex computing, transport, new materials, and critically, environmental protection has come from NASA research. You think that's air you're breathing? It would be less so without all of their hard work, trust me.

      - Of the less the half remaining, a great deal goes on education, teaching children about space, Earth and science. They do a great job, and to be frank, very little else will inspire kids in their scientific development these days.
      - NASA's total budget is less than half of what the US militiary spends on space activity. Yet, they still get NASA to launch equipment for them. NASA will often develop new ideas and offer them to the military, only to be told 'No thanks!' (don't need it, already got it!).
      - The cost of the Orbiter Endeavour was around $2b at the time. Oddly enough, the same as a Stealth fighter. Which does the US have more of?

      Is the Shuttle programme hindering other programmes? It depends how you look at it. Imho, NASA are great at producing new designs and doing new research, but they are getting defeated at every turn by people trying to cut down their budget. They'll come up with a new launcher, only to be asked "Can you do this cheaper by modifying the Shuttle? Can you achieve some of the goals by doing that instead, for a bit less money?". The trouble is, the Shuttle is a versatile vehicle and the answer to that question is too often "Yes". In short, the Shuttle allows the politicians to avoid making harder funding decisions and enabling NASA to produce new vehicles.

      Whether you like it or not, NASA gives good value for money. The trouble is, they need more of it. No one said that space exploration was cheap, but NASA does a good job.

    2. Re:Barton's right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article referenced wasn't about NASA's value for the money- it was about the shuttle's value for the money.

      Read the article and you'll find that NASA heads all but lied through their teeth when they sold the shuttle program to congress as a cheap way into space.

      Current (well, pre-Columbia accident) cost for a shuttle flight is- very roughly- one billion dollars (that's total annual budget for Shuttle operations divided by number of flights). Shortly after the shuttles were grounded, I read that Russia offered to put up additional Progress modules to the ISS for fifty million dollars. Maybe the numbers are a little flawed, but 20:1 is a bit of a difference (your tax dollars at work!).

      I've seen arguments that it would have been about the same price to abandon the intial Hubble and fabricate, test, and launch a replacement (on an unmanned rocket) than it was to do the shuttle repair mission.

      (Speaking of flawed figures.... $2B for a stealth fighter? Um, no. Unit cost is listed as $47M (USAF fact sheet). Maybe you're thinking of a B-2 stealth bomber? Unit cost of those can exceed $1B, depending on how much of the R&D is ammortized over the fleet of aircraft that were finally bought.)

      While more shuttle money for NASA would be really nice for USA (United Space Alliance), I'm not sure how it would benefit the USA (that organization of which I am a taxpayer).

      The shuttle is a rather old, very complex system which requires a tremendous number of man-hours to prepare for launch. Price per pound to orbit is large, and with that much labor it won't get better. A visionary NASA would be pushing the bounds of the technologies required to reduce prices in the future, the current NASA seems to be scrambling to support the shuttle to provide a minimal level of service for the ISS, and pushes the ISS as... well... a justification for the shuttle.

    3. Re:Barton's right. by An.+(Coward) · · Score: 1

      Actually, very little of what you've said contradicts what I wrote, and in fact, much of it supports it. I explicitly recognized the benefits, both purely scientific and practical, that the space program in general has given us, and my criticism was not of NASA in general but of the current state of the manned space program as it currently exists. One key statement from you: "In short, the Shuttle allows the politicians to avoid making harder funding decisions and enabling NASA to produce new vehicles." All the more reason to scrap the shuttle, then! I would love to see space research, development, and technology take up a much greater percentage of the budget than it does. But that simply ain't gonna happen any time soon, because, again, unlike the Apollo years, there is no clear goal or vision driving the program. As for hindering other programs...NASA's budget is about $15 billion, and 40% of it--$6 billion--goes to manned spaceflight operations and support, per year. Consider that NASA management imposed a $150 million total budget limit when seeking proposals for the on-hold Pluto-Kuiper Express mission to the last unvisited planet in the solar system, and then put the project on hold, and...well, you tell me...does that look like hindering to you?

    4. Re:Barton's right. by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      The grandparent post had a lot of good points. The fundamental problem with the STS program was that it was stopped before it ever got going. If you need a contemporary aerospace parallel, look no further than the SR-71. It was a fantastic aircraft, but it was never taken and turned into something better. It was a dead-end. Supersonic airframe research in the Mach 3+ realm all but died once the SR-71 came about. 30+ years later we still have no contemporary aircraft that could compete with it. In fact, we're currently racing to catch up.

      The shuttle program was killed at four orbiters, and never allowed to evolve. It's all been about keeping what's working working, instead of taking the lessons we've learned and making them better. When was the last time the SSME had a serious reengineering that incorporated contemporary metallurgic and rocket science?

      So you can take that $100b program lifetime cost that the shuttle has, or maybe it's $200 billion, and amortize it over 5 vehicles, instead of the 20 that were supposed to be built.

      Yes, the orbiter has had it's incremental upgrades, but nothing on the order of revolutionary. Whatever happened to liquid-fueled outboard boosters, instead of the SRB's? No money. How about redesigned, less complex and more robust SSME's? No money.

      Yes, the STS is a program in search of a vision, but what I really think is that the STS is really what the space transport industry needs. A flexible launch platform that can carry significant cargo, and yet gain those great leaps in reliability that come from evolutionary development. The STS was designed in the 1970's, and has effectively stayed there.

    5. Re:Barton's right. by pfdietz · · Score: 1

      No, the fundamental problem with STS was that demand for launch was never large enough to justify the development of expendable launchers.

      If you look at other areas of technology, things get developed when there is enough demand to support multiple efforts. This was not the case with STS: NASA had to grab just about every launch opportunity there would be, and invent hundreds of fantasy launches, just to get enough traffic in their models to have the economic case close (on paper). Even that would not have been possible if STS was going to be only the first in a line of evolving vehicles.

      The right thing to have done would have been to go back to the KISS principle and design simplified expendable launchers, like Schmitt's cost optimized concepts. These would have made sense even at low flight rates, and because you're always replacing them your opportunities for evolution are built right in.

    6. Re:Barton's right. by pfdietz · · Score: 1

      Erk, I meant 'justify the development of reusable launchers'.

  68. Why the sarcasm? by daves · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The Challenger exploded on STS-51L. The subsequent investigation predicted catastrophic failure, on average, every 58 flights (IIRC). Current stats show about the same rate.

    It sounds to me like Rep. Barton is on the money concerning shuttle reliability.

    --
    People who disagree with you are not automatically evil, greedy, or stupid.
    1. Re:Why the sarcasm? by luna69 · · Score: 1

      > Why the sarcasm? Because it's FUNNY.

      --
      No gods, no demons, and no masters. Secular Humanism!
  69. Shuttles, Safety, and Politics by Phoenix · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Frankly I agree with him on one point. The STS program needs to be replaced. The Shuttle is an aging piece of antiquated hardware that is probally getting to the end of it's lifespan.

    However

    I do not believe that we have to send the rest of the Shuttles to the Graveyard just yet.

    The two shuttles lost are so far, the first that actually made it into space (Enterprise being little more than a test platform) and the Challenger which (if memory serves and if I'm wrong I do apologize) is the second oldest orbiter.

    Secondly, It's Space we're dealing with. It's an unknown and we're trying to learn how to get into space without killing ourselves. If you think about all the manned spaceflights that we have done as the world as a whole, mankind has a pretty damn good track record.

    I agree that the Shuttle needs to go, but with a little care, it CAN still serve it's purpose until the replacement is designed, tested and ready. Give the remaining Shuttles a once over, fix the problem and get them back up.

    Phoenix

    --
    -- Wiccan Army, 13th Airborne Division "We will not fly silently into the night"
  70. China by Bugmaster · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Actually, the likeliest contender is China.

    The American space program did not start because we though we could reap some tangible benefits. The American space program started because we had something to prove. Specifically, we had to prove that our ideology is superior to Communism, and that if they can put a satellite in orbit, then by God so can we. Yes, there are obvious defence implications as well (i.e., if you want to spy on people, satellites are your best bet), but mostly America was driven solely by public relations reasons. The moon landing especially.

    Now, let's look at the current contenders. The USA has already proved to everybody that they won't be messed with -- anyone who thinks different can just take a look at the smoking ruins of Iraq. Russia has no money, like you said. The EU doesn't have that much money either, and they don't have the nationalistic spirit that the US used to have. North Korea has nukes but no food.

    The only country left is China. They have been doing better economically recently. They have a massive population. And, unlike everyone else, they do have something to prove: they want to prove that the Communist ideals are superior to Western imperialist pig-dog propaganda.

    Perhaphs America will take notice again when Chinese astronauts land on Mars. Until then, China is really the world's only hope for manned space flight. Regrettably so.

    --
    >|<*:=
  71. And this refutes my point how? by Thag · · Score: 1
    That's an incredibly specious arguement--if space travel scaled to the point that air travel is at, we would naturally expect the rate of failure to decrease--it would have to, as we wouldn't expand to that point until it had.


    Then if the rate of failure remains as high as it currently is with Shuttle, doesn't if follow that space travel cannot scale up?

    I want space travel to scale up. Therefore the current rate of failure is NOT ACCEPTABLE.

    Jon Acheson
    --
    All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
    1. Re:And this refutes my point how? by mikedaisey · · Score: 1


      But that wasn't your original arguement--your chicken and egging here. If there had not been the two shuttle disasters and the shuttle had a perfect record it wouldn't ipso facto lead to more space travel, except insofar as we'd have two more orbiters and less down time from the investigations.

      I'm simply saying that you can't draw a specious connection between air traffic and shuttle trips that means anything. I'm not contesting your viewpoint--just the bad connection you are using.

    2. Re:And this refutes my point how? by Thag · · Score: 1
      But that wasn't your original arguement--your chicken and egging here.


      No I'm not. My original argument has always been that 1 in 62.5 IS a bad failure rate. Your response indicated that it would be an unacceptable for airline-like space flight, which tends to back up my point rather than refute it.

      I think you're reading more into my response than I meant to put there. I'm not arguing that shuttle operations are like an airline (though they were promised to be), or that the flight envelope of the shuttle is in any way similar to that of an airline. I'm only saying that 1 out of 62.5 is a bad failure rate for anything outside of a disposable missile or a test vehicle.

      If there had not been the two shuttle disasters and the shuttle had a perfect record it wouldn't ipso facto lead to more space travel, except insofar as we'd have two more orbiters and less down time from the investigations.


      I see your point, but disagree. I do think that without the two shuttle disasters we would be farther along, though we certainly wouldn't be vacationing on the moon. Public confidence in space would be a lot higher, and it would probably be a lot easier for private companies to find investment: it would seem less of a risk.

      And, if the lack of disasters had been due to the space shuttle being a better-designed launch system that had somehow achieved its goals of regular, less expensive space travel, we'd be way ahead.

      I'm simply saying that you can't draw a specious connection between air traffic and shuttle trips that means anything.

      That's true, I can't draw any kind of a specious connection that means anything. :) Fortunately my argument isn't specious.

      Jon Acheson
      --
      All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
    3. Re:And this refutes my point how? by mikedaisey · · Score: 1


      You are perfectly free to say that 1 in 62 is a bad failure rate, but your first post made a specious connection between that and airline travel.

      I look forward to the word-by-word refutation of this post.

  72. Mod parent up! by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up! It's the most knowledgeable post I've seen so far.

  73. I attended the hearing by Elvisisdead · · Score: 5, Informative

    Let me say, as someone who actually attended the Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee hearing, that this cynical Barton- and government- bashing is ridiculous. What the Yahoo article failed to point out was that Barton unequivocally affirmed his support for manned space flight and ambitious space exploration, and has in fact supported every NASA budget request (read: every ill-designed, failed NASA initiative) over the last ten years.

    His remarks were made thoughtfully and deliberately, not banging a shoe on the table. And as to remarks by MagusAptus that "Just goes to show that we elect the brightest and the best to congress. It would just seem reasonable that if we had to have these committees on everything, then the members of those committees should have at least *some* knowledge or background in the area," Congessman Barton has actually been on the S&A Subcommittee since the early '80s; he served when the Challenger crashed. And he also earned a B.A. in Industrial Engineering from Texas A&M.

    --

    "Want in one hand and spit in the other and see which one fills up first." - My Dad
  74. work by underwhelm · · Score: 1

    Sure, but how many people in cars, trucks, buses etc. aren't leaving home and going back at the end of the day, too?

    --

    I don't need large brains to have a good time.

  75. Deep Space Homer by sacrilicious · · Score: 4, Funny

    From The Simpsons:

    Tom: It's a lovely day for a launch, here, live at Cape Canaveral, at
    the lower end of the Florida Peninsula, and the purpose of
    today's mission is truly, really electrifying.
    Man 2: That's correct, Tom. The lion's share of this flight will be
    devoted to the study of the effects of weightlessness on tiny
    screws.
    Tom: Unbelievable, and just imagine the logistics of weightlessness.
    And of course, this could have literally millions of applications
    here on Earth -- everything from watchmaking to watch repair.
    Homer: Boring.
    [tries to switch channels, but the batteries fall from the
    remote control]
    No! The batteries!
    Tom: Now let's look at the crew a little.
    Man 2: They're a colorful bunch. They've been dubbed "the Three
    Musketeers". Heh heh heh --
    Tom: And we laugh legitimately. There's a mathematician, a different
    _kind_ of mathematician, and a statistician.
    Homer: Make it stop! [panics]

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
  76. (Supersonic) Concorde is too expensive to operate by totierne · · Score: 1

    Therefore it (also :) ) has been grounded:
    Concorde
    With a few token efforts to keep it in the air.
    I blame the economy stupid.

  77. I'm not sure what's implied here... by Oswald · · Score: 1, Informative
    this may have more to do with Joe's friends than how much attention he paid to his math teachers

    I see Lockheed Corp listed as the Senator's number one contributor, but I don't understand why they would want the shuttle program killed. They own one half (with Boeing) of the company that gets paid to maintain the shuttles. Is there some new system that Lockheed is trying to sell the government that would replace the shuttle? If so, and it's ten years from being ready to use, would Lockheed just as soon forego the trouble of raking in 10 more years of government cash?

    This innuendo is confusing. If the submitter has something to say he should say it.

  78. Each has their own advantages by neurostar · · Score: 1

    There is nothing a shuttle can do that soyuz + iss can't, and then some.

    I think you're a little mistaken there. You'd be extremely hard pressed to see a soyuz put hubble into space, or chandra, or any of the ISS modules.

    neurostar
    1. Re:Each has their own advantages by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
      I think you're a little mistaken there. You'd be extremely hard pressed to see a soyuz put hubble into space, or chandra, or any of the ISS modules.

      And why should you want to? Heaving lifting of dead objects is for unmanned rockets.

      If there's no need for human intervention, why oh why build a craft capable of harbouring one. It's just a waste of money. The rocket can be built larger, cheaper and doesn't have to be that reliable, since loss of life is not at stake.

      No, the now quite old quip that "If the space shuttle was the answer, what was the question?" still applies.

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    2. Re:Each has their own advantages by neurostar · · Score: 1

      And why should you want to? Heaving lifting of dead objects is for unmanned rockets.

      IIRC, one of the reasons those items went up on the shuttle was because the rockets weren't capable at the time of carring a large, hubble-sized, satellite.

      neurostar
    3. Re:Each has their own advantages by Soft · · Score: 1
      No, the now quite old quip that "If the space shuttle was the answer, what was the question?" still applies.

      • How do you bring back more that a few hundred kg from orbit?
      • How do you repair/upgrade a (LEO) satellite?
      • How do you launch people at less than 56 degrees inclination? (OK, launch a Soyuz from Kourou...)

      I agree that the need for those capabilities is debatable, with the first being the most apparent (sample return from ISS). Repairing GEO satellites would be interesting, but is way outside the shuttle's reach.

    4. Re:Each has their own advantages by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
      IIRC, one of the reasons those items went up on the shuttle was because the rockets weren't capable at the time of carring a large, hubble-sized, satellite.

      But that's putting the cart before the horse. That there wasn't anything available isn't surprising if you've developped a shuttle to do just that kind of thing. If you hadn't, you could have built a rocket (and much cheaper) to do the same thing better.

      A testament to this is of course the fact that there exists rockets today in the US (the Titan IV has a LEO lift capacity of 17 tons, the Hubble a mass of about 11 tons). Rockets that were developed despite the fact that the shuttle was available, since the shuttle is too expensive (and hasn't got the omph to lift anything into geo synchronous orbit anyway).

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    5. Re:Each has their own advantages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the assembly line for those rockets had been shut down! The Saturn V had a much larger payload capacity to LEO than the shuttle.

    6. Re:Each has their own advantages by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 4, Interesting
      How do you bring back more that a few hundred kg from orbit?

      As you said yourself two of the arguments don't really hold. There just isn't any money in reparing satelites, LEO or geosynchronous, just lanuch a new one. And geography takes care of the rest. There is one left though, return of heavy objects. Granted it's not that much of an issue, what heavy objects are there to be returned in one piece? A few hundred kilos will go a long way towards deorbiting anything worthwhile. There simply isn't hundreds of tons sitting up there waiting to come down.

      But the answer is not that hard anyway. You design something that does deorbit a ton or two (it's not that hard to do). I'd bet that that could be done cheaper than the cost of a few shuttle flights. You only need a large enough parachute (perhaps metal vanes initially) and landing it in the ocean. Since there's no people involved landing shock etc can be much higher.

      Looking at the dollars involved, the cheap thing is probably to scrap the existing shuttle fleet, and redesign non-reusable craft to go atop existing US rockets. Granted they weren't built for manned flight, but operational records aren't that bad for some of the more tried and tested designs.

      Hell, if memory serves the Titan IV is cheaper per shot than a shuttle launch, and you don't even have to bother about what to do with the junk once you've used it! ;-)

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    7. Re:Each has their own advantages by Soft · · Score: 1
      You design something that does deorbit a ton or two (it's not that hard to do). I'd bet that that could be done cheaper than the cost of a few shuttle flights.

      I assumed the question was something earlier in the thread, "there is nothing a shuttle can do that soyuz + iss can't, and then some." (Generalizing "Soyuz" to Soyuz capsules and unmanned launchers.) If you start designing new vehicles, then surely you can replace the shuttle. Whether you can design that cheaply is another matter, but I tend to agree if you keep it off NASA's management.

      Hell, if memory serves the Titan IV is cheaper per shot than a shuttle launch

      That's difficult to say since shuttle launch cost estimates vary, maybe between 250 and 400 M$, while a Titan IV-B might cost 400-450 M$. There aren't many left anyway, and the Delta IV Heavy, while cheaper, won't reach the same performance.

    8. Re:Each has their own advantages by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1
      I assumed the question was something earlier in the thread, "there is nothing a shuttle can do that soyuz + iss can't, and then some."

      Fair enough. Though that wasn't quite my perspective. Mine is more "why keep throwing good money after bad".

      So if you deny me my brand spanking two ton reentry vehicle, I'll have to go back to; there's nothing worth deorbiting that weighs more than what you could pack on today, anyway. Nothing worth deorbiting in one piece that is. ;-)

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
  79. panic and paranoia by gobbligook · · Score: 1

    the astronauts today have far less risk than those in the 50's and 60's. Things are so much safer. If I am to believe that today, because of two fatal accidents in the space program's history, progress in this area will be delayed for a year (at best) or years, then I would say to you.... Didn't these astronauts die for nothing? We have to continue with the space program, and every year we delay, means another year behind in development. Look how long it took to get a man on the moon since the program started. Where have we gone from there? We should be colonizing Mars or whatever, but insted we are worried about half a dozen fallen astronauts. I say honour their memnory, learn from our mistakes and move on sooner rather than later.

  80. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    1 out of 62.5 might be acceptible if we were getting something of great value out of the endeavor. But I personally don't think the shuttle program is delivering very much valuable science for its price in blood and treasure. Its main purpose in life seems to be to support the ISS, whose main purpose in life, in turn, seems to be to provide a reason for existence for the shuttle.

    Sean

  81. Stupid White Men by vs-Tsoonamy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Hello out there!

    I don't know how many of you already have read it, but I think that "Stupid White Men" by Michael Moore is quite worth reading, if you want to know more about Republicans and their interests...
    (If I'm not telling you news anyway, forget about this post!)

    I read it and - as a German - really started thinking.

    Oh and by the way, can anyone tell me if all in it is right? Because if it is, well... did you think about attacking yourself do bring democracy in that country? But anyway, go and read it for yourself and tell me what's wrong and right - you're quite more "int it" than I am.

    Martin

    --
    Tend to post comments only when drunk
    1. Re:Stupid White Men by errxn · · Score: 2

      "Stupid White Men" is only worth reading if you're interested in the techniques that Michael Moore employs to *severely* distort the truth.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, Chuck Norris will still kick your ass.
    2. Re:Stupid White Men by praksys · · Score: 3, Informative

      Michael Moore is pretty funny at times, but he is not exactly a reliable source of information. If you want to learn something about American politics you would be better off reading a good biography of a President or two. You will find plenty of sensational dirt to keep you entertained, and you might actually learn something.

      Seriously, saying that you learned about US politics from "Stupid White Men" would be like me saying that I learned everything I need to know about German politics by listening to "Die Gerd Show".

    3. Re:Stupid White Men by BrainInAJar · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, Michael Moore is an idiot.

      I'm not saying that because I'm a conservative (liberal, for anyone outside the US), because I'm not, I'm a marxist... I'm saying it because Michael Moore is an idiot. When faced with the question "How do you explain the glaring factual inadequacies of this book?" his reply was "yeah, I don't really worry about that kind of stuff"

      He makes the entire left wing look like a bunch of nutters.

    4. Re:Stupid White Men by BrainInAJar · · Score: 1

      Sorry, Inadequacies should read "Inconsistencies"... my bad, it's early

    5. Re:Stupid White Men by vs-Tsoonamy · · Score: 1

      Oh I think the Gerd Show actually is nearly everything you have to know about German politics right now - most of them ar idiots and do not know at all what to do against the problems we have. :-)

      But thanx to you - and to all others who replied - for telling me what to think of Mr Moore.

      Martin

      --
      Tend to post comments only when drunk
  82. you're forgeting the test flights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is one shuttle, Discovery, that was used for suborbital teats. He's likely including these flights.

    The shuttle is 60s technology, and the only reason we have it is the scientifically worthless International Space Station, the multicultural hugs-in-space program. If killing the ISS means killing the shuttle, it's worth it.

    1. Re:you're forgeting the test flights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "the scientifically worthless International Space Station, the multicultural hugs-in-space program "

      The FOX NEWS style guide clearly states that the preferred term is "special olympics in space".

    2. Re:you're forgeting the test flights by PD · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1) There were no suborbital shuttle tests.
      2) The test flight shuttle was Enterprise.
      3) The shuttle is 1970's technology.

    3. Re:you're forgeting the test flights by Ponty · · Score: 1

      I think that's actually the Enterprise.

  83. A Texas Politician? by yet+another+coward · · Score: 1

    Considering the money the shuttle has brought to Texas, I am surprised that one of their representatives made those statements. He must be far from the Houston area, but the lack of solidarity is remarkable.

  84. Acceptable Risk - Comparison by TrollBridge · · Score: 1

    Put it this way, if I had a 1 in 60 chance of getting into a fatal crash every time I took my car onto the interstate, I'd be much less inclined to drive.

    --
    There's a Mercedes gap too. I want one and can't afford one, but it's not government's job to do anything about it.
  85. Who said anything about giving up? by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    Barton never suggests that we get out of the manned space flight business. He just wants a manned space flight vehicle that doesn't kill one of every 62 passengers. Sounds reasonable to me.

    Sean

  86. Hear, hear. by StarKruzr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I really don't understand why the /. crowd should dislike this proposal.

    If I had my 'druthers, I'd scrap the Shuttle operations budget entirely, put all of them into museums, and spend the operations budget entirely on serious R&D for purpose-built reusable spacecraft.

    We need:
    1) A reusable, unmanned heavy lifter like Venturestar (possibly with an option to load a cargo module that would essentially be a cockpit/life support system, for getting people into orbits higher than LEO).

    2) A passenger ferry to get us to the ISS. This needs to be neither large nor capable of carrying much cargo, just people.

    3) A craft built in orbit that would be able to get us to Mars. We could ferry parts up there with the aforementioned heavy lifter, and ferry people there with the passenger ferry.

    Does this not make sense?

    --

    +++ATH0
    1. Re:Hear, hear. by Rip!ey · · Score: 1

      From an engineering perspective, I like your thinking.

      Build multiple space vehicles where each one serves a specific purpose and serves it well, as opposed to building a single multi-purpose vehicle which does many things but does none of them particularly well.

      Too many trade-offs are required in the case of the later.

    2. Re:Hear, hear. by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, not only was the STS project a multi-purpose one that did nothing particularly well, but it had problems from the start because it was politically pulled in a hundred directions by a hundred different Congressmen and had parts from something like 10 different major vendors.

      Why can't we contract this out to ONE company?

      --

      +++ATH0
  87. Get our radix settled first to hexadecimal. by Thinkit3 · · Score: 1

    Settle on hexadecimal SI and we won't have so many problems. To think that we're going into space with a mix of all sorts of different units and bases--no wonder there's been so many disasters. Space will always be there...there's no problem waiting to get things settled right back on Earth.

    --
    -Libertarian secular transhumanist
  88. URANIUM-SHUTTLE by anythings-possible-b · · Score: 0, Troll

    21:53 9/5/2546

    TOPIC: AERODYNAMICS

    SKUDOS to every Astronaut thet flew on a spaceshuttle.
    i mean i was eight years old and saw a wire frame of the
    spaceshuttle on an old CAD programm on my friends dads computer.

    i asked him if this was a new airplane. he laught and said no, but a SPACESHIP.

    i didn't believe him. the aerodynamics on the spaceshuttle are ... there's no word for it.
    sending up a cube would probably have better aerodynamics. my god!
    i think the efficience is something minus 3, so they have to sacrifice a
    few astronouts once in a while for the space-travelling-god to close one eye.

    and:

    must be a loser senator. the light bulb breaks, so lets stop using them.

    how about installing a neon-tube they last way longer ...

    why if it really WERE a senator, he'd go to church and summon pres. kennedys spirit,
    and the pres. would answer: "improve, improve, we've got the russian to beat!"

    he'd dump the equivalent of the irak-war on NASA and fire EVERY boss that let's another
    astronaut die 20 years after they've been to the moon.
    (actually in china they secretly poison the manager if he let's his company become flawed in a minor way.)

    i got a designe for a reussable ROCKET. the engine parachutes down. just needs some
    checking and refuel and up it goes again. good for a tousand time. more if you like, but
    then we got to think about the econmomy. if we always use the same rocket they're all out of work :)

    it would be silly of the americans to forget real-space and just live in cyberspace.

    as i read somewhere: "in russia, space logs onto you".

    NO really please please dear disigners THINK about aerodynamics, PLEASE! your design is like a cadillace
    its for your ego, and maybe the ego of your girlfriend, alot of cheap crap around a
    cheaper engine, but it "looks" good. i dunno ...

    oh and WHEN you do make a new spacecraft, DONT watch P0rn, they got the cheesiest design around. your mind
    needs to be CLEAN (ZENwisdom). go watch some butterfly, bettlebugs,grasshoppers. now THERE's design!

    a rockets not a an aeroplane! maybe they should hire a guy from ferrari or honda for the aerodynamics.

    oh and something else. why are your satellits always in one piece? why isn't there a
    observertory module and radiolink module, an engine-module, etc?
    at least we could reuse the radiolink module?

    and something else: why are you stealing from the planet? why aren't your satellits you're sending so far not coming back.
    someday, voyager will have accumulated 20 tonnes of debris and crash back on earth.

    and did you know, every spaceshuttle is ALREADY running on PLUTONIUM/URANIUM.
    where do you think they are getting the energy to make hydrogen? AND: every hydrogen car's
    so far is running on uranium/plutonium. see above. mega cover-up.

    MAEH, i'm feeling dumber everyday.

    1. Re:URANIUM-SHUTTLE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF?

      How did this get modded +2, informative? it's just some insane babble with no basis in reality.
      Mod Parent down, troll

  89. Except that it isn't space exploration. by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    We've been to low earth orbit lots of times, people. No mystery there. Going to Mars - now THAT would be space exploration.

    Space shuttle missions are no more exploratory than Columbus' mission would have been, if he made round trips to the Azores, over and over again.

    I say again - what are we GETTING for these deaths and all the money we're spending?

    Sean

  90. Very different to Challenger by 0123456 · · Score: 1

    "And now it looks like they've done it with Columbia."

    Nope. There was already an active program underway to resolve the foam-loss problems... but any change to such an important system requires a lot of testing before it can be implemented. Just imagine if they'd changed the formulation of the foam and _caused_ a shuttle loss as a result.

    NASA is a typical government bureaucracy and should be closed down, but comparing Columbia's bad luck (it appears that the foam must have hit in just the wrong place to cause the damage it did, and a few feet in any direction would probably have been survivable) to the Challenger management ignoring the engineers who were telling them that launching in that temperature was dangerous is wrong.

    1. Re:Very different to Challenger by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Good points - thanks for correcting me.

      But please remember that NASA also had an 'active programme' to fix the SRB seals before Challenger exploded. They knew there was a problem, but they didn't ground the vehicle.

      It will be interesting to see if NASA had done any worst-case scenarios to see what was the maximum damage that could be expected from foam impacts.

      If they hadn't and yet they knew the ET had a problem then sine serious questions will have to be asked.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    2. Re:Very different to Challenger by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      "But please remember that NASA also had an 'active programme' to fix the SRB seals before Challenger exploded."

      They didn't. The engineers hadn't even managed to convince the management that it was a problem, let alone that it could be fixed. Not to mention that there was an utterly trivial short-term fix if the management had believed it was a problem: just don't launch when the weather was too cold.

      If the management had considered the O-ring problem as serious as they considered the foam loss problem, the Challenger explosion would never have happened, as the engineers would have imposed the launch temperature limitation as a short term solution as soon as they were asked for a fix. The managers at the time simply didn't care about what the engineers told them.

    3. Re:Very different to Challenger by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Sorry, they did. Marshall space centre ordered Morton Thiokol to determine the causes of O-ring erosion as far back as 1984. Thiokol knew the problem of joint rotation was going to get worse with a proposed light-weight SRB and they wanted to eliminate the problem.

      However, Marshall continued to tell NASA that the problem was not severe and no reason to delay the launch schedule. The lack of urgency was because Marshall considered the second O-ring to be redundant, and would ensure that the joint would never lose integrity.

      They were wrong.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

  91. Price of stupidity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, let's ground the shuttle fleet AND shut
    down the Houston Space Center. Don't need all
    those NASA people hangin' around if there's no
    space program...

  92. Why? by Lord+Kholdan · · Score: 1

    So... he wants to prevent volunteers from going to space because he fears that people will die up there? How many in here would volunteer even if that'd mean certain death up there? I know I would.

  93. Re:Loss of Life? Riiiight. by sean.peters · · Score: 1
    I don't want to sound harsh, but we lose highly trained military personnel in helicopter accidents monthly (and usually more than 7 personnel), why not shut down all of that model of chopper?

    Can you provide any references that suggest we lose military helicopters monthly? Didn't think so. You're talking out your ass here. Another news flash for you: when a fatal military helicopter crash occurs, they DO ground that model of helo until such time as they can establish that the cause was something other than pilot error.

    Sean
  94. National Pride??? by rm3friskerFTN · · Score: 3, Interesting
    "... imagine this scenario: It's 2029, and a lunar mission lands at Tranquillity Base. A crew of heroic young Indians - or Chinese - quietly folds and puts away America's 60-year-old flag. If the world saw that on television, wouldn't the gesture be worth tens of billions of rupees or yuan? Of course it would." The New Cold War

    BTW, I think NASA/society sets the bar too-high for astronauts ... a crew of high school kids with an old-fart chaperone (someone who is 28-years old) would do a far better job than the over-qualified astronauts ... real-life example is the reactor control room of a US Navy submarine.

    --

    I believe Juanita

  95. Nixon and Mondale -- grey shades by ianscot · · Score: 4, Insightful
    That last bit of testimony from Robert F. Thompson included some stuff about Nixon -- can you believe it? -- collaborating in misleading congress. In this case, it was about how often the shuttle could be launched, the resulting cost per pound of cargo, and the overall cost estimate for the program. The leading congressional opponent, seen then as a "luddite" (Washington Post) who'd gut NASA if he could: Senator Walter Mondale of Minnesota.

    Today's neoconservatives often disparage the shuttle as high-tech socialism, and I've talked to more than a few different people who regard the whole program as a tax-and-spend legacy of an earlier governmental style. (Low-cost probes like Pathfinder and so on are their usual ideal.) Just goes to show you, the world's not black and white.

    Mondale would be practically a liberal dinosaur by today's standards, and generally speaking he was arguing for funding social programs above NASA -- but his objections to cost estimates for this program seem to have been basically right, don't they? You have to respect that. Nixon's got a conservative's rep, but he was a Keynesian in economic terms and he definitely committed to a massive spending program here based on bogus estimates. With his eyes wide open about it, too.

    --
    "Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
  96. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Rick.C · · Score: 2, Funny
    your stupid country just spent 300Bn destroying Iraq!

    Correction: Our stupid country spent 300Bn NOT destroying Iraq.

    We could have turned the sand to glass at a much lower cost. Why didn't we? Because we're saving our

    NUKEs for FRANCE!!

    --
    You were 80% angel, 10% demon. The rest was hard to explain. - Over The Rhine
    "Math in a song is good."-Linford
  97. Dinosaur-killer response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Bend over, grab ankles, kiss ass goodbye!

    If a 10-klick+ asteroid is going to hit the Earth, that's about the only the only thing we could do. By the time we know it's going to hit the Earth my guess is that it would be too close to do a damn thing about it.

    Would we really want to know about such an event before it happens?

  98. Kick NASA out of the launch business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    NASA should be kicked out of the space launch business altogether. Let them buy space access competitively like everyone else. NASA's unbroken chain of expensive failures over the last 20 years (article) and its poisoning of competition by spreading money (article) are good reasons for it to be kept as far as possible from the launcher building business and launch policy.

    One of the problems with current situation is that craft seem to be designed by committee according to specifications drafted by politicians eager to bring to their districts as much business as possible (and line their own pockets with 'campaign contributions'). Efficiency, cost and (unless people die and it hits the news) safety do not seem to be important.

    The rest of this post is mostly about launching satelites, but it probably also applies to manned launches.

    Another problem is that of economics. There currently aren't enough launches per year to allow economy of scale to play any role. If, for instance, one were to design, build and launch a particular booster type twice weekly for three years (ca. 300 launches total), the unit cost would be a lot lower than if that same booster type were launched every other month (18 launches or so) or even monthly (36 launches) over the same period. The former case makes an assembly line affordable, the latter would not. The higher schedule would also allow more opportunities to test and phase in new equipment like electronics, pumps and engines.

    A (somewhat extreme) example of this can be found in the history of the World War II A4 missile, better known as the V2. At peak production it is estimated that the Mittelwerke produced hundreds of the things, even under wartime conditions. Of those launched, about 80% worked as designed. Without bombing and slave labor and with better materials, quality control and manufacturing methods, mass-building a booster capable of lofting 2 tons or more to low orbit for under $4 million apiece and with a success rate of 95% or better should be quite possible. Since it isn't designed for maximum throw weight (like an ICBM) somewhat cheaper (and heavier) materials can be used to keep costs down. More on the V2's history and its application to modern launches can be found at this location. Cheers, Coward

  99. Soyuz not that good by ToSeek · · Score: 3, Informative

    The Russian Soyuz spacecraft has made 1500 successful launches in a life of over 30 years. Several hundred of those have been manned, with only one catastrophe. This is inaccurate in several respects. The Soyuz/R7 launch vehicle has a 97.5% success rate (1 failure per 40 missions). 106 of those launches have been manned with 2 fatal failures (Soyuz 1, Soyuz 11) and several aborted missions, including the Soyuz T-10A, where the launch vehicle exploded and only the recovery system saved the cosmonauts.

  100. McCain-Feingold better be overturned, then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If you want to buy them back, that is.

    Because McCain-Feingold is really nothing more than an incumbent-protection racket.

    Think about it: the political ads that organizations like NOW, NEA, Sierra Club, NRA, AARP, even the KKK and NAMBLA would have to be approved by a government agency that gets its funding from Congress. Why? Because such ads could "negatively affect elections", or so the story goes. Gee, why would an entrenched political class ever want to regulate that?

    What the hell ever happened to freedom of speech and freedom of association?

  101. What is "acceptable"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd be curious if he'd stick his neck out and say what an acceptable failure rate would be.

  102. Compare to the Russians by lawpoop · · Score: 3, Insightful
    No deaths in a Soyuz capsule in 20 years. I don't blame the senator for saying our death/accident rate is too high.

    Can't we at least do better than the Russians?

    --
    Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
    -- Pablo Picasso
    1. Re:Compare to the Russians by doce · · Score: 1

      comparing Soyuz to the Orbiter? i mean sure... Soyuz is reusable right? and it carries the same payload? and it carries up to 7 humans or so? right? right?

      as long as we're on the same page here...

      --
      woof!
    2. Re:Compare to the Russians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the point is, reusability is -pointless-. It doesn't save money. The shuttle was a lie and a boondoggle from the drawing board.

  103. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think you'll find they have their own nukes. That's why you can't bully them like you do most of the world. Who disagreed with the US policy on Iraq? France (nukes) China (nukes) Russia (many nukes). Can you see a trend?

    --
    That was classic intercourse!
  104. Astronauts don't care... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...most of them would even fly into space if death is granted.

  105. "this may have more to do with Joe's friends" by Pulsar · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not to defend the man, because this is a stupid stance to take, but he represents an area near here at the University of Texas at Arlington, and the primary reason he would have such a high level of contributions from Lockheed Martin is because they have several locations in this area.

    Opensecrets.org is based on how much employees of that company give; there's a MUCH higher than normal concentration of Locheed Martin employees in this area and in his district.

    When making allegations like that, you should probably check into the facts. I'm sure that LMCO has some sort of sway with Joe, but there are many, many other corporations in this area that have just as much sway, if not moreso. For once, I don't think this politician's actions are based on something shady a campaign contributer has asked them to do. These stupid remarks really were just his thoughts on the issue. Scary.

    1. Re:"this may have more to do with Joe's friends" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      he represents an area near here at the University of Texas at Arlington

      Maybe you don't know Arlington Texas. It is a religious hotbed, populated by the most assinine ignorant people East of the Pecos.

      Most of his constituents thinks the earth is flat anyway.

  106. Not The End... by Alastor187 · · Score: 1

    I read in an aviation news letter today (I deleted it so I cannot copy it, I will just paraphrase the main ideas) about a push by some politician(s) to make the shuttle a 100% autonomous cargo transportation vehicle. According the article most of the shuttles functions are already autonomous and those that are not could readily be made so. An alternative(read: cheaper, safer) space vehicle is desired for travel from earth to ISS and back. In the mean time while the shuttle is being converted and the new vehicle is being designed, the current astronauts could hitch a ride with the Russians. NASA, obviously doesnt agree 100% but they said they could start reducing the size of current shuttle crews. Ultimately getting down to just a pilot and co-pilot, during this period of time NASA would hope to have an alternative vehicle constructed. One of the biggest problems is that currently NASA does not have a design for an alternative vehicle. All the past designs have been scrapped for one reason or another. NASA more than likely has been counting on the longevity of the shuttle. Alastor

  107. Military uniform == target by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    It's part of the job description. Always has been.

    That's why 9/11 will always be a bigger day of infamy than Pearl Harbor - as brutal as Pearl Harbor was, the targets on Dec 7 were clearly military, and they could hardly be classed as a strategic surprise - war was already raging across Europe and Asia, and tension were extreme between the US and Japan.

    The terrorists of 9/11, on the other hand, attacked clearly civilian targets, and it surprised the shit out of a lot of Americans that there is actually a group of evil bastards who would kill Americans simply for being Americans.

  108. numbers discrepancy by gobbligook · · Score: 1

    sure the 1:62.5 number doesn't work out with the actual shuttle mission numbers... or does it?

    What about the testing process of these space shuttles? surely the entire space shuttle fleet has had at least one test flight per shuttle? that would mean that his numbers are right.

    Not that I know what happens at NASA, but all vehicles (aircraft-autos-RV's) go though manned tests. It is only reasonable to assume that the shuttles did too. Before you spew off the fact that the numbers are wrong, look again, perhaps the people reporting are right, and perhaps they just may have more information about the topic than you do.

  109. Some example! by why-is-it · · Score: 1

    Our DoD budget recently gave everyone who has CNN a spectacular display of where our tax dollars are going as it defeated an entrenched enemy within a couple of weeks. NASA has failed to do the same.

    Are you saying that in order to be considered "successful", you want NASA to kick some alien ass in order to secure our access to their natural resources?

    If the war against Iraq is your standard, where do you think we will find a planet that has resources we desperately require and a military that is totally inferior to our own? It's not as if the war against Iraq was a battle of equivalent military forces you know.

    --
    *** Where are we going? And what's with this handbasket?
    1. Re:Some example! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First off, your view of the war in Iraq is fucked if you think the US went in there solely for the oil.

      And it's really futile to try to hold an arguement with someone who doesn't have a fucking clue, and insists on pounding away with political rhetoric.

    2. Re:Some example! by Capt.+DrunkenBum · · Score: 1

      "Are you saying that in order to be considered "successful", you want NASA to kick some alien ass in order to secure our access to their natural resources?"

      I think I saw that movie.

      --

      Not everyone deserves a 320i

    3. Re:Some example! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they went in to destroy weapons of mass destructions. No wait, New week, new reason, to liberate the people. No wait, sorry, didn't realize it was May, it was to get a bunch of people who could possibly at one point in the furture produce WMDs. Tune in Next week for a new excuse.

      Here's a hint: It's all about the benjamins.

    4. Re:Some example! by CommandNotFound · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that in order to be considered "successful", you want NASA to kick some alien ass in order to secure our access to their natural resources?

      Absolutely not. You misunderstood my statement, and if it was not clear, I apologize. The parent post first drew the comparison between NASA and the DoD. I simply pointed out that the average taxpayer can easily see the effects of DoD funding, whether they agree with those effects or not (apparently you do not, but that is another topic). NASA has not provided a public display to the taxpayers of what said tax dollars have provided, other than some more boring shuttle experiments, a constanly-on-the-verge-of-shutdown space station, and several failed X-planes.

    5. Re:Some example! by mfrank · · Score: 1

      By "successful", he means actually getting something for the money spent. Whether or not you agree on how it's been used, it's pretty obvious that the money spent on the military resulted in something that did what it was supposed to do, and did it extremely well.

      You can't say that about NASA. So now we have a space station with three astronauts on it. Whoop-de-doo. We had one of those thirty years ago. It was called Skylab, and it was launched with *one* Saturn V, with a total price far less than the ISS piece of crap currently in orbit. The shuttle and the ISS are white elephants.

      I've been a member of the National Space Society for fifteen years. I didn't renew my membership this year. Unless NASA is completely restructured or eliminated, America is going nowhere in space. We'd be better off just giving the $15 billion dollars a year to the Russians and let them go at it. We'd have a moon base and footprints on Mars in 10 years.

    6. Re:Some example! by agrounds · · Score: 1

      NASA has not provided a public display to the taxpayers of what said tax dollars have provided, other than some more boring shuttle experiments, a constanly-on-the-verge-of-shutdown space station, and several failed X-planes.

      I was leaving this branch of the thread alone as it was getting hairy, but I have to interject on this one:

      Hubble
      Telecommunications Satellites (the early ones were launched from the orbiter)
      Weather Mapping Satellites (some of these were also launched from the orbiter)
      Global Positioning Systems (ditto)
      Voyager
      Galileo
      and let's not forget going to the moon

      Not a bad feat of accomplishments that I think most schoolkids know about. Even some taxpayers might have heard or benefited from one or two of these...

    7. Re:Some example! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, I think it has more to do with the fact all Islamic governments except Turkey (which is an Islamic state, but has a secular gov't, which is in stark contrast to other Islamic states) wants to see a nation that occupies a few percent of the land in the Middle East wiped out.

      See, originally there was the nation of Palestine, which would have covered modernday Jordan and Israel. The British when they left thier occupation of the middle east after WWI decided to split Palestine which was to be a homeland for the Jews. They created modern day Israel and gave that to the Jews instead.

      It was within a few years Britain was under threat from Hitler and ever since they split Palestine up, the British empire has been nothing.

      Then our illustrious President Clinton proposed to split modern day Israel into two states, one for the Jews and one for Jordanian refugees. Nearly immediately our economy started to slow down. Now we have a new president who hasn't learned, and our economy continues to tank.

      I suggest everybody go look through the history of the world, and compare the rise and fall of nations and empires, with how those nations and empires treated Israel. I think you'll be suprised at how much of this world rises and falls on supporting or not supporting the Jews.

      Whether or not our current president is a true Christian waits to be seen. But he is a Protestant, and the four Protestant denominations follow the Catholic tradition of believing the Jews purpose in the world was replaced by the Church. (It was not. Of course then again so few people know what the Jews purpose is...) This fact would explain the reason President Bush supports Israel as a matter of US tradition, and not out of personal conviction.

      This war was because the US supports Israel out of tradition, but not out of conviction for the most part. Its only a matter of time before the US doesn't support Israel any more, you can see it happening now even. The people don't, except by tradition. And as soon as there are so few people with conviction about it, the nation will stop its support of Israel. (In fact there is a large amount of growing oppoistion to Israel in this country.)

      The reason that the stated purpose for the war keeps changing is because quite frankly our leaders don't have a clue whats going on now. Dumb and Ignorant of history, that is what they are.

      Watch your backs people, this world is getting messy and it isn't going to get better for a long time.

    8. Re:Some example! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since the first telecomm satellites were launched in the 1960s (remember Telstar?), as were the first weather satellites (remember Tiros?), they didn't have anything to do with the shuttle.

      The shuttle was used to launch satellites for a while, until Challenger, at which point the figleaf of safety was used to conceal the embarrassing fact that expendable launchers were far less expensive.

    9. Re:Some example! by Thud457 · · Score: 1
      • Hubble- unmaanned
      • Telecommunications Satellites (the early ones were launched from the orbiter)- unmaanned
      • Weather Mapping Satellites (some of these were also launched from the orbiter)- unmaanned
      • Global Positioning Systems (ditto)- unmaanned
      • Voyager- unmaanned
      • Galileo- unmaanned
      • and let's not forget going to the moon - manned - before the days of the shuttle
      --

      the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    10. Re:Some example! by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1
      Hubble- unmaanned
      ... but only functioning today and capable of delivering the amazing images it does because of a manned space program.
    11. Re:Some example! by pfdietz · · Score: 1

      As designed, it needed manned servicing, but there's nothing essential about that. HST's replacement, the NGST, will be launched on a Delta into an orbit that the shuttle cannot reach.

    12. Re:Some example! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Not too bad except that half of what you mentioned was not done by NASA. The telecommunications, weather, and GPS systems were all out of the military. NASA launched some telecos and weather satellites, but that was because it was mandated that way to justify having a shuttle (in fact, at one point (I believe it was Reagan) an executive order was issued that anything going up in space has to go on the shuttle; the Air Force got an exemption and kept working on launchers, but Galileo and Hubble went up on the shuttle because it was a requirement. Galileo especially had no reason to go on the shuttle, and in fact would have been much cheaper and easier to go on a rocket. The mandate, by the way, was lifted when Challenger blew up). The GPS systems and most other telco and weather satellites go up on rockets because the shuttle cannot get to GEO.

      The school kids know about the other ones you mentioned, but all of your implied benefits come from the military (and NOAA), not NASA.

  110. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by mfrank · · Score: 1, Informative

    I think you mean France (profits off oil-for-food) China (arms sales) Russia (both of the above).

  111. texas leftys by dj_virto · · Score: 1

    Left wing activism has been flowering in Houston and Dallas in recent years and has been kicking hard at the ruling elite in Austin for many years. Many of the children of folks who moved here for their corporate jobs are starting to see through the sham I'm afraid.

    Houston is perhaps the most conservative city out of the top 4 metro regions (NY, LA, Chicago, and Houston).. and yet we have cool lefty things like an open access micro cinema (the aurora picture show), a full power FM pacifica station (KPFT) which a genuine open door policy where anyone can just walk in and start producing radio, fully non profit art centers like Super Happy Fund Land, a dozen vegetarian/vegan restaurants, all out activists groups like the Houston Peace and Justice Center, Houston Animal Rights Team, Food Not Bombs, the Green Party etc, etc...

    Also there's a bunch of incredibly cool people who work for NASA. So let's not be so quick to put down a state as all one way. California may be the land of fruits and nuts, but it also contains Orange county and Ronald Reagan.

  112. The failure rate is expected by sjbe · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Is grounding the shuttle fleet for the next ten years a good idea? Well, I don't have all the facts but the failure rate does suggest that the programme does need to be more closely examined.

    There are two critical factors that determine the reliability of the shuttle. The first is the number of "mission critical" systems, which is simply the number of systems that there is no backup for and if they go bad a disaster occurs. (Fuel tanks, boosters, heat tiles, etc) The second is the reliability of those mission critical systems.

    As I recall there is somewhere around 20 mission critical parts. These parts are designed to have a reliability of 0.999. That means individually we should expect any one of these parts to fail 1 out of every 1,000 uses. They were not designed to be more reliable for cost reasons. Getting more "9s" of reliability is exponentially expensive. But the important factor to remember is that the probability of failure is additive so while the chance of a single part failure is quite low, the collective chance of a system failure is significantly far from zero:

    Chance of failure = (1-0.999) * 20 = 0.02 = 2%

    This means there is a roughly 2% chance of each shuttle mission failing catastrophically. After 113 missions the number of shuttles we should expect to see blow up is

    2.26 = (1-0.999)* 20 * 113

    Note this does not mean that we will see 2.26 shuttle failures. Rather it means that on average we should expect to see one blow up roughly every 50-60 missions. We might see the next 3 blow up, or we might not see one blow up for 150 missions, but over the long run we will lose one roughly every 50-60 missions.

    There are two ways to improve this. Have fewer mission critical systems or design the systems we have for better reliability. The first means getting a new launch system because the shuttle design can't be dramatically altered at this point. The second means a much more expensive shuttle, which congress is unwilling to fund.

    I find it very ironic that congress blames NASA for explosions that were virtually assured by the budget congress gave NASA for the shuttle program. (Please note: whether you think NASA and/or the shuttle program is a good investment or not is irrelevant to the point I just made) My point is that once you fix a budget and a design, the system's reliability is fairly deterministic. The expected failure rate of shuttles was known at the time the program was started. Congress blaming NASA exclusively for the explosion is ignorant at best and hypocritical at worst. If fault must be assigned (and I don't think it really needs to be) Congress is probably more at fault than anyone else in this case. My $0.02 anyway.

  113. hey tard-o by zogger · · Score: 1

    --the POINT was we already have the things. Yes, what you said is true, what I said is true as well. Scrapped on the ground they are about useless except to gawk it. My reply was to counter the original idea from the congressman-you know, the article?- To just ground them. And they DO undergo the most stress on take offs and landings, that's what beats on them and wears them out the most. I say, before they are so used up and worn out that we re-think their missions as shuttles up and down from earth and park them up there where they will be more useful. And if they aren't coming back down to earth, we can REMOVE THE FREEKING LANDING GEAR and other heavy stuff we won't be needing before the last launch up, maybe the wings, or maybe retro fit the wings to store and deploy a big solar array-whatever, those partsd aren't as important as the concept of using what we have that is still working. You'd want to retrofit them anyway for their new "pure in-space" missions, any of the "reentry" stuff becomes redundant and yes, useless mass and weight, SO, we would replace it with useful stuff.

    I thought this was so obvious it didn't need mentioning, guess I was wrong on that. sheesh

    Use a user name if you want to troll and flame, at best, I will only do one reply to an AC, and you just got yours.

  114. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, you just don't understand....

  115. So long as there are astronauts. by sbaker · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Fixing these craft to improve those odds of survival is an unending thing. It's like debugging a ten million line software application - you'll never get the last bug. Fixing THIS problem may well be a complete waste of time since it'll probably never happen this way again. Sure, other shuttles will crash if we continue to fly them - but I'd be very suprised if the exact same problem happened again. Hence, it's irrelevent whether you fix this problem or not - even designing an entire new manned space system may not dramatically improve people's odds of surviving a round trip to space.

    But so long as the astronauts like those odds, there is no really good reason not to continue to fly the existing shuttle fleet. A 98% chance of survival is OK for quite a lot of people to get a once-in-a-lifetime chance to get into space. If any of them believed the shuttle fleet was anything like 100% safe, that thought must have been dispelled by the first shuttle accident.

    A 2% chance of dying is not a good risk for (say) driving to work every day - but for a chance at doing something utterly amazing which you'll only get to do once or twice in an entire career - I don't think you'd find trouble getting volunteers.

    Driving your car to work every day for a year gives you a one in 124 chance of dying or being seriously disabled. Driving to work every day of your life is MUCH more risky than taking a round trip to the ISS in a shuttle.

    The actual capital cost of the shuttle fleet is significant - but if your only other plan is to ground them permenantly, you might as well fly them to destruction instead - either way, the cost of losing them (in purely monetary terms) is the same.

    I'd bet good money that those astronauts who were sitting up in the ISS last week would have preferred to risk coming home in an un-fixed shuttle than coming home in that ratty old russian ship (which incidentally came close to killing them all as it was).

    --
    www.sjbaker.org
    1. Re:So long as there are astronauts. by pmz · · Score: 1

      Driving your car to work every day for a year gives you a one in 124 chance of dying or being seriously disabled.

      Where did this statistic come from? If 1% of our driving population become non-driving each year, then suburban sprawl would probably have become impractial. The American "give me a car or give me death" attitude probably wouldn't have happened, either.

      There are 100s of millions of cars in the U.S. and tens of millions of drivers. By your statistic, this would mean hundreds of thousands of people are at least disabled each year in car accidents. This seems a bit much.

      Also, don't forget that nearly all car accidents are preventable. Every accident I know of was either caused by negligence (overloaded trailers, no seatbelts, etc.), drunkenness, or visual obstructions (overgrown trees, poorly designed intersections, etc.). The only unpreventable accidents tend to fall under the "natural disaster" category.

  116. By all means ground it by IWantMoreSpamPlease · · Score: 1

    and shut down NASA.

    And overhaul the whole ideal, scope and construction.

    You *do* have this already planned, don't you Senator?

    No? Well then, shut up until you do.

    --
    So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
  117. Statistics by visionsofmcskill · · Score: 4, Interesting
    1 in 56.5 is far more than acceptable given the field of work.

    when you consider these VOLUNTEERS enter the most dangerous and inhospitable of environments known to man (a vacum), and return safely in nearly 99% of missions, then the risk becomes more acceptable.

    To ground the program due to what seems to me an exceptional track record given the extreme nature of their work is beyond senseless, a disaster occured in which information can be garnered to prevent such catastrophies from occuring again. Because a ship was lost does not justify reasoning that the entire organization is flawed. This is high risk work people, and generaly high risk work runs into intermittent tragedies that illuminate problems to be prevented int the future.

    Now at this point im sure plenty of people will chime in, that what if these tragedies can be averted by further research and development... etc.... This logic however falls short because we cant prepare for every possible imaginable disaster, we cant protect ourselves from millions of potential disasters that are beyond boundless in scope and possibilities. An ill timed solar flare on a certain region of the sun could wreck ireprable damage on all the electrical systems on earth, so should we just not go into space at all considering that may happen (and trust me, we dont have the tech to protect ourselves from a strong enough flare)

    so then the real question becomes acceptable risk. is a 1-2% failure rate acceptable? I would have to say yes, and most risk-analysers would agree.

    the second question is risk vs profit. this is far more tricky, as many have mentioned what THEY believe to be pointless or fruitless expiraments done in space, which provide little benfit given the risk and cost of the endeavor. In my honest opinion almost any reasonable research in space is at this point priceless, even manned research is of an in-estimable value to mankind. The results may not lend any imediatly profitable outcomes to buisness ventures, but on the whole the entire endeavor does many things, it first of all provides a wealth of knowledge otherwise completly unattainable on earth to the scientific knowledge of all humanity. We are talking about research that is impossible to obtain otherwise. Second of all it gives us, humans, a goal beyond this planet, a sense of a greater direction, a destiny of sorts that we can all build towards. I know that sounds grandiose and over the top, but look at our cultures far back into time, breaking boundries and pushing limits to find new things has been the legacy of humans since we could write on walls. And lets face it folks, as far as earth goes we're begging to reach the boundries here-in.... the space program has been giving us a new frontier that is important for the well-fare of the human psyche and our global culture. Thirdly the program creates jobs on more levels than NASA, there are contractors, and the companies that support the contractors, most people in the end are somehow connected to NASA through the MANY companies that support, supply, or buy from her.

    while no-one has seriously proposed to stop NASA, grounding her is a similar action in that it would kill a great amount of drive behind her development. And in my opinion NASA's development is one of THE MOST IMPORTANT things earth should be doing right now.

    i agree that reviewing the processes behind how NASA operates should happen frequently, but hampering her as well is worse than foolish, it is counter-productive, and potentialy catostrophic in it's own right. If anything we should be pumping more money into appropriate portions of NASA and concentrating on creating and achieving even grander goals in shorter spans of time.

    a manned mission to mars should have been accomplished years ago.... there should have been a manned (or at least unmanned) station ON the moon decades ago, there should have been hundreds more probes sent through our measly solar system, and many more things.

    the space race has died, and needs to be revived for the greater good of all.

    If commercial space ventures can get a jump-start soon (as they seem nearly there), then we may find ourselves finaly advancing at an acceptable rate.

    --
    --Idiots, Every single one of YOU, A flaming mass of conglomerated morons, hey wait a second, isnt that how RAID works?
  118. you never know where breakthroughs will happen by dj_virto · · Score: 1

    History has shown you really never know where the next breakthrough or pre-breakthrough will come from. It is consquently nearly imposible to do a long term cost benefit analysis of one experimental program over another.

    Galvani was a strange man trying to put electricty through frogs legs, but the battery he created made fundamental differences for the development of electronics.

    Was it worth all the money the government gave to Douglas Englebart to come up with something as useless to the world of the 1960's as the mouse?

    I was just reading the other day how NASA scientists were the first to identify hydroplaning and have consequently changed the way that tires and braking systems are built. The examples could go on and on. You really never know what application this sort of stuff will find. The best thing you can do is to give the gearheads money and and keep them screwing around! At any rate it is a hell of a better deal than buying another dozen Apache helicopters for the right wing militias of Columbia or some other crap. Ignorant people just complain about NASA because that's the government spending they see on TV.

    Setting people up to do science in microgravity could revolutionize our society one day when some crazed aging hippy's experiment yields the secret to making incredibly strong fibers.. or who knows what?

    1. Re:you never know where breakthroughs will happen by pfdietz · · Score: 1
      History has shown you really never know where the next breakthrough or pre-breakthrough will come from. It is consquently nearly imposible to do a long term cost benefit analysis of one experimental program over another.
      In that case, the obvious strategy is to have as many programs as possible (since, by your assumption, all are equivalent). This means you want a lot of small programs, not a few big programs. In other words, this is a very strong argument against very expensive manned space efforts.
  119. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1
    Thanks for offering us your nukes, but we've got plenty, thanks.

    Come to think of it I wonder where they're targeted these days? :-)

    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video
  120. perps=layers of reality by zogger · · Score: 1

    don't stop at your comfort level when assigning total blame. I agree, it was a pretty dastardly deed. But I think it needs a wee bit more "investigations" then what have transpired so far. Go all the way, yep, some saudis/al queda/taliban and whatever involved, but chew on some of this stuff for awhile, and see perhaps if there might not be more than brown skinned humans wearing robes and turbans involved. I'd like to see a "regime change" of ALL the perps involved, even the more "embarrasing" ones. A good start would to have credible investigations, not warren commission part deux.

    here, check it out

    http://www.libertythink.com/911.htm

  121. Space Elevator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I tend to agree. We would be much better off spending more money doing research on making a Space Elevator.

    Just my $0.02

  122. buying a senator... by evil_mojo_jojo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What's amazing is not that a Senator can be bought, but rather how inexpensive it is.

    $13,800 contribution from Lockheed Martin?

    At that rate, the Slashdot crowd could own all of the Senate and Congress and still have money left over to buy a burger.

    Why are we screwing around with the DMCA and RIAA all the time? Just buy your own congresscritter. Take two, they're cheap.

  123. Re:I volunteered my money to burn up on reentry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    somehow your trend breaks down right about now... Canada (?????).

  124. Re:Loss of Life? Riiiight. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We lose them monthly in Ca ALONE. Certinaly the entire US has at least that many.

    And yeah, they ground them for two weeks till the cause is found. The shuttles have already been grounded far longer than any military craft has ever been.

    More crap, different asshole.

  125. 1 in 65 or 2 in 65 ?? by oldzoot · · Score: 0

    Have there not been two failures of the Shuttle?

    I seem to vaguely remember something called Challenger....

    Or maybe there have been more than 62.5 flights total.

    Z

    --
    enough is too much
  126. Don't forget Senator Daschle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We could let Tom Daschle take it over. If he applies his philosophy on the economy, he will block any attempts to fix the shuttle program in the hopes that there are more explosions, people blame in on the Republicans, and more Democrats are elected.

  127. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moderators : the parent post is a reference to the "Monty Python and the holy Grail" movie, which depicts french attitude with those lines. It is supposed to be funny, as much as the post it answers. At least, you should tag also the "let's nuke the french" post as offtopic too...

  128. Chances are by totallygeek · · Score: 1

    If the chance of failure was 1 in 10, there would still be thousands of people lined up to be space explorers. These people are piloting the most well-maintained vehicle on Earth in the most dangerous travel path. Before you villianize the space industry, look at how many of us are killed in car accidents.

  129. 113/2=? by phriedom · · Score: 1

    Does anyone else find it humorous that the correct number is actually HIGHER than the one cited?

    On a different note, after NASA has sent the shuttle up to Low Earth Orbit over a hundred times, is there much to be accomplished in going another hundred times? I'm in favor of manned space exploration, but I don't see the ISS and the shuttles as exploration. They look like a solution searching for a problem.

    --
    Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
  130. 1:56 odds by salesgeek · · Score: 1

    It's easy for us to say those are good odds -- but if your butt was in the pilot's seat you'd see that quite differently.

    It's time to invest in something new that can give us better odds that I have a 2% chance of blowing up spectacularly on this trip!

    --
    -- $G
  131. Re:1 in 65 or 2 in 65 ?? by doce · · Score: 2, Informative

    you aren't familiar with a math principle called reduction? 1-in-62.5 is equal to 2-in-125

    The shuttle has flown closer to 125 times than it has to 62.5. I think that the Columbia disaster occurred on missios STS-107, which according to NASA, was the 113th mission of the shuttle.

    FWIW, the STS-# designation of the mission is it's originally scheduled launch sequence - that is, STS-107 was slated originally to be the 107th launch. In the end, though, the launch order changes for a variety of reasons. The various recent problems with cracks, crewing issues, shuttle readiness, payload readiness, etc, cause NASA to shift the actual launch order around quite a bit.

    --
    woof!
  132. That's a misleading statistic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Astronaut" isn't in the top 10 because the BLS (Bureau of Labor Statistics) doesn't keep statistics on them. Astronauts are lumped into the "Federal Government excluding the Postal Service" category. In reality, being a shuttle astronaut is either about as fatal, or more fatal, than fishing (depending on whether you went up during the early years or more recently, based on 10-year averages).

  133. Engineering problems. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (1) The STS was designed by comittee. It had so many goals to meet that it never really accomplished any of them. It wasn't very good at heavy lifting, it was cramped, difficult to perform experiments in and required a large number of people to staff it.

    (2) "Ceramic tiles" are an obsolete technology, as is much of the Shuttle. As a result of the past 30 years of material science, modern alloy / composite structural materials are quite capable of handling the heat and stresses of re-entry on their own. You could build the hull from some of these materials and it could take the stress of re-entry - without having a protective layer of ceramic that has to be replaced after each and every mission.

    (3) Adding an "aeroshell" is a quite silly comittee-style solution that's overcomplicated, adds weight, drag and is something else that can go wrong.

    (4) Russia's Buran Shuttle clone was light-years ahead of the Shuttle - and a much better, more modern take on the concept. It included an autopilot to orbit and back for unmanned missions. It was a pity they ran out of money. Where is it now? The only flown, full-scale and working specimen was damaged when a museum roof partly collapsed on it last year. The most advanced spacecraft in the world - and it's being allowed to rot away. Sigh.

  134. Re:If every space flight was guaranteed not to ret by luna69 · · Score: 1
    If someone were to come up with a plan for a one way trip to Mars that offered even a glimmer of hope for surviving, you'd have no trouble finding people who would rather live a few months on Mars than the rest of their lives on Earth. Time by itself isn't a reason to live.

    Well said. We can bitch about losing money when something like this happens...that's valid. But the lives lost? They knew, no, they EMBRACED the risk, because they believed in what they were doing.

    A trip to Mars? Just issue me a suit, and I'm gone.

    --
    No gods, no demons, and no masters. Secular Humanism!
  135. Don't breathe! by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2, Funny

    People who breathe oxygen have a 100% chance of dying at some point.

    Hold your breath! Boycott oxygen!

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  136. You're missing the point by missing the point. by ValentineMSmith · · Score: 1
    There's no reason to send an astronaut into space, at huge expense, to perform experiments that could just as easily be done on an unmanned craft
    Define cheap. If you are looking solely at the cost of the launch (launch vehicle, ground infrastructure, payload), yes, you can probably do unmanned cheaper than manned. However, what you don't see is the number of times automated experiments on the shuttle would have failed except for human intervention. Having someone physically there to kick/duct tape something when it needs it saves the cost of having to do everything over again.
    --
    Karma: Chameleon - mostly influenced by bad '80s New Wave music
  137. Not white vs black, but rich vs poor by omarKhayyam · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The way you've phrased your argument you're letting the "upper class" (different from the wealthy, as there are wealthy people who aren't bastards) succeed in their perpetual goal of setting the impoverished lower classes against each other.

    In your kidnapping example, in the US the real dividing line is not white vs. colored as it is about rich vs. poor, or more correctly powerful vs. powerless. This is easy to confuse, because there happens to be strong correlations between race and income (for at least partially historical reasons). The fact is that poor white people have more in common with poor black people than they do with wealthy/powerful whites - a fact that the many wealthy whites (the afore mentioned "upper class") want to hide, conciously or unconciously. Why? Because setting the poorest people against each other keeps them from realizing how bad their situation is and demanding better.

    I've simplified this argument greatly because I'm at work and don't want to take an hour or more off to give this topic the nuanced argument it deserves. I like my employers, they're good folks :).

    khayyam

  138. The truck should be unmanned by Animats · · Score: 1
    We know what works. Simple little manned craft, like Mercury, Gemini, and Soyuz work fine. Big complicated manned craft, like Apollo and STS, don't. Why? Because the big craft have to be severely weight-reduced to get off the ground. Their margins are too low and the complexity is too high.

    Heavy launches should be unmanned and one-way. Proton and Saturn boosters worked well, and the costs were far lower than the STS.

    Trying to build a space truck is a mistake.

  139. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by pkinetics · · Score: 1

    If you don't take an active role in politics, voicing opinions, contacting your representative, etc. Then yes, you are volunteering your money for whatever projects OTHERS deem necessary.

  140. Actually... by TubeSteak · · Score: 1
    IANAL etc... Corporations are treated as individuals under the law. How do you think you can sue a company? If companies weren't people you'd have to sue each and every managing partner separately. The whole idea of a corporation is that you create a legal entity that is liable for anything that goes wrong.

    Now as for free speech, like the other responses said, corporations have printing presses too. As was made crystal clear in the recent Nike free speech case, corporations can say whatever they want as long as its not Commercial Speech . Its also discussed here. 3 out of 4 Supreme Court Justices thought Nike (a corporation) should have its free speech and eat it to.

    If you still want to ignore how things are, this site abolishcorporatepersonhood.org should provide you with some mental masturbation. Just don't forget to take everything they say with a grain of salt... like "they abuse their 4th amendment right to privacy". That right to privacy means you are protected from unreasonable search and seizures.

    "Ring Ring! its the BSA, we're here to inspect your computers and make sure you have licenses for everything"
    nhavar: Fuck off, this is my business, where's your warrant to search my premises?
    BSA: Hahaha, why do we need a warrant? Your business doesn't have a right to privacy!
    I bet you could stick some kind of Soviet Russia joke in here

    Anyways, i think i'm getting off track. the point is corporations need to be recognized as people for certain basic functions of business.

    P.S. I can't be bothered to search for the statistics, but the majority of people are quite happy with their Senator/Congressman; they just aren't too thrilled with the Senate/Congress as a whole. go figure
    P.P.S. What if you start your own one man business? are you a person? are you a company? are you a schizo?

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:Actually... by rleibman · · Score: 1

      Totally!
      You also have to remember that a corporation is a group of individual humans, and it has (and should have) the same rights as those individual humans.
      I was trying to find an Ayn Rand quote on this but didn't have time.

  141. Scrap the Shuttle! by spikeham · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't usually agree with politicians, but this guy is right. I am a big fan of the space program, but the Shuttles should be put in museums, never to fly again.

    It is astonishing that so many people want to keep the Shuttles flying when they are so obviously a fundamentally flawed, dangerous, ridiculously bad system, which has killed 14 people and will kill more if it stays in operation.

    I attribute it to national pride. People are blinded by the associations created between the Shuttle and the national image. There is also the lingering competiveness of the Space Race, which leads people to insist that the Shuttles are "better" and "technologically superior" than Soyuz, when it is statistically obvious that the Shuttle is far less reliable, astronomically more expensive, and much more likely to kill the crew.

    The Shuttle is a first-generation product and we could do much better! It is apparent that a far safer, more efficient, cheaper system could be built without too much effort. Why can't NASA and the rest of the country forget the flying dinosaur from the 70's and move on?

    When you have to keep applying band-aid after band-aid to a system to get it to work, and it comes nowhere near fulfilling its original goals, it is time to go back to the drawing board. Stop wasting effort trying to patch up a bad design.

    NASA itself, if it wasn't a stagnant bureaucracy, should be able to realize the many advantages of a new vehicle, including more frequent, faster launches, more flexibility and reliability, the elimination of lots of antiquated infrastructure, the elimination of lots of effort on maintenance, the glamour of a new, flashy, romantic vehicle, and most importantly, no more PR nightmares from killing astronauts in large groups! A new vehicle could revitalize NASA by making it easy to launch all kinds of missions. NASA needs to wake up to the untenable position of supporting this piece of junk. They are foolish to stake their reputation on it. It is yet more proof that NASA no longer innovates or embraces change; it merely tries to continue doing business as usual.

    It is sickening that we will be sending up more astronauts on this death machine. They deserve to have more value placed on their lives by NASA and the rest of the nation. The astronauts are brave and dedicated, and they know the risks, but that is no reason to keep allowing them to face a extremely high probability of catastrophic death.

    Even if it weren't prone to exploding, the absurdly high costs of operating the Shuttles should be reason enough to get rid of them. It would be far cheaper and easier to use expendable rockets for everything the Shuttles do now. NASA could buy a hundred Soyuz, launch a massive wave of new space missions, and still save money over trying to continue operating the Shuttles.

    Hopefully, Burt Rutan's new civilian spacecraft will succeed, helping to make everyone realize that getting into space can be cheap and easy, and just what a stupid waste of time keeping the Shuttles going really is.

  142. Re:If every space flight was guaranteed not to ret by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    I nominate the parent for Best of Slashdot.

  143. The price of humanity by default+luser · · Score: 1

    Let me tell you a very important thing about the world.

    There are two pure extremes out there: the Pacifist, and the Belligerent. Neither one is right, because neither one promotes survival of the species.

    Before you understand what I'm trying to say, you have to understand that the two words have been corrupted by popular culture.

    PACIFISTS NEVER FIGHT. If you would fight to defend your home and your belongings, actively protect your family and friends, save your daughter from a rapist, you are not a Pacifist. A Pacifist lacks any trace of humanity because he or she would never intervene violence with violence for another human being's sake.

    But then again, if you are willing to make calculated war with another country, you aren't a true Belligerent. There are times when fighting now is better than fighting later, or vice-versa, and this is a concept neither a true Belligerent not true Pacifist can understand. Even Hitler, crazy as he was, led his expansion in an cool, calculated manner.

    If you concede the fact that the real world is neither of these two extremes, then you also must concede that, as people set on survival, we can never fully lower our gaurd. We lower it as much as we can for the sake of everyone's sanity, but it can never be removed.

    When you bitch about budgets the size of Texas, I really wonder if you've lost sight of the human factor and slipped into full pacifism. You forget that an effective army, whether it's used for defense or offense, is a necessity, and that human lives are above-all most important.

    Perhaps you'd like to step back to the Vietnam era? Our completely non-stealth B-52s and F4 Phantoms were getting swatted down like flies by Soviet SAM sites. Our platoons went in to die by the thousands just to hit critical enemy installations.

    Yet, you're getting upset that we're now replacing a portion of that fleet of B-52s with something that has a radar cross-section ten-thousand times smaller than a B-52? A bomber built to survive, so we have less PEOPLE as well as bombers to replace?

    You're getting upset over a cruise missle that saves hundreds, possibly thousands of soldiers' lives by hitting key enemy targets, especially the well-defended ones?

    War exists. Take this as truth, for all eternity. Don't get caught up in the numbers, just worry about the people.

    --

    Man is the animal that laughs.
    And occasionally whores for Karma.

    1. Re:The price of humanity by agrounds · · Score: 1

      I could answer this post by trying to demonstrate that I am not being a Pollyanna, or by elaborating the idea that I am merely illustrating a point of priorities of death over knowledge, or even on a point-by-point refutal, but I'll leave it at these three words which I feel address all your concerns over my beliefs in the human race and in safeguarding my families' and indeed all of the United States' citizens lives:

      I'm a veteran

      Don't lecture me on the real world. I've been there.

    2. Re:The price of humanity by David+Koresh · · Score: 1

      Thank you for telling me that "very important thing about the world." I seek further enlightenment and await your next post.

  144. 1:1.62 risk is always acceptable when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...it's someone else doing the dying.

  145. Project Apollo by earthforce_1 · · Score: 3, Insightful


    I believe the apollo astronauts knew that there was a significant risk of catastrophic failure. I am sure everybody around them knew of these risks as well. I remember a TV interview of one manager who was in mission control at the time of the first landing, talking about the master computer overload alarms that kept popping up as they were landing. He said he had estimated beforehand that it was 50-50 as to whether or not they would acutally be able to complete the mission. Apollo 13 came hairline close to catastrophic failure.

    I remember seeing a film clip of a man testing a prototype parachute off the eiffel tower in 1900. His prototype chute didn't open, and the unfortunate man met his end at the base of the tower. Fortunately, this didn't dissuade others from repeating his tragic experiment.

    We all have to go sometime, might as well make it for a meaningful cause.

    --
    My rights don't need management.
  146. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    And the US (both of the above, but obviously not enough).

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  147. What's acceptable? by Pedrito · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What's an acceptable failure rate? I mean, going into space is dangerous stuff. Driving a car is pretty dangerous. Do the math. I mean, granted, driving isn't AS dangerous as going into space, but a lot more drivers die each year than astronauts, that's for sure.

    Hell, fighter pilots and helicopter pilots in the military die all the time in accidents in peace time. I mean, not every day, but it happens a few times a year, it seems. Should we stop letting pilots fly military jets and helicopters?

    I mean hey, let's not get involved in any more wars because 1 loss in 10 (or whatever) is NOT acceptable. Let's not have people work in steel mills anymore because 1 death in 1000 (or whatever) is NOT acceptable.

    People die doing dangerous things. Astronauts aren't ignorant of the dangers. They know them better than any of us will ever know, and yet they choose to do it. Hell, if I had the opportunity, I'd do it. I don't consider myself brave or foolhardy. I simly consider the value of the program to far outweigh the few lives that have been lost to it.

    As far as I'm concerned the only politicians that are qualified to decide if the shuttles should be grounded, are former astronauts. Unfortunately, I don't think we have any former astronauts in congress anymore.

  148. Surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm surprised that a congressman has the guts to say the obvious - the shuttle is the most overpriced, dangerous craft ever built by human hands.

    If he wants to build a replacement, I'm all for it. There are better technologies that, if funded, could really open up space exploration at a much lower cost.

    1. Re:Surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If he wants to build a replacement, I'm all for it. There are better technologies that, if funded, could really open up space exploration at a much lower cost.

      In the heavens' name, NO! Don't have NASA or government funding. Have them pay for success only. That way smaller (and more innovative) companies aren't forced out of business by NASA or politicians, as has happened in the past. NASA's track record over the past 20 years is an unbroken and extremely expensive history of failures, paper projects and politically terminated projects.

      Cheers, Coward

  149. Nope, the first words spoken on the moon... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...on July 20, 1969 were by "Buzz" Aldrin, who said "contact light" to confirm to Mission Commander Neil Armstrong that the Lunar Module's lower stage landing pad probes had touched down, shutting down the lower stage engines, indicated by the brightening of the "contact light" on the control panel.

  150. No offence, but... by niom · · Score: 1

    There is obviously not a shortage of astronaughts wanting to go up in the space shuttle. It is not like we are strapping space monkies into the shuttle and sending them up against their will. These are smart educated people, who train hard to be astronaughts and are willing to give their lives to go into space and be pioneers.

    This is what happens when you learn spelling with the titles of porn movies.

    --
    -- Repeat with me: "There is no right to profits".
  151. The risk is worth the result by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    saying it's not worth it is a bit far-fetched. sure, people dying always sucks.. but well, was what they learnt from the missions before them worth the risk involved? I think if you look at it without burrying your head in the sand you'll say yes. we've learnt far too much in these sorts of explorations than the risk involved, so yes, IMHO it's worth it. Just look at what was learnt in the 40 or so missions before the one that ended catastrophically, then you will know if the risk is worth it.

  152. Won't get it past the Teamsters by AtariAmarok · · Score: 1

    Unmanned trucks? If you try to put it past the Teamsters, you will get a horse head in your bed (since this is space-related, it might well be the entire Horse Head Nebula).

    --
    Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
  153. aww phooie... by zogger · · Score: 1

    Any manned mission to other planets or the moon will require the shielding and food, and also a crew cabin that is verifiably functional. Ya, so???? You would still have to boost the shielding no matter what, if the compartments could be shielded with robots and some eva, well maybe. Not all of it needs to be shileded, just the parts where humans hang out. /the bulk cargo is just that, bulk cargo. Here's your alternative then, start from scratch, build something that can launch something x-times heavier from the surface. Seems like you'd need a heckuva big rocket then. And also, why is it you can only use ONE shuttle for the new and improved rocket modding plan??? No air friction loss in space, use the modular concept, bolt them suckers all together, span them. 150 years ago it was called the "wagon train" concept, seemed to work then.

    I just think it's a heckuva waste to ground functional craft.

    As to food and cabin fever, I have a years worth of food here,(several really) staring at it out in the shed through an open door,one takes up not all that much space, roughly 8 feet by 4 feet by 2 feet. Granted, you need water to go with that, again, dittos for anything else you take with you, or any other design you can come up with. One shuttle hauls water then, or two if you need it, or 3, WHATEVER. How many in the fleet again? And they could bolt some more launched "things" to the contraption, it doesn't have to be streamlined, it just needs motive power. We're gonna need huge amounts of fuel, launch throw away fuel tanks then, and etc. Once up there,with the existing shuttles, you have a multiple of crew cabins, fuel tanks, cargo holds, etc, all the stuff you need rather than building a brand new deal from scratch. NASA struggling to keep 20 billion, the US public ain't gonna buy a 200 billion project, so recycle as much as possible.

    Or let em rot in some museum on the ground, build from scratch. gonna cost some......

    Or maybe we just don't want humans to go anyplace in space until some gravitational sci-fi drive is perfected.

    I'm old enough, I clearly remember sputnik, I remember going out with binocs and seeing echo. Followed all the earlier missions when every channel (all three) caried total TV coverage for the entire missions. Just giving up on travel-not floating around in orbit, but traveling, point A to B seems like such a bummer to me.

    Cabin fever? ha! I live in an rv less than 20 feet long, I got a good idea on that. It's funny but I think having a mixed sex crew might help along those lines! hahahaha! Nothing like a useful hobby!

    I can't really see us using chemical rockets from the earth without doing it in steps, modular, the sheer size is just too much.

    I think they should be used for something practical, that's all, seems just an incredible waste to ground them. It's like they are half way to being real "space ships", seems just so...wrong to not use them better. Even if all they are is storage containes at the space station, with carrying up one last useful cargo apiece, that would be better than grounding them. Dang it! I'm a tax payer! I paid my x-amount for them dang SPACE frikking ships I want them UP IN SPACE not sitting on the ground someplace. OK, one maybe, we already got that,the rest of them, NO,NO,NO, ABSOLUTELY NO! UP there, If they need to be boneyarded, then do it IN SPACE. There's some things that humans GOT to have, it is unexplainable in terms of money! Un-ex-plainable, it's like...explain geekhood, science in general, exploration--can't explain it any better. Don't let the government dangle "man in space" at us for half a centry then give up! If they abandon hoomans in space I'm gonna go wherever them PHB live and get medieval on their sorry butts! They think their budget is low now, just take away from the people "man in space", they'll have to chip in for a pack of bottle rockets. You see just how thrilled the US tax payer would be with a NASA budget for just "unmanned and that's it" space exploration. I s

  154. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by TheGreek · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Who was our closest ally in Iraq?

    Great Britain (Nukes.)

    How, exactly, did we bully them?

  155. Looks like a Normal Accident to me by Interrobang · · Score: 1, Interesting

    For those of you not up on your accident theory, a guy named Charles Perrow developed a model in which he proposes that there are always going to be the 2% accidents -- total, unpredictable, catastrophic failures. While most incidents telegraph themselves a mile wide and a mile deep, some are just practically unavoidable.

    The other side of the coin is that with something as potentially catastrophic and as politically charged as space exploration, we should be aiming even to try to eliminate as many of those "2% Accidents" as possible, which can be done more or less, but takes a lot of work, with (seemingly) minimal return.

    1. Re:Looks like a Normal Accident to me by TKinias · · Score: 2, Insightful

      scripsit Interrobang:

      there are always going to be the 2% accidents -- total, unpredictable, catastrophic failures.

      Lots of things operate with far lower failure rates than two percent -- my car, for instance. If there were a two percent chance of catastrophic failure every time I put my car on the freeway, I would be dead many times over.

      --
      In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
    2. Re:Looks like a Normal Accident to me by ces · · Score: 1

      Lots of things operate with far lower failure rates than two percent -- my car, for instance. If there were a two percent chance of catastrophic failure every time I put my car on the freeway, I would be dead many times over.

      Your car isn't a space vehicle that has to deal with extreme tempratures, vaccum, re-entry, and transonic speeds.

      Space technology is nowhere near as mature as automobiles or air travel.

      Even with the current failure rate I'd go up given the chance.

      --
      Happy Fun Ball is for external use only.
    3. Re:Looks like a Normal Accident to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Your car isn't a space vehicle that has to deal with extreme tempratures, vaccum, re-entry, and transonic speeds.


      You've missed his point.

  156. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Rick.C · · Score: 1
    Yeah, what he said.

    Mod points should only be awarded to people who have demonstrated that they have a sense of humor.

    "Ah tole heem we already gots one."
    --
    You were 80% angel, 10% demon. The rest was hard to explain. - Over The Rhine
    "Math in a song is good."-Linford
  157. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by operagost · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Not really. The UK has nukes too. And I don't think that the opinion of a country that rolls over its citizens with tanks (that's China, in case you have forgotten) for protesting peacefully is worth any consideration. Neither does one that in the past executed many thousands, if not millions of dissidents without trial. As for France, well they smell funny.

    --

    Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  158. This is why I hate statistics... by Transcendent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1:62.5 ratio? Hardly...

    The maintenance and dynamics of each shuttle launch can NOT be summed up in a simple ratio. This is implying that there is some magic force behind the shuttle disasters... which there is not.

    Spewing ratios and saying that this correlation will hold in the future is a horrible excuse. The way to solve the problem is not to just ground the fleet... their magic ratio would still remain. The proper course of action would be to raise funding (instead of the cuts that the government likes to put upon NASA) for their shuttle fleet so they can better find, diagnose, and fix the potential problems and design safety procedures in the event that the unthinkable DOES happen...

    Why does this senator want to ground the fleet? Perhaps money?? hmm... well NASA WAS working on the Venture Star a while back... but they had to scrub it since they didn't have enough funding to continue the project to make a safer and more efficient reusable launch vehicle.

    The astronauts know what they're getting into, the engineers know the risks, the entire organization knows how dangerous this is... so why are we going to groud the shuttles so they can't make further scientific experiments and tests that would help improve the safety of each launch?

    If people had this mentality when the idea of launching people into space first became reality, man would never have left the ground...

  159. obvious? by rk · · Score: 1

    I hate to break it to you, but despite what you see on Star Trek, spaceflight is really, really, REALLY difficult. I agree that there are problems with NASA (like any other federal bureaucracy), and I'd like to see more privatization of space travel and exploration, but I guarantee you that space flight problems are quite a bit more difficult than running a porn web site.

  160. Promethious by Grendol · · Score: 1

    So, Prometheus brings fire to humanity and humanity decides to ban fire when some people got burnt.

    Lets throw rocks at prometheus! Back to the Cave!

  161. Retire the shuttle ASAP by Jeremi · · Score: 1
    The sooner we stop playing around with wasteful, unreliable rocketry, the sooner we can start work on the Space Elevator.


    That's the best way to convert space exploration from an impractical national-pride toy-symbol into something that significant numbers of people can actually benefit from.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  162. Not is all as it seems by mpd2014 · · Score: 2, Informative

    With regards to "There's also an interesting piece on testimony given by the first Shuttle program manager.", the author of this op ed is well known for wanting to scrap all human in space activities. This should be considered when reading the article.

  163. If we're going to play "knee-jerk sniping..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    We could let Tom Daschle take it over. If he applies his philosophy on the economy, he will block any attempts to fix the shuttle program in the hopes that there are more explosions, people blame in on the Republicans, and more Democrats are elected.
    Funny! But to be a completely accurate metaphor, you should really point out that those "attempts to fix the shuttle" will consist primarilly of giving tax breaks to shuttle mechanics in hopes that they will invest the money in training, better tools, etc. and thus operate more efficiently. =D
  164. Re:Launch me! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jesus Christ. You hit every nail on the head. I couldn't have stated it better myself.

  165. Applicants vs. openings sets the bar by rk · · Score: 1

    3,000 applicants. Six openings. You do the math.

  166. Bwa-HAHAHAH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The representative is probably right, but not for the reasons he thinks he is: the government is just holding us back too much in terms of space flight development. We need to get private enterprise involved. How? Have several CEOs study all the plans out there.
    You want us to trust CEOs to lead the great leap forward? I guess you must have been living in a cave the last couple of years. There was this thing called "Enron..." =)

    To avoid boring you with all the details, the point is that the days of CEOs as capitalist superheroes are pretty much done. These days, most people (myself included) would, indeed, expect CEOs to "start writing checks" as you say... except that they would be writing checks to themselves through some 'creative accounting' scheme that siphoned off money from their alleged Mission to Mars.

    Heh. "Private enterprise is the way to go," shyeah. Considering that America's Congress is quite attentive to the concerns of industry (to put it mildly) these days, the fact that private companies aren't leading space exploration is probably not due to being held back by government.
    1. Re:Bwa-HAHAHAH! by bc90021 · · Score: 1

      Those are valid points, and I'm not even in disagreement with you. However, for the one Enron, and the one Worldcom, there were *thousands* of corporations that didn't do anything "creative" with their accounting.

      Aside from that, so what? What if Enron had funded the first mission to Mars? We'd be there! Granted, ideally, we would have wanted them to have funded it legitimately, and not rip off thousands of people's pensions, but again, that's where the thousands of non-evil corporations come in. ;)

    2. Re:Bwa-HAHAHAH! by mfrank · · Score: 1

      You do know that all that hardware has always been built by private industry, don't you? Along with most of the maintenance? If the govt made the contracts so the company's profit would be based solely on how reliable and inexpensive the launch system is, instead of using it for pork, the space program would be in much better shape.

      The federal govt didn't build Apollo. They just paid for it.

  167. Unmanned Shuttle by MichaelPenne · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Instead of fixing the shuttle, Barton said it should be grounded or converted to a craft that flies unmanned.
    This seems more logical: the thing flies itself anyway.

    Rip out all the life support systems and it will make a great space truck, then build a ligher, safer, more modern space plane to get the people there and back in one piece.

  168. Re:Blood for nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In other words, there's no oil in outer space.

    Wrong. It practically rains gasoline on Titan (Saturn's moon).

  169. Didn't RTFA? by antiMStroll · · Score: 2, Informative
    That's not what he's arguing:

    Rep. Joe Barton (news, bio, voting record), a member of the House Science Committee's space and aeronautics panel, wants the government to build a new, safer space vehicle or modify the shuttle so it can be flown unmanned.

    It's a pure safety argument that includes pouring more 'billions' into the existing Space Shuttles. Ironic for a Congressman from a state that has no problem with liquor and firearms in moving vehicles.

    1. Re:Didn't RTFA? by bfe369 · · Score: 1

      Open containers are no longer allowed in Texas, and haven't been since the last Legislative session.

      Firearms are allowed if traveling long distances, and under certain circumstances. Nobody except CHL holders may simply toss the ol' .45 in the front seat wherever they go.

      Arizona and Vermont, though, are some great places to carry guns. :)

      --
      -- Brad Felmey
    2. Re:Didn't RTFA? by nyseal · · Score: 1

      And what, exactly, is wrong with liquor and firearms in moving vehicles? Would you prefer an armed crack dealer sipping a 40 on your local street corner? (SARCASM)

      --
      [SIG] Remember Mattel handheld games?
  170. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

    Britain's nukes are supplied by the USA these days, and therefore controlled by the USA, too.

    --
    That was classic intercourse!
  171. NASA spaceflight. by Mordant · · Score: 3, Interesting

    NASA is a jobs program for bureaucrats, and a goldmine for companies like . . . Lockheed-Martin.

    Lockheed-Martin has no interest in seeing NASA shut down the shuttle - quite the opposite. Government contracting in general and NASA in particular are great cash-cows for LMC and for all the companies on the list you've cited.

    Aging, sclerotic bureaucracies flying obsolete, overly-complex 'spacecraft' don't explore new frontiers.

    The future of spaceflight doesn't lie with NASA - it lies with private ventures like Xcor. Taking the manned mission away from NASA and pushing them the hell out of the current command-and-control, false economy of the Shuttle-distorted launch market is the best thing that could happen to the cause of manned spaceflight.

  172. Here's a solution by orim · · Score: 1

    I agree with you both. $350 billion per year for the military is ridiculous. $15 billion is a lot of money for a space agency (compare that to the Russian Space Agency which bailed our asses this time... what maybe $200 million).

    What NASA should do is convince the military there are bad aliens that want to kill us out there. See how quickly the space infrastructure would get built.

    I'd love to see the faces of the military guys 10 years later: You've been punked!!! We'll be taking our nifty space stuff for civilian purposes now, back to Earth with the lot of you.

    OK, OK... I'm allowed to dream, am I not?

    --
    "If you could only see what I've seen with your eyes..." - Roy Batty
    1. Re:Here's a solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or convince Bush that there's oil on Mars.

  173. Re:Loss of Life? Riiiight. by mfrank · · Score: 1

    Most of what you're describing is paid for out of people's own pockets, not out of taxpayer money. The others, like military and school, perform at a fairly decent level.

    There are much cheaper and safer ways to explore space, both manned and unmanned, than the shuttle.

  174. OK... by KlomDark · · Score: 1

    Dear IRS, please send the $500,000 I've paid in taxes the last five years to NASA. As inefficient as NASA is, I think space exploration has the best long term return on investment for society possible and support it fully, even if I will not see the return in my lifetime.

    Anybody gonna follow me on this?

  175. Re:I volunteered my money to burn up on reentry by mythr · · Score: 1

    somehow your trend breaks down right about now... Canada (?????).

    Canada (war-hating draft dodgers and more French) ;)

  176. Extinction is overrated by bitspotter · · Score: 1

    The species isn't sacred - it's the mind.

    Humans are well adapted to life on the surface of the earth. any proposed adaptations to life elsewhere are pretty likely to create a different species, even in purely biological terms.

    That doesn't even take into account the likelihood that human minds will be "uploaded" into machine substrates that are far better adapted to life in space.

    If the same money wasted on adapting meat to an environment different from the one it took MILLIONS of years to perfect itself to interact with were spent building things that take far less effort to adapt, you'd see a lot more progress in space exploration.

  177. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nuking the French is never offtopic.

  178. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by blixel · · Score: 1

    Every time a shuttle crashes and has to be rebuilt

    Shuttles aren't rebuilt. They built 6, only 5 of which ever went into space. (The first shuttle, Enterprise, could not lift off on its own so it was retired. It had to be launched from the back of a 747.) Challenger was lost in 1986 and now Columbia is gone as well. There are now only 3 remaining - Discovery, Atlantis, and Endeavor. They wont build any more. The next set of space vehicles will be a completely different breed, when and if they ever get built.

  179. Its space, damnit! by burns210 · · Score: 1
    We are humans, and we are explorers. It took centuries to discover the New World(which turned out to be worth the wait). We didn't just send 1 Spanish ship out, and if he didn't come back with anything said "oh well, we gave it a try."

    This is space people. This is what is next. We must explore it.

  180. Re:Scrap the Shuttle! NOT! by dlm3 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The Shuttle is a first-generation product and we could do much better! It is apparent that a far safer, more efficient, cheaper system could be built without too much effort. Why can't NASA and the rest of the country forget the flying dinosaur from the 70's and move on?

    When you have to keep applying band-aid after band-aid to a system to get it to work, and it comes nowhere near fulfilling its original goals, it is time to go back to the drawing board. Stop wasting effort trying to patch up a bad design.

    For its time, and even for now, the Space Shuttle is a fairly good design. Perfect, it isn't, but within the limits of materials available and propulsion systems based on chemical reactions, it's not bad.

    The safety of any spacecraft is dominated by the propulsion system (the same is true of terrestrial aircraft). What has changed since 1975? Unfortunately, not much. The most recent innovation in large-scale rocket engines, Rocketdyne's RS-68, can provide more thrust than the SSME (Space Shuttle Main Engine), but was designed as a single-use engine on expendable boosters. It might be adapted, perhaps, to be used on a manned vehicle, but improving the SSMEs would cost less and they perform adequately.

    If you were to design a functional replacement for the shuttle, you might be surprised to discover that it looks a lot like... The Shuttle...

    Some things might be different. You might consider designing liquid-fueled flyback boosters to replace the SRBs. You might eliminate the toxic propellants used in the reaction jets and the APU to ease servicing the orbiter. You might eliminate the external tank, enlarge the orbiter and eliminate the cost of replacing the tank. You might even find something better than RCC and silica tiles for thermal protection.

    But any new vehicle would probably be remarkably similar to what we already have if it accomplishes the same mission. The Russians, themselves not fools, virtually copied the Shuttle in their Buran vehicle. Do you suppose there might be some reason for this ?

    The fundamental design decisions and engineering trade-offs that resulted in the shuttle design have not been changed by new technology. So long as that remains the case, and requirements placed on the designers remain unchanged, new vehicles will not be much different.

    I hope John Carmack, Burt Rutan, XCOR and the others are successful. But their immediate goals are far less lofty than those placed before the designers of the Shuttle.

    Is a new vehicle needed ? Absolutely. Hundreds of them. But not one will perform the task the Shuttle has done for the last twenty years. And more than a few will crash, explode, and otherwise fail, taking their crews and passengers with them. And there will be calls from the news media, caterwauling on /., and the banshee cries of plaintiff's attorneys demanding payment for the after-the-fact ineptitude of everyone involved. How is this different from loss of the crew of Columbia?

    The Shuttle has many limitations, but if the task was easy, it would have been repeated and improved upon long ago.

  181. seems reasonable to me by g4dget · · Score: 1
    The shuttle fleet is an outdated, hugely expensive boondoggle for contractors. They shouldn't just be grounded for a while, they should be converted to scrap metal and be replaced by something better. I rarely agree with Republican representatives from Texas, but I think he is right on this one (even if he can't divide).

    As for this being due to Lockheed's campaign contributions, I kind of doubt it. I suspect Lockheed makes lots of money on the current shuttle contracts. Opening up this issue just risks that more of the development of the next craft will be done in-house, as contracting is more and more viewed as being responsible for safety problems.

  182. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by mfrank · · Score: 1

    It's been illegal for US companies to do business with Iraq since the first Gulf War.

  183. $75B to kill Iraqies! by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

    These same congresscritters approved $75B to depose a minor dictator! and they might need more.

  184. Isn't huston in Texas! by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

    A good share of that 15B goes back into Texas, California, and Florida--to fund their Hi-Tech sectors! A good chunck goes to wages [both Nasa and contractor] so the money's going right back to taxpayers pockets.

    1. Re:Isn't huston in Texas! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      She's in Beverly Hills, I think.

  185. Senator Byrd's Hat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come to think of it, Senator Byrd could promote this idea by wearing a hat that looks something like a shuttle standing on its engine-end. To make it simple, the hat could be all-white instead of black and white. He could even cut eyeholes.... wait, I forgot. He already likes to wear hats like this.

  186. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Rick.C · · Score: 1
    So?

    A lot of things are illegal, but never mind that - there are profits to be made!

    --
    You were 80% angel, 10% demon. The rest was hard to explain. - Over The Rhine
    "Math in a song is good."-Linford
  187. Best way to do it... by BoneFlower · · Score: 1

    Build a Shuttle Mk II... Keep the basic design, but with more modern materials(lighter and stronger).. a B-1 style ejection system(should be feasible with modern materials) and incorporating all lessons learned from the current shuttle. This would be far less expensive than designing a completely new vehicle, far less risky than a completely unproven design, while still providing huge benefits in safety, reliability, operating costs, and mission capability. It is also possible that with this tactic, the existing shuttles can be upgraded- Probably not to full MkII status, but some of the parts could be upgraded.

    The basic design of the shuttle is good. No need to completely replace it. Advances in metallurgy, composites, and computer technology could be used to build an awesome second generation shuttle along the same basic lines as the current one.

  188. Privatize NASA by aerogeek · · Score: 1

    NASA and our government have been obsessed with the idea of a reusable launch vehicle since the 1970s, but they're missing the point entirely. It is still much cheaper and safer to launch and recover a ligher, capsule-style spacecraft like the Soyuz. Sure, the shuttle looks sexy flying back to earth like an airplane, but who are we kidding? The STS is much heavier and more expensive than it needs to be. And while NASA should have been designing the next STS, they were conducting feasibility studies of feasibility studies of single-stage vehicles. Privatize this bloated, ineffective organization (the space division, anyway), let industry compete for contacts to ferry humans and supplies to the ISS -- an X Prize on a larger scale -- and watch the prices fall while safety records improve. I believe spaceflight will always be dangerous and expensive, but we can do better. That's my pipe dream, anyway.

  189. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "(The first shuttle, Enterprise, could not lift off on its own so it was retired. It had to be launched from the back of a 747.)"

    While you are correct, i just want to clarify. Enterprise was built as a test shuttle, it was used for glide testing and did not have most the systems to work, engines, space life support. It was built to make sure the glider aspect of it would work. So it wasn't that it was to heavy, or retired, it was just never intended for space flight.

  190. Ack! Missing link by davebo · · Score: 1

    Link to state department page on foreign aid budget here

  191. Re:Blood for nothing by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

    Sheesh, it's a joke. I mean, flamebait? Who's going to start a flamewar over this?

  192. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by UniverseIsADoughnut · · Score: 1

    "And I don't think that the opinion of a country that rolls over its citizens with tanks (that's China, in case you have forgotten) for protesting peacefully is worth any consideration."

    That guy made the choice to stand infront of a tank that was driving at him. He could have moved. Sure he wasn't attacking it, but standing infront of something and letting it run you over doesn't make it entirely the tanks fault. More then anything he was stupid. Standing up for what you belive in doesn't mean you can do stupid things and not suffer the consenquences.

  193. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by norite · · Score: 1

    So, when are you going to return the statue of liberty? after all, it was a gift from FRANCE :)

    --
    -- Fuck Beta
  194. Strange article opening by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So this Senator is a bad guy for claiming the risks to life are unacceptable? What makes you think his position counters common sense and conventional wisdom? If people want to put there lives on the line in the name of "space exploration" (seems a telescope would be more usefull here) let them do it on there own dime. It baffles me to find that Slashdot of all places thinks the Shuttle is a Good Thing for Science. This Fantabulous Contraption is the Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang of the space age, except Dick Van Dyke's wheels didn't eat money for breakfast and kill people. We no more need to send humans into orbit than we need an astronomer living on Hubble. When one of these things goes boom we lose lives, money, prestige, and more money, but no science that couldn't have been done better with robotics. That will remain true until space flight is as cheap and safe as automobile travel since the only thing we're doing with the Shuttle involves fucking spider webs and ant farms.


    But Iron-Head! What's that little Hubble Thingy?


    That's the finest advance for science the Shuttle has been involved in. Too bad they didn't just use a cheap, proven, fly-me-to-the-moon-Alice Saturn V. With the money saved they might have built the mirrors right the first time.


    Being anti-Shuttle doesn't make one a tree-hugging luddite. It's too bad people think this freaky beast is our vehicle to a Brave New World of Tang flavored discoveries. If we weren't so vain and short sighted that we've had to continue throwing good money after bad we might have a super collider today.

  195. X-33 by Kris_J · · Score: 1
    Sure, ground all the old shuttles and bring in the replacement X-33 Venture Star.

    Oh, wait, that project was killed by Bush.

  196. Re:If every space flight was guaranteed not to ret by jerryasher · · Score: 1

    I think you're being glib.

    I've heard astronauts speak, and I've heard them describe what it's like to put their flesh on the line. They value their lives. They value their families. They value their careers. They don't give their lives easily and they don't want to give them up for mistakes or some blind notion of progress.

    I would be interested in a survey of our astronauts asking them if knew then what they know now, would they still volunteer to go.

    And just because some will volunteer for a death march, doesn't mean it is moral or ethical of you to allow them to participate in a death march. And to justify this by speaking of how proud you are of them for their bravery, ducks the issue of the morality of the mission itself.

  197. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Lars+T. · · Score: 2, Informative

    Urm, well, yes. Halliburton, the company VP Cheney worked for. Did business with Iraq before the first war, between the wars (even if Cheney denied it) and now got government contracts after this war.

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  198. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    standing infront of something and letting it run you over doesn't make it entirely the tanks fault.


    Yes it does. The tank driver was in no danger of being harmed by the protester and it wasn't going too fast to stop. IIRC, the tank ran over him from a dead stop. Either one of the players in that incident could have altered their behaviour. Here's the difference: Tank driver == no danger. Protester == could die. The message == ask for democracy and we'll kill you even if it is unnecessary.


    More then anything he was stupid. Standing up for what you belive in doesn't mean you can do stupid things and not suffer the consenquences.


    Stupid? Do you think he didn't know he would die if the tank ran over him? What exactly is your point?

  199. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Carnivorous+Carrot · · Score: 1

    A brave man dies for freedom, while the free countries sit, filled with people wringing their hands at the evil concept of...freeing other nations.

    There's no god damned hope for this planet.

    If some murderous thief takes hostage a group of people in a store, the store isn't suddenly practicing respectable "self determination."

    Better not free 'em. That's be "wrong". (Wrong in a way the theoretical god Yaweh would love. Sit there and do nothing.)

    --
    "Has [being a kidnapped teenage girl, raped repeatedly for months] changed you?" - Katie Couric to Elizabeth Smart
  200. Make the best of it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make the odds clear and accept only volunteers.

    Or, on a more Heinleinesque note, make it part of certification requirements for the Bar. :>

    Better yet, make it part of certification requirements for electoral public office.

    Just an idea.

    But, as things go, in the near future only Russia, Europe, China, India, Japan and (maybe) Korea are going to have manned space projects.

    Then, maybe the SSFreed.. oops!, the ISS, I mean, could be leased out to big corporations as an orbiting convention hall / ballroom ?

    Or... never mind.

  201. Re:If every space flight was guaranteed not to ret by RhettLivingston · · Score: 1

    No, I'm not being glib. I can think of quite a few lesser things that I'd give my life for. I've only briefly spoken with any astronauts, but I've talked to a few test pilots who were deciding whether or not products were ready for first flight and, though careful, they saw it as their job to take measured risks. I'd say the ratio of the risk to reward was much greater in their case than what an astronaut takes.

    One chance in 50 of blowing up against the reward of actually going in to space is a much smaller risk to reward ratio than many people take. For example, what's the risk to reward ratio of skydiving? I think I've read that the risk is about one chance in 3000 of dying and that is placed against the reward of falling a few thousand feet. I'd say going to space is worth more than 60 sky diving trips, so going to space is less risky per unit of reward. All I'm saying is that the value of actually standing on Mars to many people would be greater than the value of returning.

    The value of life is simply not measured in years lived. That measurement is nearly worthless. A more proper measurement would total the quality of the life per unit time over that time. A few months being the first on Mars would total greater than many years being one of a few billion ants on Earth for many people.

    Frankly, if our space program isn't full of people who'd rather spend the last three months of their life as the first on Mars now than spend the next 40 years on Earth, then we've got the wrong people in the space program.

    This is no different then those who would die for their spouse, their children, their country, or any of countless dreams. And though it wouldn't be moral to encourage them, I'd go as far as to say that once they've made the judgement as to which life is the greater one to them, it would be immoral to oppose their pursuit of that greater life just to impose your belief that the longer life would be greater.

  202. Shiny gasoline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It would be fun to see how the big oil corporations would advertise radioactive gasoline.

  203. I think youve got it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You might have found the solution.

    Just find someplace much like Texas. Lets say - Mars. That is already inhabited but that will accept homesteaders who, when they are numerous enough, will turn on the inhabitants and take the place from them.

    That's sure to interest that fine gentleman and his stalwart supporters.

  204. Sleep gravity well, sweet p by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China does have an aerospace industrial complex. It just isn't a laissez-faire civilian corporate industry. They make planes, jet fighters, rockets, mini-shuttles, sattelites. Plus stuff. They design them. They fly them. They launch them. They improve them. Regularly. And they are keen on getting their people up there in space. Look it up.

    One of the greatest shocks western (US) specialists got when they visited Russian research bureaus was with the apparent "shack-like" environment it (russian research) was done in. Eppur, si muove. Research is still going on. Scientists don't usually stop thinking just because they don't have the fanciest equipment to test ideas on. They find other ways. With less fancy equipment.

    There is an old adage that the US space program relied on engineers, while the Russian space program relied on scientists. Russian stuff tended to be simpler, more rugged, more dependable and worked without the need for 50 concurrent computers. Another joke was that they once learned how to make locomotives, and everything else they made since then were still locomotives, with different uses. Ever see an Antonov Mirya (spelling may vary.. :) ? A MIL ?

    India just launched a 100Kg geostationary sattelite - with a few carry-along experiment packages. Every step of the way for the last decade, though, there were unanimous "experts" braying about how they would never make it to the next step because they were broke and would have to slide back into their "due station" with oxcarts and bicycles.

    I wouldn't bet against their putting people up in space eventually. Maybe soon. By their own means. If I had a say in the matter, I'd make sure they sent up at least one complete oxcart. And leave it in orbit. Just for kicks.

    Europe is a big burocratic morass. But still sends birds up every few months, with something or other. No astronauts forthcoming, though. They are too tied in with US corporate interests. And corporations don't want people to think that there is a way out.

    But that's another story.

  205. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Pooua · · Score: 1
    That guy made the choice to stand infront of a tank that was driving at him. He could have moved. Sure he wasn't attacking it, but standing infront of something and letting it run you over doesn't make it entirely the tanks fault.

    The only guy who intentionally stood in front of the tank in the Chinese protest was not run over. All the tanks stopped, and then he climbed onto the tank and spoke to the driver. Rumor is, he asked the driver why he was doing this, causing chaos to the city. Then, bystanders in the crowd pulled him into the crowd, and he was lost to anonymity. The authorities never found him.

    It's surprising how many people remember that the guy was run over.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  206. Re:If every space flight was guaranteed not to ret by jerryasher · · Score: 1

    Speaking only about shuttle and iss flights and not about Mars flights....

    First, no one will stand in front of me, in the claim of being pro-space.

    Based on my understanding of the science and research being performed on the shuttle and ISS, I just don't see the pressing need at this time to base a space program on the anticipated deaths of seven astronauts every 50 flights or so. Or a pressing need to base a space program on three shuttles, one of which must be cannibalized to serve the other two.

    An alternative in my mind is to pony up the resources (that means dollars) to have a safer, more reliable, more productive space program.

    We are cowards, and we are immoral when we have resources available but instead insist on paying for our progress with human lives.

    Regarding Mars.

    Mars is going to be expensive, take a long time, require a real commitment on everyone's part. And be very risky.

    We'd better do it right. To lose a Mars Mission because of organizational bungling would be tragic for all.

  207. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by Pooua · · Score: 1
    The first shuttle, Enterprise, could not lift off on its own so it was retired. It had to be launched from the back of a 747.

    It would be more accurate to say that Shuttle Orbiter "Enterprise" was released from a 747, for a glide flight back to ground. It could not, of course, launch into space from the back of a 747. Indeed, it could not go into space at all, the way it was outfitted. It is now the property of the Smithsonian.

    --
    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
  208. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by nyseal · · Score: 1

    Right.....and America OFTEN threatens POS third world countries with nuclear war because it's in our best interest to import Nikes, Reeboks and Ralph Lauren products. Without these products our society would collapse. Jesus, I wish it were that simple....at least we could USE a bomb or two that way.

    --
    [SIG] Remember Mattel handheld games?
  209. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by blixel · · Score: 1

    While you are correct, i just want to clarify. Enterprise was built as a test shuttle

    Good point.

  210. Re:I didn't volunteer my money to burn up on reent by blixel · · Score: 1

    It would be more accurate to say that Shuttle Orbiter "Enterprise" was released from a 747, for a glide flight back to ground

    Good point.

  211. Getting Programs Started In DC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've seen several comments about how the Shuttle was originally sold to Congress. People seem shocked the Nixon adminstration intentionally low-balled the cost estimates they gave to Congress. As a government employee, I'm here to tell you this is business as usual here in the government. It is much easier to keep a program going than it is to get one started. There are programs which do at best nothing for the nation that the executive branch can't get rid of because some congressman thinks it might pay off if it was done right. Nobody knows what right is but it usually involves more money.

    You want to know what can happen when someone in the US government really means when he says a program gets cut x million dollars? Instead of getting an increase of x+y million dollars, they are only getting y million dollars.

    I read in other comments how the B-2 cost $1.7 billion dollars. That's sort of correct. It only costs around $500 million in material and manpower to build one but it cost $20 billion to figure out how. The numbers people use depends on whether they favor or don't favor the program.

  212. Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you trolling or do you really believe that shit. Your post is so bizzare that I don't know how to address the deeply sentimental wellspring that created it. Do you really believe our current space flight controllers couldn't learn how to direct a conventional rocket? Do you really think the plans for the Saturn would have to be recreated ex-nihlo? You make the space program sound like a medieval guild with all that "generation" crap. IIRC, it took 8 years for Armstrong to set foot on the Moon from the momment Kennedy said go. I've never heard anything about "generations" of space engineers passing on aged wisdom to the young apostates who might master their dark art.

  213. Re:Scrap the Shuttle! NOT! by pfdietz · · Score: 1
    For its time, and even for now, the Space Shuttle is a fairly good design.
    Since the shuttle completely failed to achieve its primary goal (reducing the cost of putting payload into orbit), how can it be judged as anything other than a failure?

    If congress had known in the 1970s how STS would turn out, they would have canned this turkey immediately.
  214. Re:Stupid White Men Tsarkon Reports by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Agreed.

    Sarandon, Streisand, Sheen, Robbins, Moore and the rest of the crew are actors, performers. They aren't scientists, doctors, engineers or useful type-people. They are know-nothing actors that have mastered only the art of simulacrum. They bend the truth and capitalize (particularly Moore) on the havoc they wreak with baseless, uneducated opinions.

    They also never, ever EVER live outside of a pampered life of luxury or outside their little citadels of wealth and decadence. At least Princess Diana wanted to clean up land minds, and do a good turn, but she didn't have to be a raging communist to do a good thing.

    Next time you hear Moore babbling about shit, about Flint, about the NRA, remember he got rich off of splicing Heston in an "Interview," omitting that the average Flint "blue collar" worker for GM made $100,000, etc, in "Documentaries". He is rich, lives in a 1.2Million dollar apartment and sends his daughter to private school and done a bit of laying off his own employees. He is a rich hypocrite. Despite the fact Moore lives in NYC, he still signs things from Flint, MI. Hypocrites. All these freaks are.

    The best thing to do is form your own opinion, and be aware there is a lot out there, but don't self-deprecate. You don't owe anyone an apology. Just because we exist in a higher state in the western world doesn't mean we have to live a life of an apologist. And we certainly should regard Islamofascism as something potentially dangerous and destructive if that's the gut feeling we get from it. Its up to them to impress us, we have the upper hand, and regardless of what people say its harder to stay on top than getting there, so in my estimation we earned it, the higher you soar the harder it feels when you fall.

    Our less progressive "enemies of America" are employing propaganda and our all to easily manipulated troupe of near-communist retard Hollywood idiots to basically try and convince westerners that they owe the cretins of the world something simply by virtue of success.

    I would also like to say all politics are local, and if you want to change something, do it locally. International politics is corrupt and arbitrary and too complex to understand, and its merely entertainment. People like to attack un-solvable problems solely for entertainment value. Heated political arguments are almost entirely useless because most are irrevocably incorrigible. Pro-Islamist evangelism has only gone to show me one thing, ignore the bleating mouthpieces for a corrupt cult. Get on with your own life and know that you did nothing wrong by leveraging what was given to you. Anyone in your position would do the same, most probably they would plant a cleat in your back when the walk on it.

    I would also like to say I believe in philanthropy, and my life has been touched in many great ways by my friends and family, and I have tried to do the same with my abilities for others.

    The US made it to the moon, for example. It was a huge accomplishment, and took a great love of science and exploration for the good of mankind to accomplish it. The people who hate us come from places where the average age is 25, too young to remember WW2, or the Moonshot, and think of Allah and the crescent moon when they look at the moon and think Magical Allah makes it glow.

    The US and the western societies have not been perfect, nor have a perfect track record, but certainly its fair to say, it's the least worst way at the time being for administering a society. Sit back and enjoy it while it lasts. The Russians tried to resist it. The Chinese and the Islamofascists try and resist it. But their systems just don't work properly, and are best sandboxed, quarantined and ignored until they implode.

    For the record, I'm not entirely impressed with Bush or the GOP Cabal and Cronies, but the are in my estimation on the same level as Democrats in terms of corruption. Federalism and centralized government isn't useful most of the time and it costs a fucking ton (good examples of goo

  215. Re:Scrap the Shuttle! NOT! by dlm3 · · Score: 1
    Since the shuttle completely failed to achieve its primary goal (reducing the cost of putting payload into orbit), how can it be judged as anything other than a failure?

    The goal of the shuttle was to construct a reusable, manned spacecraft.

    There is no question that it accomplished that goal. It's the only reusable space vehicle flying, and one of very few ever built.

    It was hoped it would be less costly than vehicles capable of launching similar payloads. And if the flight rate was higher, it could well have met some of its advertising. If there were more vehicles and more payloads, this might have been possible since the fixed costs of shuttle processing don't vary much with flight rate.

    The problem was and is that there aren't enough payloads to make a manned vehicle competitive. Expendable launch systems with similar lifting capability cost as much per pound but don't risk the lives of a crew. So instead, the shuttle is used for missions that nothing else can do. The population of such missions is a minority of the payloads out there, and now is almost entirely the domain of the International Space Station - which is what it was designed to do in the first place, but took another twenty years to get into orbit.

    So no, the shuttle didn't fail. It's reusable, it's manned, and it has an excellent safety record compared to every other launch system out there, STS-51L and STS-107 included.

    This does not mean it can't be better. Far from it. But for its time, and for the task it was given, the Shuttle has been a resounding success.

  216. $250k life insurance by nuggz · · Score: 1

    $250k life insurance should only be $30-50/mo or so for a healthy person in their 20's.

    If your family needs $250k, you should have insurance, it is quite cheap.