Slashdot Mirror


Rescue Mission For European Space Industry

metz2000 writes "The New Scientist reports that the European Space Agency (ESA) has pledged hundreds of millions of Euros to guarantee its independent access to space. Europe also looks set to co-operate with the Russian Space Agency. Looks like the space industry is hotting up again. How will NASA react to this news after being the dominant space agency over the past three decades? A lot of money is going into rocket technology also; with this and the 'European version' of GPS are we heading towards a future conflict across the Atlantic?"

563 comments

  1. First! by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Anyway I do not think its a conflict. Unlike the cold war there is no need to create a space race in order to improve military technology.

    Most european countries just purchase American or Russian military vehicles and weapons anyway.

    I think it would be great for nasa to work together. If the US wants to be seen as a world player they may need to increase funding to NASA and have it work with the European space agency. The russians have been great help working with Nasa and I expect the same.

    1. Re:First! by dingo · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be better if they didn't work together.
      A bit of good old competition, maybe a race to mars?
      Liven things up a bit ;)

      --
      The Borg assimilated my race & all I got was this lousy T-shirt
    2. Re:First! by amorsen · · Score: 1, Informative

      "Old" Europe, as George Bush II put it, is currently trying to build up the domestic military industry. If you expect lots of purchases of US military technology from there, you may be in for a surprise.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    3. Re:First! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moron that was Rumsfeld get your facts right...

    4. Re:First! by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      You've got that the wrong way round, Britain would be DELIGHTED if the US Air Force were to abandon it's UK bases - they're a lot more valuable to you than they are to us.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    5. Re:First! by splateagle · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Most european countries just purchase American or Russian military vehicles and weapons anyway.

      Pretty sweeping unsupported statement that, you might want to look at EADS before making any more blind assumptions there... That said I think you're missing the point.

      The first space race might have been driven by the military, but if there is to be a second race between ESA and NASA I imagine it'll most likely be driven more by developments in civil aerospace.

      Arianespace are hardly a minor global player, neither are Airbus. While admitedly they've yet to show a direct interest in space flight, they are part of EADS and given Boeing's development, it's unimaginable that Airbus hasn't got it's eye on space at some point in the future...

      As it stands the ESA have already been working with NASA and the remnants of the old soviet space agency (calling it "Russian" is confusing, since Russia is in Europe) and I expect that they'll continue doing just that, the Space Station is after all an International venture, not just an American thing.

      Race or not, this news seems to suggest that (as happened with civil aviation technology in the later years of last century,) Europe might be about to take the dominant role in Space technology now... maybe. Should be interesting anyway, and anything that drives us forward globally has to be a good thing.

    6. Re:First! by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Not to mention that, of the eight trillion-dollar economies in the world today, three of them (UK, France, Germany) are in Europe"

      You forgot Italy ($1.44 Trillion), and Spain isn't far off the big T ($828 Billion). EU GDP is larger than that of the USA, as is population - but the combined armed forces are no match for America's ludicrously expensive collection of death toys. We tend to spend our money on hospitals instead...

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    7. Re:First! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yore education system is obviously lacking.

    8. Re:First! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Err, most european countries use equipment made by germans, french and some leftover soviet equipment.

    9. Re:First! by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      Damn those crappy leftover SU-27s, MIG 29s and Antonovs! If only they had some decent aircraft...

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    10. Re:First! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      enjoy the hospitals you pussies since we kept the soviets from making a parking lot out of your asses the last half century dickstone. Oh, and we also helped rebuild your ungrateful asses - ever heard of the Marshall plan? Our "death toys" are why your sorry ass is not speaking either german or russian (assuming you are not already some whiny german bitch).

      So given those facts, I think we'd like to keep using those bases for a while thank you very much. Maybe if you are nice, we'll give you a reach around.

    11. Re:First! by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Oooh, oooh, that means E. Europe gets even *more* cheap bases beyond the relocated FRG ones.

      Hey, mutual delight! I think we have a winner here.

      For the US basing out of Kogalniceanu in Constanta means short flight times to the Mid East and the Caucuses. It also would lead to stabilization of a regionally key seam country between the functioning core and the non-integrating gap countries. It works in multiple ways.

      In reality the UK bases will stay because the UK is a true ally and not paying lip service as a few other EU powers are.

    12. Re:First! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One day, someone will give you a cranial lead implant for talking like that. I'd like to see it, but I will be too busy raping your daughter.

    13. Re:First! by dbrutus · · Score: 2, Informative

      It may be confusing for you to call Russia's space agency Russian but you clearly haven't quite wrapped your brain around the reality of the USSR. The ESA's launch site is a french colony (french guyana) and the Russian's launch site is a former Russian colony, Kazakhstan. Russia, for the geographically challenged is both a european and asian entitiy that is the US' closest neighbor after Canada and Mexico who actually share a land border.

      Beyond that, you might want to wrap your head around the fact that the EU does not consist of all of Europe and will not likely do so for quite some time. The ESA is a grandiose title that may someday be true but is by no means true today and will not be true this decade at least.

    14. Re:First! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you didn't pay too much for that edekasion of yores.

    15. Re:First! by JimFromJersey · · Score: 1

      except of course the American consumer market would be gone, what percentage of your trillion dollar economy is dependent on exports to the US? If you think it isn't a problem, think again. The G-8 leadership is pissing its collective pants at the thought of a weak dollar. Image what chaos a total collapse would bring. Not to mention what an implosion of the US equities market would do to the world economy.

      --
      between the greater and lesser infinities sleep the dreams undreamt
    16. Re:First! by splateagle · · Score: 2

      actually I meant it was causing confusion for others - check a few other posts and you might see what I mean.

      As for the rest, please don't lecture me about "wrapping my head around" stuff that for all you can tell I already know much more of than you. Thanks.

    17. Re:First! by BenTels0 · · Score: 1
      Anyway I do not think its a conflict. Unlike the cold war there is no need to create a space race in order to improve military technology.

      Yes and no. There's lots of cooperation already to be sure (especially on the scientific part, where competition doesn't buy you anything but duplicate work). But I have a sense that in other areas there most certainly is a lot of competition -- I'm thinking of commercial satellite launches and manned spaceflight here. The first is of course obvious and as for the second, well, let's say that the number of seats for non-Americans on the shuttle missions so far has been somewhat disappointing.

      Most european countries just purchase American or Russian military vehicles and weapons anyway.

      Depends on the country and the vehicle. With the smaller NATO members and aircraft you are right (the US insisted some years back on a standard aircraft for all NATO members -- and guess which one they pushed through?). But a lot of larger European nations also build their own aircraft and for instance the Netherlands builds its own tanks and of course ships (come on, the Netherlands, you don't think we would buy naval vehicles from anybody else do you?).

    18. Re:First! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      first of all, you're in England. You aren't a part of the EU. Secondly, hospitals are more and better in America, as is the treatment, the staff, the equipment, and the techniques (and it's reflected in the bill.) To top it all off, not only those who can afford to pay, but those who can't, all get treated here. The debt may ruin your life, but at least you'll live longer and suffer (physically) less.

    19. Re:First! by BenTels0 · · Score: 1
      first of all, you're in England. You aren't a part of the EU.

      Yes, he is.

      Secondly, hospitals are more and better in America, as is the treatment, the staff, the equipment, and the techniques

      Some are, some are not. And the other way around. The idea that America has better medical care across the board is nonsense, as is the idea that all European hospitals are by definition better (and some of those techniques were invented in Europe, by the way).

      To top it all off, not only those who can afford to pay, but those who can't, all get treated here.

      Oh, I think we all know that isn't true (we haven't allowed HMO's and other insurers to dictate public health policy over here, you see). It is true over here, however. And we don't overload people with debt afterward either.

    20. Re:First! by BenTels0 · · Score: 1
      except of course the American consumer market would be gone, what percentage of your trillion dollar economy is dependent on exports to the US?

      Not as much as you'd think. For the entire EU, something on the order of seven percent, last I heard. Some countries like the Netherlands would be harder hit (we're an exporting nation), but the Union as a whole should be able to weather it quite well. Would hurt a bit for a while, but it would stabilize soon enough.

      The G-8 leadership is pissing its collective pants at the thought of a weak dollar.

      It's inconvenient, I'll grant you that much. Not disastrous, though -- it doesn't affect the internal market that much. Although, the time is growing nearer that the ECB will have to start supporting the dollar.

    21. Re:First! by nametaken · · Score: 1

      And Jamaica might be about to develop a nuclear weapon... maybe. Yeah, hold your breath.

    22. Re:First! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Most european countries just purchase American or Russian military vehicles and weapons anyway.

      Thats utterly misinformed. Most European armies use European built vehicles, very often even built by their own countries. And the US army buys essential vehicles here, too. Ever heard of the "Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles" (FMTV), the new U.S standard truck? We saw a lot of them in Iraq recently. Constructed by an European (Austrian) company and built in the U.S.A. under licence. And guess who builds around 70% of the pistols of U.S. law enforcement executives, the Glock? Oops, Europe (Austria) again. I think what we buy from each other is quite balanced. -- an Old-European

    23. Re:First! by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      "first of all, you're in England. You aren't a part of the EU."

      Check out the big brain on Brad!

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
  2. Space is hotting up indeed by lingqi · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Did y'all know that China has very recently launched it's third navigational satellite, making it possible for china to use its own positional system independently of US / EU / Russia? (three is the minimum for triangulation - if you assume that the triangulated point in space is to be thrown out)

    btw, I find it so very amusing that whenever western sources refer to the chinese space program, they just HAVE to add phrase like "secret, military linked," as if NASA is completely independent of the military, or something...

    anyhoo. maybe there is still a chance for me to visit mars before I die eh? or some serious possibility of WWIII - as China and EU becomes increasingly suspicious of US... (not unwarrented or anything)

    --

    My life in the land of the rising sun.

    1. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by dingo · · Score: 1

      If wwIII starts i sure hope i am on mars too

      anyone else read Kim Stanley Robinson's Red/Green/Blue Mars

      Safest place to be

      --
      The Borg assimilated my race & all I got was this lousy T-shirt
    2. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Cyberdyne · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Did y'all know that China has very recently launched it's third navigational satellite, making it possible for china to use its own positional system independently of US / EU / Russia? (three is the minimum for triangulation - if you assume that the triangulated point in space is to be thrown out)

      You need three visible satellites for triangulation. Picture the globe, and work out where the satellites would be. Either they're geostationary, clustered over one part (which would give a crude GPS service - over one chunk of the Earth only) or they're not (in which case you can't triangulate anything from them on Earth). You might be able to use them from a lower orbit, though, for positioning satellites; all 3 equidistant GEO satellites would be visible when you're over either pole. Whatever it is, it's not [yet] a GPS rival!

      btw, I find it so very amusing that whenever western sources refer to the chinese space program, they just HAVE to add phrase like "secret, military linked," as if NASA is completely independent of the military, or something...

      It is independent of the military, actually; the Pentagon did have input in the Shuttle program early on (they wanted to be able to use it for launching and servicing/upgrading spy satellites, which can't be done with a rocket) but these days they launch their own stuff, on rockets from Lockheed Martin. (Built in what Michael Moore claimed in BFC was a "missile factory", as it happens.) NASA probably handle some stuff for the military, still, but most of it is done "in-house" using their own systems - in fact, orbital monitoring is military, with a full-time member of staff to liase with NASA and monitor the status of the Shuttle and ISS.

    3. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by sparkes · · Score: 1

      you would need a lot more than three for a Global positioning system the planet keeps getting in the way of the signal ;-)

      the more signals the better the resolution of the data you can get.

    4. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      As said before you need more then three satelites for continuous coverage...

      However you need more then three satelites for a gps like system anyway...
      Unless you are going to equip every receiver with its own cesium clock you need to receive atleast four satelites at the same time.

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    5. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by BJH · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, since I dare say China probably has no intention of providing positioning information to anyone outside of China, three satellites is almost certainly sufficient to provide GPS-like functionality within Chinese borders.

    6. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 2, Interesting

      " (Built in what Michael Moore claimed in BFC was a "missile factory", as it happens.)"

      He actually refers to them as "rockets with a Pentagon payload", which is about right. There's a good chance that the kind of payload that those Titan and Atlas rockets carry is a LOT more dangerous than a Tomahawk.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    7. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everyboddy is a native english speaker, if YOU had paid attention in school you might have know...

    8. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by pe1chl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >btw, I find it so very amusing that whenever western sources refer to the chinese space program, they just HAVE to add phrase like "secret, military linked," as if NASA is completely independent of the military, or something...

      That is similar to certain presidents always mentioning "weapons of mass destruction" linked to certain countries, while having stockpiles of those in their own yard...
      (even more amusing when they fail to come up with evidence about them)

    9. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Kurt+Russell · · Score: 1
      What do we really have to gain from space travel/exploration?

      All this money spent on space travel should be used for domestic issues.

      "anyhoo. maybe there is still a chance for me to visit mars before I die eh?"

      I too dream of love slaves from the planet B3k.

      I find the tech fascinating but it seems like weapons manufacturers are really the ones who benefit from it.

      Just a thought.

    10. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Cyberdyne · · Score: 1
      He actually refers to them as "rockets with a Pentagon payload", which is about right. There's a good chance that the kind of payload that those Titan and Atlas rockets carry is a LOT more dangerous than a Tomahawk.

      You think a satellite is more dangerous than a large bomb?

    11. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

      Yep I read em and they are quite good. Especially (blue I think) when they become independent.

      --
      -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
    12. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      a Tomahawk usually carries a fairly small bomb but, yes, a satellite could WELL be more dangerous than a large bomb.

      Haven't you seen Akira? ;-]

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    13. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Fembot · · Score: 1

      As I see it the next major coflict will be Europe vs America... it does seem worryingly inevitable (20 years?) but at the moment hear in the UK were torn between the two sides. The UK will either endup as the 51st state of america or another state in Europe.... Not too sure which of those is the lesser of two evils, but neither is appealing at all.. as to where china and russia fit into this I havent a clue.

    14. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 1

      But what about the citizens who leave China ? I guess you could try to stop them from leaving, but that would require one hell of a big wall !

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    15. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by AlecC · · Score: 1

      Could you triangulate with three satellites in geostationary? Roughly speaking, they are all going to be in a line - and a line isn't a triangle. Of course, you could put them off-equator, so they nod up and down, but there is still going to be plenty of time when the trianle is very long and thin, thus giving pretty poor accuracy. I think the GPS satellites are in fairly tilted (near-polar) orbits, so that (a) thya cover polar areas efficeingly, and (b) you can always get a nice fat triangle from visible satellites.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    16. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      We don't need to gain anything. Simply wanting to do a thing is enough. And you should really research all of the technologies we have today that came from the space industry.

      Lastly not everyone agrees that the state of the environment/world is as dire as your chicken little website would lead us all to believe.

      Just food for thought.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    17. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Anonym0us+Cow+Herd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      since I dare say China probably has no intention of providing positioning information to anyone outside of China, three satellites is almost certainly sufficient to provide GPS-like functionality within Chinese borders.

      Positioning information within your borders is only useful for peaceful purposes, such as tracking the movements of dissidents.

      Positioning information outside of your borders is useful for diplomatic purposes, such as ensuring that your bombs hit their targets.

      --
      The price of freedom is eternal litigation.
    18. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      It's a false dichotomy; money not spent on program X does not necessarily get spent on program Y. Instead, it goes back into the general fund, where it tends to get parceled out into bunches of little special-interest projects that usually have little if anything to do with what you personally might want.

      In any case, space is one of the very few areas of spending which has consistently returned more money to the government than is spent, because of its overall economic effects. I'll skip the usual arguments about spinoff technology -- as important, and valid, as those arguments are -- and focus on the environmental angle. Look closely, and you'll see that most of what we know about planet-wide environmental conditions comes from space imaging. If we want to have any hope of dealing with humanity's effects on the planet down here on the ground, we have to get high enough up to get the big picture.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    19. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by brsmith4 · · Score: 1

      Ok, say it with me "The US is sanctioned by the UN to possess those weapons that it already has but is encouraged to reduce that number" which we are. These other countries are not allowed to possess those weapons and for good reasons.

    20. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      On the biggest environmental question of the day (global warming), space data is just ignored. The space data on global temperature is widely ignored since [dramatic drumroll please] it indicates no global warming is occuring. The much higher source of error ground stations are depended on instead because they give comforting numbers for the apocalyptic predictors of doom (what a great name for a band).

    21. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by RKloti · · Score: 1

      Considering that both Titan and Atlas rockets were originally developed as ICBMs to carry multiple megaton thermonuclear weapons, yes, I do think that their payload COULD be a lot more dangerous than a Tomahawk.

    22. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by pe1chl · · Score: 1

      Like "they might start a war"?

    23. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Cyberdyne · · Score: 1
      Considering that both Titan and Atlas rockets were originally developed as ICBMs to carry multiple megaton thermonuclear weapons, yes, I do think that their payload COULD be a lot more dangerous than a Tomahawk.

      The original design, yes; however, the Titan and Atlas rockets that plant manufactures are not missiles. (The original launch rockets were recycled from ICBMs in that plant.) The point remains: they are not missiles. They do not (and cannot) carry bombs, they carry satellites: certainly not "more dangerous than a Tomahawk".

    24. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by RKloti · · Score: 1

      Nothing is stopping them from launching a satellite with a nuclear weapon on board. It could be quite useful as an EMP generator, if the bomb is big enough.

    25. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Keebler71 · · Score: 1
      Could you triangulate with three satellites in geostationary? Roughly speaking, they are all going to be in a line - and a line isn't a triangle.

      Yes, assuming that all three are visible. However, the accuracy would suffer greatly as you correctly point out as there is not sufficient angular seperation. This factor is known as GDOP (geometric dilution of precision) which is a measure of how the geometry of the system affects the accuracy. Also, there is a hidden assumption in the statement that you only need three satellites to obtain a position. The assumption is that you know your altitude by other means. So it is true that you can get your surface lat/long with only three sats, but you need FOUR to get positon with altitude. Obviously this is important for some applications. The instersection of three spheres is in general TWO points.

      I think the GPS satellites are in fairly tilted (near-polar) orbits, so that (a) thya cover polar areas efficeingly, and (b) you can always get a nice fat triangle from visible satellites.

      Not polar, as I recall it is somewhere around 53 deg inclination. Inclination is more important for coverage reasons, as a fully populated constellation often has many more than four sats visible, so those that result in the best GDOP can be used to find the "best" solution.

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    26. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by joggle · · Score: 1
      Actually, for any amount of accuracy you need four satellites for a 3-d fix. The four variables are x, y, z, and time (the clock error of the receiver). Without the fourth satellite, you can only get a reliable 2d fix, which assuming you're on the surface of the earth, is just fine for some applications.

      Also, all of the satellites need to be visible, otherwise they don't do you any good at all. Considering they only have three SVs up there, they probably can't perform any navigation yet, except for perhaps a few minutes of the day if that's how they designed their orbit constellation.

    27. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh, but we don't all "want to." Current space exploration benefits practically no one. Many others "want to" explore because we believe there is plenty to gain from it, but the regime of "scientists" (who don't experiment) has a monopoly on space.

      Personally, I prefer the love slaves from Sirius 11 (mmm... low G jiggle!)

      But the only solution to domestic problems is expansion. Do you know why America was the "land of the free?" It was because those who didn't like things where they were, could strike out to new territory and, by their own initiative, realize their desires.

    28. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ack! All the areas we thought were covered with trees have turned red!!! Something must be done to save the environment!

      Really, much of the environmental doomsaying is hardly better than this. Especially climatalogy with it's insufficient data, untested and indeterminate methods, and pre-decided conclusions.

    29. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Cyberdyne · · Score: 1
      Nothing is stopping them from launching a satellite with a nuclear weapon on board. It could be quite useful as an EMP generator, if the bomb is big enough.

      Nothing, that is, apart from it being a really dumb attack (it would fry billions of dollars worth of their own satellites, significantly degrading their own intelligence and communications systems, as well as GPS) and ineffective against almost any conceivable enemy. (Military ground/air assets are all hardened anyway; terrorists rely on nothing more advanced than telephones and cars/planes.) If you wanted to knock half the planet's civilians offline for a couple of weeks, it would work (at enormous cost) - but otherwise useless.

      An orbital EMP would also be hard to justify as "more dangerous than a Tomahawk" (particularly since Tomahawks can be nuclear-armed for real).

      So: theoretically, if you were really dumb and/or desperate, you could detonate a nuke in orbit which you launched using this rocket - although nobody has ever tried it, unlike the Tomahawk. Of course, the same is true of the Space Shuttle; for that matter, you could also use a car to deliver a nuclear warhead, with rather more effect and control. Does that make cars "more dangerous than a Tomahawk"?

    30. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I thought the UN was meaningless seeing as how the recent war was fought against the larger part of its members wishes. Do we side with the UN or not? Or is it just a matter of invoking the UN when its useful, and giving it the finger otherwise?

    31. Re:Space is hotting up indeed by iAlex · · Score: 1

      Not exactly, but you are getting closer to the reality of solving GPS solutions than everyone else so far. You do need 4 satellites but the reasons are slightly different. Three satellites give you your position as a pseudorange, usually given as North, East, Down. Now there is a lag from the time the signal leaves the satellite orbiting at 11,000 miles and the fourth variable you solve for is time. The equations to solve for all of this can get pretty nasty, but it is really interesting stuff. One of my projects at work involved solving for all of this. It get's even more interesting when you start adding in more satellites and differential GPS receivers.

      --
      What's a Sig???
  3. Hmmm, Interesting by SkArcher · · Score: 4, Interesting

    With the current problems in the US space program, it may be that the newly fixed Arianne launch system can claim a significant share of the market.

    It is important to remember that Arianne is also somewhat cheaper than the Shuttle for any given weight of payload - the shuttles main advantage is that its live crew (which is the reason for the higher cost) can perform and regulate scientific tests.

    I await the next Arianne launch with baited breath.

    --

    An infinite number of monkeys will eventually come up with the complete works of /.
    1. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by sparkes · · Score: 1

      The smaller arianne rockets are cheaper to launch than almost any other platform. Unfortunatly the new larger varient is more expensive as it keeps blowing up :-(

    2. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by SkArcher · · Score: 1

      IIRC the score is 2 shuttles to 1 arianne :/

      --

      An infinite number of monkeys will eventually come up with the complete works of /.
    3. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My apologies in advance for this insignificant nit, but I think you mean "bated breath". "Baited breath" would be what you'd have if you just ate a worm or a crane fly or something like that.

      Or perhaps it was deliberate, and you were just trolling for a swordfish.

    4. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, there's only been 3 US missions where humans lost their lives (2 shuttles and the first Apollo mission). That's not too bad, given there's been over 100 missions in the last 40 years.

      But I hate to see any of these missions fail, since it takes so long to get back on track. I would love for all these nations to have strong space programs. Competition is a good thing.

    5. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean, current problems in the US space program? AFAIK, the space shuttle's success rate is on par with the expectations.

    6. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by quigonn · · Score: 1

      IIRC it's 2:2. The ESA lost one Ariane 5, and (recently) one Ariane 5+.

      --
      A monkey is doing the real work for me.
    7. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My I point out that the european space agancy has by far the largest market share in the launching of commercial satelites ...

      Just something to keep in mind.

    8. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by Anspen · · Score: 3, Informative

      With the current problems in the US space program, it may be that the newly fixed Arianne launch system can claim a significant share of the market.

      Arianespace already has a significant share of the market (~40-50%) and has had so for years.

      Up until recently one of the main reasons it didn't have a bigger share was the requirement that US satellites to be launched with US launchers.

      The new Ariane-5 series however is more expensive, and it could take awhile until optimization has it back to the competitiveness level of the 4 (though it was necessary to move to the 5 due to the increasing requirements for payload weight)

      It is important to remember that Arianne is also somewhat cheaper than the Shuttle for any given weight of payload - the shuttles main advantage is that its live crew (which is the reason for the higher cost) can perform and regulate scientific tests.

      Actually the Arianne series doesn't really compete with the shuttle, it's main (US) competitor is the Atlas series.

      The shuttle is massively more expensive to launch for anything but the largest payloads not so much because of it's crew (though it doesn't help), but because it was designed for an altogether different mission.

      Meanwhile the Russian rockets are in many ways cheaper than both.

    9. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by GrimReality · · Score: 2
      With the current problems in the US space program, it may be that the newly fixed Arianne launch system can claim a significant share of the market.

      It seems logical, but one should also consder the following:

      • Ariane is heavily dependent on commercial launches, while NASA will always have a steady stream of US defence projects.
      • The 'current problems in the US space program' that you refer to seems to be limited to manned missions, and I don't know if Ariane is a platform intented for manned flight, so these current problems might be irrelevant.
      • Consider also the fact that NASA probably has a lot more financial power than Ariane (their almost exclusive dependence on commercial launches stated above fits in here).

      Therefore, the overall picture suggests that Ariane might not gain 'any significant share of the market' due to the 'current problems in the US space program'. US defence contractors would continue to use NASA and the third world will continue to use Ariane or Russian rockets (probably due to the cost factor and the access factor).

      In other words, there probably won't be any significant change in market shares.

      Thank you.
      GrimReality
      2003-06-04 15:26:08 UTC (2003-06-04 11:26:08-0400)

    10. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      The US Military stepped in after NASA gave away the heavy lift and cheap lift capacity to chase the space station/shuttle. Delta and Atlas (EELV) at least gets us back into the game.

    11. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by Talaran · · Score: 1

      At least one more Arianne 5 launch was only partially successful, as the second stage failed to place the two satellites it carried in the correct orbit. One of those sats was a writeoff, the other took over 6 months to limp into position with a greatly reduced lifespan.

    12. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by Talaran · · Score: 1
      The new Ariane-5 series however is more expensive, and it could take awhile until optimization has it back to the competitiveness level of the 4 (though it was necessary to move to the 5 due to the increasing requirements for payload weight)

      AFAIK, the Arianne 5 was built as big as it was specifically for the launch of ESA's ENVISAT satellite, which is a huge, schoolbus-sized satellite. The industry is generally moving towards smaller satellites, so for other Arianne 5 launches they include multiple satellites in the same payload. It certainly doesn't hurt to have the option of using the larger capacity though.
    13. Re:Hmmm, Interesting by SirTreveyan · · Score: 1

      I know I am picking nits here, but the actual flight status of a vehicle determines the difference between a mission and a training exercise. By all accounts the AS-204 ( Apollo 1 ) fire occured during a mock launch, i.e. a training exercise. The launch vehicle was not fueled, therefore it was not capable of carrying out an actual mission. The AS-204 fire must be considered a TRAINING accident and not a 'mission.' While the loss of Ed White, Virgil Grissom and Roger Chaffee was a tragedy, the fact that training for space flight is dangerous was underscored. Over the years several astronauts, including Elliot See and Clifton Williams Jr, have lost their lives in training accidents, mostly from crashes involving high performance T-38 trainer jets. Their sacrifice should be remembered as much as those who died "while the clock is running."

      --

      SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0

      0 rows returned

  4. Conflicts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    with this and the 'European version' of GPS are we heading towards a future conflict across the Atlantic?

    That is primarily dependent upon the accessibility of your oil supply. :-)

    1. Re:Conflicts by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      That's a slightly baffling statement. Britain is (NET) self-sufficient, Norway is a NET exporter and Russia has enormous untapped resources. Much more importantly, Europe could fairly easily become self sufficient in fuel if it substituted ethanol for petrol and vegetable oil for Diesel - why we don't do this is a total mystery to me.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    2. Re:Conflicts by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      "Europe could fairly easily become self sufficient in fuel if it substituted ethanol for petrol and vegetable oil for Diesel - why we don't do this is a total mystery to me."

      Other than because it typically takes more energy to create the ethanol than you get when you burn it, you mean?

    3. Re:Conflicts by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      Who cares? It's just a question of energy source portability, after all.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    4. Re:Conflicts by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      Much more importantly, Europe could fairly easily become self sufficient in fuel if it substituted ethanol for petrol and vegetable oil for Diesel - why we don't do this is a total mystery to me

      We do have the North Sea oil, but I believe like the USA, they would rather use oil from the rest of the world, which is usually cheaper. Having our own oil and not using it allows us to have a certain bargining tool on the table when buying oil from others.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    5. Re:Conflicts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason is not all oil is the same. Some requires more processing and refining than others. Some is more suitable for certain tasks, than others. Oil from the Middle East tends to be of the higher quality variety. Oil from the North Sea and much of America is lower grade.

    6. Re:Conflicts by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 0

      the Sun you fucking prick

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    7. Re:Conflicts by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      What's really funny is that this can be a barb pointed in either direction.

    8. Re:Conflicts by mikerich · · Score: 1
      The reason is not all oil is the same. Some requires more processing and refining than others. Some is more suitable for certain tasks, than others. Oil from the Middle East tends to be of the higher quality variety. Oil from the North Sea and much of America is lower grade.

      Not quite; it is to do with the relative fractions that can be distilled from the oil. North Sea oil is extremely light, sweet (low sulphur) oil which yields large amounts of gasoline without further catalytic cracking.

      Middle Eastern crude from the Southern Gulf is a heavier oil better suited to fuel oil and kerosene. It can be turned into gasoline, but requires cracking.

      North Sea oil is so desirable that Brent Crude is one of the international price benchmarks. Crude from the US covers almost the whole range of possible compositions.

      Middle Eastern crude (of which the US is not a major customer) is liked because it can be raised extremely cheaply in vast quantities and the infrastructure exists to move it to market. And we'll carry on liking it because soon enough it will be all that's left.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    9. Re:Conflicts by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      "And we'll carry on liking it because soon enough it will be all that's left."

      Oh come on! You've still got the Yellowstone oil and the Yosemite oil and the Arctic and the Antarctic and Russia and...

      As long as you're prepared to go after oil at ANY cost (like the US govt) there's plenty more out there... :-]

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    10. Re:Conflicts by mikerich · · Score: 1
      The Middle East has approximately 65% of all known reserves (and the largest amount of probable reserves in structures that have not been tapped). The Former Soviet Union possesses about 7% of World reserves of which a large amount can never be tapped due to bad management of reserves in the past. North America (which includes large reserves in Canada) comes in just below that with 6.7%. Europe trails in with a pitiful 2%, most of which is in Norway.

      In recent years, just about all of the new big discoveries have been in the Middle East. America production is in steady long term decline no matter what those fantasists who want to dig up Alaska and the national parks like to think. The US is one of the best known geological regions in the World - there are no new 'giants' waiting to be discovered.

      World production is increasingly concentrated in fewer large fields. 14% of World reserves lie in 8 enormous oil fields with more than 30 billion barrels apiece. Of the 50 000 or so oil fields in the World, more than 1/2 of production comes from just 120 fields. Almost none of which lie inside America.

      No matter what, we are at the point where oil production is peaking. Fewer fields are being discovered and the average size of the new fields is falling. Billion barrel discoveries have been on a falling rate since the 1940s, 500 million barrel discoveries since the 1960s. More than 80% of global oil production is coming from fields discovered before the energy crunch of 1973, current discoveries are less than 1/3 of usage and falling.

      All the time of course, oil consumption is rising.

      If that wasn't gloomy enough there is the really worrying possibility is that almost all reserves have been inflated. The USGS has a long history of upping reserves without good reason and many members of OPEC have inflated their reserves to gain larger production quotas. We might actually have less oil than we think.

      And as for Britain, well all that oil and gas which has been helping balance the government's books is really starting to run out. The big downturn in production is less than 10 years away.

      Sooner or later we're all going to be looking in the same direction for the lovely stuff. One of the new big players in the Persian Gulf is the Chinese State Oil Company, the PRC has already declared that the Persian Gulf is a region of strategic interest for the Chinese. Oh good - the current superpower and the next superpower both looking hungrily at someone else's oil.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    11. Re:Conflicts by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      I was joking, but thanks for the info.

      "All the time of course, oil consumption is rising"

      Now I know it's not true to blame ALL of this on Americans driving SUVs - but what the HELL is the US govt. doing allowing the average fuel consumption of their road traffic vehicles to actually INCREASE over time? I realise that the oil companies are a powerful lobby indeed, but how fucking stupid are these people?

      Personally, I'm not really worried about the oil running out - Diesel fuel is probably the most important fuel of all, and we all know that you can run Diesel engines on all sorts of crap like vegetable oil and so on. More worrying (for the UK) is the insane "dash for gas" that's occured here since electricty production was privatised, we are increasingly relying on a resource that's running out, while neglecting investments in coal, nuclear and - most worryingly - wind and wave power. Sometimes I wonder if politicians can even IMAGINE times further distant than the next election.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    12. Re:Conflicts by mikerich · · Score: 1
      I realise that the oil companies are a powerful lobby indeed, but how fucking stupid are these people?

      With Bush in power I think we'll need to move to a logarithmic scale of stupidity.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

  5. Heavy lifters by Bombula · · Score: 5, Interesting
    We've seen many articles we've recently about space, including the recent Shuttle tragedy and the successful launch of the Mars Express, as well as the X-prize. Throughout, I continue to see an emphasis on the importance of reusable equipment. Can someone give a comprehensive explanation for why lifting technology needs to be reusable?

    It seems like 30 years ago we did pretty well with expendable rockets. Since each shuttle mission costs hundreds of millions, is it really worth it? Why not invest in the development of a 'cheap' single-use lifting technology, like a successor for Soyuz? Even if each rocket cost $100 million wouldn't it still save lots of money, and wouldn't it mean much larger payloads could be delivered?

    --
    A-Bomb
    1. Re:Heavy lifters by stoborrobots · · Score: 1

      Availability of resources might cut into your ability to keep building expendable lifting devices...

      Just a thought...

      It might still be viable though... We'd need to do a cost/benefit analysis...

    2. Re:Heavy lifters by SkArcher · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes and no. The idea behind the shuttle was to save on having to build an entirely new launch vehicle every time you wanted to put a payload into orbit.

      Unfortuanately, the shuttle program was based on some incorrect assumptions. First, it was assumed that their cost predictions for the shuttle would be accurate (they weren't, it costs far more per launch than predicted) and secondly, the increase in payloads wanting taking to orbit wasn't predicted (there was a massive increase, IIRC)

      In theory, reusables are cheaper, but in the short term the throw away option works better.

      What would make throw away rockets even cheaper is a dual use philosophy of design, allowing the entire rocket (or a lot of it at least) to reach orbit, where it could be reused to form parts for orbiting storage or some such (after all, these are generally allready presurized tanks, so they will be airtight in orbit)

      --

      An infinite number of monkeys will eventually come up with the complete works of /.
    3. Re:Heavy lifters by Timesprout · · Score: 1

      Think death star. What sort of self respectng megalomanic would attempt to conquer the universe with independent launch vehicles

      --
      Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
      What truth?
      There is no dupe
    4. Re:Heavy lifters by Stuntmonkey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      On an economic basis there is no justification for reusable vehicles. Launch costs today are dominated by the cost of the ground crew (thousands of people are needed to maintain and launch the shuttle). The best way to reduce costs is to simplify ground operations as much as possible. Reusable vehicles don't do this, in fact they do the opposite.

      If the world were run by rational people, there would be two primary vehicles: (1) A heavy-lifting, single-use, less reliable unmanned system for cargo, and (2) a small, but highly safe/redundant system for people. Combining these in the manner of the shuttle forces human reliability standards throughout, which is a bad way to get stuff into space cheaply.

      So why do people persist in thinking that rockets should be reusable? It's just one of those persistent cultural myths, probably borne out of the American fascination with the automobile. Blame the Jetsons. Or maybe Star Wars. Who knows.

    5. Re:Heavy lifters by WindBourne · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, everybody likes to use the shuttle as an example of an inexpensive reuseable system, but it was botched from the git-go. Nixon's ppl, and NASA, outright lied about costs and incomes. Worse still, Nixon cut the funding further to which nasa simply put into place more disposable systems which now add higher costs. The shuttle is not a good example of a reuseable system. The way that NASA wanted to do the original shuttle is the way that rutan is doing it. 2 parts with one peice being a jet and the final delivery vehicle being a rocket. Great way to go. But back then, it would have been about 1.5 x the cost to develop it. The reusable approach with a standard payload and many launches, really is the right way for going to earth orbit.
      Now, for sending fewer very large payloads, or simply breaking earth orbit, that would require much larger rockets. That is where we should be using throw-aways.
      This is somewhat backwards from what we have today. We use the shuttle for large delivery and throw aways for small devices. On the other

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    6. Re:Heavy lifters by johannesg · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Reusables basically provide a service that is not much in demand: returning goods from orbit down to Earth. If you take that away you are left with a very simple requirement: returning astronauts. There is a good, tried and tested way of doing that: capsules. A capsule is cheap to build and cheap to launch.

      When you have capsules, you do not need to to launch wings, control mechanisms, and all the other bits that make up an airplane into orbit. That saves a huge amount of weight. The saved weight can be "spent" in two ways: cheaper rockets and larger payloads.

      The cost advantage of cheaper rockets (i.e. Soyuz) over a shuttle is obvious (something like a factor 20 or so).

      The cost advantage of larger payloads is also obvious: all of your energy is used lifting stuff that actually needs to be in space, rather than used to return safely to Earth. A shuttle launch assembly minus the shuttle (instead imagine a huge cargo container in its place) would have phenomenal lifting power; in fact, the Russian equivalent of this, Energia, could have launched the entire weight of ISS in just three launches! That would have saved a few hundred billion dollars.

      So stop thinking of the shuttle as a "cool space plane", and instead consider it to be a highly over-engineered, *heavy* method of returning to Earth.

      So what is the problem with this? I guess it has to do with NASA being afraid to lose face, which seems inevitable when they give up on the shuttle and return to expendable launchers.

      Here's what I believe the various space agencies should do to replace the shuttle:

      - Develop an expendable launcher that can lift *really heavy* items into a useful orbit (which can be ISS orbit, geostationary, or some escape orbit). Russia's Energia would be a good starting point, as would the shuttle launch stack (they are related anyway). This would be the heavy workhorse for orbital construction.

      - Develop an expendable launcher that can lift people to that same orbit. Put a capsule on it in which people can travel comfortably and safely during the entire trip - i.e. it is fine to overengineer a bit, since it will one day safe lives. Use that just for people.

      - Want to do something in orbit? Put your equipment on a big launcher (together with a lot of other stuff), and put your people on a small, safe launcher. The big launcher delivers to ISS (or some other orbital facility - constructing them will be cheap with this model), where the resident astronauts can install and operate it.

    7. Re:Heavy lifters by The+Shepherd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A major problem with the development of heavy lifters is the loss of information. When the US decided to stop relying on the heavy lifter model they also stopped keeping the current information up-to-date. In order to redevelop the heavy lifter the entire program would have to be restarted. The price tag is simply to high for the American Government to contemplate. Backup for this idea can be found in the book Space: The Final Frontier? by Giancarlo Genta and Michael Rycroft, page 88 "The American decision (shut down Saturn production lines) was probably a mistake; also for the loss of know-how which followed. If a rocket like Saturn V had to be built today, a long research and development programme would be needed and not only to introduce all of the updates due to the advances of the three most recent decades. Technological know-how in all fields cannot be considered as something acquired once and for ever. Of some capabilities are not used for a certain time, they fade and can be regained only with large investments, in terms of human and financial resources."

    8. Re:Heavy lifters by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They want to get the cost per kilogram/pound down .

      They want to launch more often, and this idea
      will get them clear of the air traffic lanes .

      Just position this out over the pacific high
      above any storm systems reach .

      I think a high altitude rail gun platform would work
      nicely to get cargo into space .

      It would not work for ppl, as it would pull so many G's
      it would kill them .

      Some tested rail guns have hit Mach 120+ in the low earth
      atmosphere with all its friction .

      At 160,000 feet using high altitude balloon tech to build
      a suspended launch platform you could fire a rail gun
      to launch cylinders into space with needed materials .

      Getting ppl into space would require a more conventional means,
      but the cargo has always been the heavier portion .

      www.21stcenturyairships.com has already got working prototype
      ballons working at near 70,000 feet .

      NASA set a world record for a ballon at 161,000 feet , so it
      can be done , 32 miles up would be a good head start .

      http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/08/020 82 7063353.htm

      These guys could provide the balloon logistics :

      http://www.andyelson.com/proj_theedgeofspace.htm

      With 99% of the earth's atmosphere out of the way, a high power
      rail gun shooting something at speeds in excess of mach 120
      would get it to the moon with NO PROBLEM .

      Less atmosphere, less friction, less gravity .

      Building a space elevator sounds cool, but cost is
      prohibitive and the logistics sound VERY scary .

      The link to the world's fastest rail gun is

      http://www.totse.com/en/technology/science_techn ol ogy/railway.html

      use CTRL+F and then enter "fastest" for your search .

      speed of sound at sea level is 330 yds/sec, they achieved
      39,991M/sec .

      Peace,
      Ex-MislTech

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
    9. Re:Heavy lifters by tinrobot · · Score: 3, Informative

      The shuttle is only partly reusable. The external tank burns up and the solid boosters need to be towed back from sea and retrofitted. Plus, the trip tears up the shuttle itself. It takes months to turn one around after a launch. That adds a lot of cost.

      Disposable rockets dispose of, well, the rocket. That is also not a trivial expense. Imagine throwing away your car every time you took a trip. Gets kinda expensive, even if you buy really cheap cars.

      In a truly reusable system, the only costs would be fuel and maintenance. It would be more like an aircraft than a car in terms of maintenance, but it would still be significantly cheaper. Inventing something like that is very expensive, but by amortizing it over many vehicles and many launches, it would make space much more acessible.

    10. Re:Heavy lifters by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Informative
      - Develop an expendable launcher that can lift *really heavy* items into a useful orbit (which can be ISS orbit, geostationary, or some escape orbit). Russia's Energia would be a good starting point, as would the shuttle launch stack (they are related anyway). This would be the heavy workhorse for orbital construction.

      NASA are considering cloning the Energia: it's called Magnum.

      Why they don't just use Energia itself I don't know... probably politics.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    11. Re:Heavy lifters by jonbrewer · · Score: 1

      At 160,000 feet using high altitude balloon tech to build a suspended launch platform you could fire a rail gun to launch cylinders into space with needed materials.

      Not sure any baloon could support thirty miles of electrical cable necessary to power said rail gun. Also think one should consider Newton's Second when speaking of floating rail guns.

    12. Re:Heavy lifters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Disposable rockets dispose of, well, the rocket. That is also not a trivial expense. Imagine throwing away your car every time you took a trip. Gets kinda expensive, even if you buy really cheap cars.

      The most expensive part of a rocket is the engines and turbopumps that feed fuel to them. What if these could be returned to earth and retrofitted, so that the only disposable portion is the fuel tank.

      Also, these could be attached to smaller fuel tanks so that, for a smaller mission, less is wasted.

      I also like the idea that fuel tanks should be used for on-orbit habitation. Imagine launching a rocket with a payload of food, water, air, etc, and having it, on orbit, turn around and use the fuel tank to provide the space needed for habitation or experiments.

    13. Re:Heavy lifters by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

      Firing it once a day you can charge a bank of capacitors
      up there on the platform .

      You run a small engine off hydrogen similar to what is
      in the balloons .

      www.21stcenturyairships.com already is planning to use
      their high altitude balloons for telecom platforms at
      70,000 feet .

      a 30 mile electrical cable, hahahaha

      Has anyone told you that you have no vision ????

      When I said ALOT and put it in all CAPS I meant ALOT ...

      It is going to take ALOT of balloon lift, but
      it still better than what happened to the shuttle
      a few months ago .

      The cost of the shuttle missions from the bottom
      up compared to this is STAGGERING .

      This could be unmanned, and could be picked up by
      robotic craft in space , remote controlled from
      the earth .

      The 21st century airships are already planned to be
      unmanned and remote control flown to put stratellites
      all over north america to provide cheap net access
      and cellular access that does not have the blind spots
      that towers do .

      It is oh so easy to nay say everything, and so many ppl
      are out there doing it .

      Devil's Advocate must be the most sought after job in the
      world, after all it is taught in college not to dream , but
      to work hardest to disprove any idea first .

      Peace,
      Ex-MislTech

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
    14. Re:Heavy lifters by 73939133 · · Score: 1

      We need reusable launch vehicles because that what they use in science fiction movies and because they let the government funnel huge amounts of R&D money to ailing aerospace companies.

      If it were just a question of efficient space travel, expendable rockets and Soyuz/Apollo-style return vehicles would be much cheaper, and probabl a lot safer as well.

    15. Re:Heavy lifters by 73939133 · · Score: 1

      In a truly reusable system, the only costs would be fuel and maintenance. It would be more like an aircraft than a car in terms of maintenance, but it would still be significantly cheaper.

      If you are talking about a reusable shuttle-like vehicle, then it's not clear that even if it were fully reusable, it would be cheaper: you need a lot of mass coming down to give astronauts an airplane-like landing, and that means that you get much less cargo capacity and that you need a lot more fuel to get the thing up and down again. The increased fuel costs per trip combined with the costs arising from having to do many more launches may well make a shuttle-like system more costly than something using expendable components even if the shuttle were fully reusable.

      Of course, you might make all the components of a capsule-like system reusable as well, but then the discussion is kind of moot. The important distinction isn't between reusable/non-reusable, it's between shuttle and capsule.

    16. Re:Heavy lifters by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yep. My father, who also worked on Apollo (yes, Daddy really did send men to the Moon -- decades later, I still get a little-kid jolt out of that idea), Skylab, and Viking, left the aerospace industry in disgust during the early stages of the Shuttle program. He said it was heartbreaking how things kept getting scaled down; the engineers knew the administration was being penny-wise and pound-foolish, but they couldn't do anything about it.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    17. Re:Heavy lifters by Anonym0us+Cow+Herd · · Score: 1

      I continue to see an emphasis on the importance of reusable equipment. Can someone give a comprehensive explanation for why lifting technology needs to be reusable?

      Disposable launchers? Horrors. Do you really propose to make launchers share the economic and convenience disadvantages of things like disposable ball-point pens that you never have to refill? Cigarette lighters that you just throw away?

      This would have the devestating side effect of lowering the barrier to entry of launch costs. (i.e. cover charge) Next thing you know, we'll have riff-raff like private industry and entrepreneurs doing the bulk of work in space instead of the government. This would be similar to other past mistakes of letting private industry run power plants, build automobiles, and make and sell other various products.

      --
      The price of freedom is eternal litigation.
    18. Re:Heavy lifters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Can someone give a comprehensive explanation for why lifting technology needs to be reusable?

      It's really a matter of opinion. If all anyone intends to do is send up an occasional satellite or space probe and then pat themselves on the back and say, "Wow, aren't we clever monkeys," then yes, expendable rockets are more than adequate.

      If anyone seriously intends to get off this ball of mud and establish a thriving, permanent presence on the moon and mars, then we need much cheaper access to space. Which means reusable launch vehicles and lots of them.

      Some people may point to the shuttle as an example of why reusable launch vehicles are not practical. But the shuttle is not a good example of a reusable launch vehicle partly because it's really a re-manufacturable launch vehicle, not re-usable, and partly because it was designed as a white-collar jobs program.

      The DC-X was potentially the start of the design path towards a practical SSTO, but we'll never know since NASA conveniently distroyed the only test vehicle.

    19. Re:Heavy lifters by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      My hats off to him. I have code that controls the MGS cameras but that was from a contract, so it is indirect work for NASA (funded by them).
      Sadly, since the early 80's, NASA became a political creature, rather than an engineering one (to be honest, it probably started in the early 70's). It continues even more so down that path. Hopefully, now private enterprise will step forward and lower the costs of the mundaine stuff and make the corporations head that direction.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    20. Re:Heavy lifters by triumphDriver · · Score: 1

      That is a very good point.

      I often wonder why there is not an unmaned / non-return replacement for the shuttle that would still use the main tank and the two SRBs. We could have launched almost the entire Space station in one go.

      --
      I grew up in the Fulda Gap, where did you?
    21. Re:Heavy lifters by kirinyaga · · Score: 2, Interesting

      actually, there is a major problem however with launcher able to lift really heavy payload : really heavy payload cost a lot of money and the launcher can just explode and blow all the really heavy & expensive stuff away. Until such a really huge launcher would have proved itself reliable enough, the "expected cost" (cost times risk) would be higher than lifting a lot of small parts. There is a need for slighty bigger launchers however.

      --
      Kirinyaga
    22. Re:Heavy lifters by tmortn · · Score: 1

      Shuttle launch costs are insane because they never had the launch schedule they were designed around. At high launch rates shuttle would be very efficient... scratch that... much more efficient than its current rate. The system was initially designed thinking there would be 50+ launches a year. Though there was nothing to launch at that rate. The costs with shuttle are fixed to the huge army of people that turn the shuttles around on the ground and they pull pay checks whether the shuttle launches 0 times or 20 times. The initial force employed in the 80's was suffcient to work very high launch rates but they where never realized. Now we have aging shuttles that they are having to perform herculean efforts to keep 'safe'... also the fact further orders for shuttle ( initially they envisioned a fleet similar to a fighter wing instead of a squadron ) never materialized and we have had to hoard the ones we do have has led to increased ground work based around longer turn around times and more precautionary measures.

      Had the need been there and we had realized economies of scale for the shuttle the shuttles would have reached their design life of 100 missions in 2-3 years of service ( fewer aging issues ) and we would be on the 3erd or possibly 4th generation of designs of reuseable systems simply as they updated the line as new shuttles were being built much similar to the way they improove cars year to year. But the budget wasn't there, the paylaods were never there and with the exception of some sattelite constelations which can't be sustained still isn't there. There are also some serious questions of if the inital launch rates would ever have been atainable. They certainly could not be now with 20 year old orbiters.

      So in the end the low launch rates with huge ground crew has tallied up a per launch cost rate for shuttle equal to or more expensive than Sat V stacks that sent us to the moon. And that really dosn't tell the story becasue it gets much more expensive once you also factor in the fact the shuttle only sends roughly 1/5th of the usuable payload that a Sat V did.

      However regarding re-useables think of it this way. Lets say a lot down the street has cars for $500. They are reliable to the point that they will run out the tank of gas from the lot about %99 of the time. Every time you run out of gas its 500 for your next car. On another lot you can buy a 50,000 car that you can refuel and with a little work on it will last your for 100 trips. So your cost for 100 trips is $50,000 + fuel Plus Labor or more than it would cost for 100 500 dollar cars that use one tank. However, if the car can be had for 25,000 or will last for 200 trips its a different story. Whether or not the shuttle would have ever broken that margin will never be known, it honestly wasn't ever given the chance to. Obviously the buy in on re-useable technology is steeper, but just as obvious is once you get beyond a certain level of use ( or re-useability ) re-useables make a great deal more sense.

      --
      I don't ask you to be me. I only ask you not expect me to be you.
    23. Re:Heavy lifters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      On an economic basis there is no justification for reusable vehicles.

      Why? Sure, if you're only planning a few launches a year, then you're right. But if you look ahead to a real, space industry, then you start talking about several launches a week, or even a day, then reusable vehicles become very economical.


      Launch costs today are dominated by the cost of the ground crew (thousands of people are needed to maintain and launch the shuttle). The best way to reduce costs is to simplify ground operations as much as possible. Reusable vehicles don't do this, in fact they do the opposite.


      Why? I think that's an assertion not backed up by facts. Remember, the shuttle was designed as a white-collar jobs program. Certainly the airline industry can be used as a guide to reducing ground operations.


      So why do people persist in thinking that rockets should be reusable?


      Maybe because jet airliners are reusable? Maybe because an entire world-wide industry has evolved to build and fly them? Maybe because someone thinks that building a reusable space vehicle is not impossibly more difficult than building a 747?

    24. Re:Heavy lifters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Shuttle launch costs are insane because they never had the launch schedule they were designed around. At high launch rates shuttle would be very efficient... scratch that... much more efficient than its current rate. The system was initially designed thinking there would be 50+ launches a year.

      It turns out that NASA lied to congress back in the 70's. They knew the shuttle could never fly 50+ mission a year, but they claimed it would so they could get the appropriations to build it. Think about it, it doesn't matter how many people you use, it will still take 2 to 3 months to re-manufacture the shuttle before every mission. It's simple physics, it can't be done any faster.

      There was a recent article somewhere, I think it was on space.com, about it, but I can't find it off-hand.

    25. Re:Heavy lifters by flyingdisc · · Score: 2, Interesting
      NASA are considering cloning the Energia: it's called Magnum.

      Part of the reason that the energia was pulled out of active service was the environmental impact of the thing. Claiming to lift up to 100 tones in to high altitude the rocket packed a huge punch in terms of fuel. So much so that it had a demonstratable impact on the launch site. This and the cost made it untenable. It's easier, less costly, lower risk to launch large structures (eg ISS) into orbit in a modular fashion.

      Current space philosophy is smaller lighter faster. What's the need for 100 ton launchers if we can do the same job with smaller rockets?

    26. Re:Heavy lifters by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      My guess is that american faith in russian safety systems took a big hit with Chernobyl.

    27. Re:Heavy lifters by dbrutus · · Score: 3, Informative

      No thanks, I'd rather take the elevator instead. Cost to build $20B. Cost to fund (with 100% contingency) $40B total. You get a nice, smooth trip to orbit suitable for even medically challenged individuals. The estimated cost to launch 1kg would be $100-$200 instead of $40,000 via shuttle.

    28. Re:Heavy lifters by tmortn · · Score: 1

      Call it two months and a fleet of 10+ shuttles and you reach the launch rate quite easily. At 2 months thats 6 launches a year for 10 shuttles thats 60. Issues like having enough engines to continually supply an orbiter for a turn around instead of generally overhauling and replacing the eingines from the last mission.. IE have 3 sets and one set is always ready to go when an orbiter completes a mission... same for SRB's etc... there are ways to shorten the shuttle turn around times right there that have no safety issues... just a parts cost issue since labor is the same regardless of the number of launches ( unless you exceed the ground crews capacity of course ).

      Like I said there are issues of if the shuttle could ever have attainted that rate. but the attempt was never made. The 2-3 month turn around is not nececarrily hard coded. That length, actually longer was used initialy while they were still learning the system and prooving the flight capabilities. Since then there has never been a launch manifest that demanded even a 3 month turn around untill ISS. In the mean time since we wound up having only 4 orbiters now 3 that are running up on 20+ years of age except for one there are age issues with the systems that is creating even more time in the process that would not have been an issue with a shorter service life. HOWEVER that is all an issue of scale. Shuttle was designed for an unrealisticlly large scale of operations... IE its the same as designing a wholesale company that makes money on slim margins and then having to do single serving sales at a loss with huge overhead costs and your not moving product at a high enough rate to get the margin.

      Meanwhile the thousands of high tech jobs that NASA brings via the joint Lockheed/Boeing USA contracts for shuttle ground crew is a huge political tool and choices regarding that tend to be driven by political issues, budget cutting pressure comming from NASA and job creation bloat coming from State officials who don't want to see a major job market hit during their tenure. The tangle of shuttle issues is a true mess... engineering problems and political all run amuck.

      --
      I don't ask you to be me. I only ask you not expect me to be you.
    29. Re:Heavy lifters by orac2 · · Score: 1

      The important distinction isn't between reusable/non-reusable, it's between shuttle and capsule.

      Exactly! In fact the US had designed a resuable vehicle before the shuttle: the Gemini capsule, which was originally supposed to use a parafoil and X-15 style skids to make runway landings too.

      For various (shortsighted) reasons, Gemini was dropped, but one or two of capsules during the manned program were refurbished and used again as part of a unmanned test program for the Air Force's ill fated Manned Orbiting Laboratory. (The Capsules were designed to easily refurbished by doing things like moving as many components outside the astronauts pressure shell as possible, giving Gemini it's relatively long nose.

      --
      "Just once, I'd like to meet an alien menace that wasn't immune to bullets." -- The Brigadier, Dr. Who
    30. Re:Heavy lifters by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      Chernobyl... 1986, I believe. As far as spaceflight is concerned, American safety systems didn't exactly cover themselves in glory that year either.

      It's probably pork-barrel politics. NASA have to spend their money on American kit to please American politicians by giving jobs to American voters. And since a large part of their purpose is to inflate American prestige internationally, they have to showcase US technology. Buying in Russian designs, even if they can be built and assembled in the US, just doesn't do that. Sure, it will get them to the Moon and beyond much more cheaply and efficiently, but since when were NASA about space exploration?

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    31. Re:Heavy lifters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Realize that a space elevator requires carbon nanotubes. No other material can support enough of itself (tensile strength). The only problem with this is that carbon ropes are currently being produced on the micron to millimeter scale. I was employed manufacturing them a couple years ago. These lengths are a result of the nanotube creation process and not any known method of manipulating them, aligning them, or getting them to stick end on end. So the space elevator design hinges on the future development - by scientists outside this company - advancing the science of nanotubes. In a few decades it might be something though. Which is not too shabby since that is the minimum time frame for the costs you suggest.

    32. Re:Heavy lifters by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Part of the reason that the energia was pulled out of active service was the environmental impact of the thing. Claiming to lift up to 100 tones in to high altitude the rocket packed a huge punch in terms of fuel. So much so that it had a demonstratable impact on the launch site. This and the cost made it untenable. It's easier, less costly, lower risk to launch large structures (eg ISS) into orbit in a modular fashion.

      The loss of its two major 'customers', Buran and Mir 2 were the killing blow to the Energia programme. The fragmentation of the Soviet industry when the Ukraine broke away prevented it being revived. The Ukrainians built the reusable strap-on boosters for Energia and chose to switch to the new Zenit booster which is now used by Sealaunch.

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    33. Re:Heavy lifters by Aapje · · Score: 1

      The problem with Chernobyl was that they turned off all safety systems to do a 'test'. It was operator stupidity that caused the meltdown, not a flaw in the system. Russian engineering is pretty reliable (based on KISS). I would rather go up in a russian rocket than in the space shuttle.

      --

      The Drowned and the Saved - Primo Levi
    34. Re:Heavy lifters by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

      Well, balloons are pretty cheap, and they work now .
      The carbon nanotube idea is great, but it is possibly a few
      decades away from actually working as the other reply to your
      post pointed out .

      NASA recently set a new altitude record lugging 3/4 ton
      payload to 161,000 feet with one balloon .

      http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/08/020 82 7063353.htm

      A platform of several could carry ALOT more weight .

      As they had to rupture the balloon to get it to come
      down think how long it might stay up if they did not .

      Redundant balloons and gas cylinders could make for a
      cheap permanent launch platform 32 miles from the
      surface of the earth .

      A railgun with a slow one day charge time could send up
      365 packages a year under perfect conditions .
      Weather would not impede launches .

      With 99% of the earth's atmosphere not there, low friction,
      and greater speeds , and less gravity I think some great
      results could be achieved .

      Firing the rail gun once a day would put cargo in space at
      the same spot day after day, and hydrogen fuel cells could
      build the charge over the period of a day in a bank of capacitors .

      My many other posts on this go over other aspects on how
      to deal with recoil , etc etc .

      ALOT of nay sayers out there...and I am not saying it would
      not be difficult , I just find it hilarous that ppl call it down
      because it is not "sexy tech" like the carbon nanotubes .
      Old school caveman tech is often shunned as "low tech" , but
      the fact is it works , and has worked for a long time .

      Just because it is boring does not mean it is bad , lol .
      The www.21stcenturyairships.com ballons could bring up more
      gas cylinders and payload to the platform and it is all remote
      control too .

      For me it is not about competing with other technologies ,
      it is about saving lives of ppl like the recent shuttle
      disaster .

      If they can fly a lighter safer aircraft up similar to some being
      proposed by private industry , then it will save lives and money .

      Let an unmanned rail gun hurl most cargo into orbit .
      We can do this now, and NASA is already using balloons to
      take heavy payloads to the edge of space .

      They are already geared up for portions of this project,
      and by all reckoning it will cost ALOT less than 40 billion .
      ALOT of universities have small scale rail guns working now ,
      and the tech is over 2 decades old .

      Peace,
      Ex-MislTech

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
    35. Re:Heavy lifters by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      repeat after me. Chernobyl had no containment system.

      Now with a pebble bed reactor, it might be ok but this was a graphite reactor that obviously had the potential for catastrophic failure. Containment was mandatory for every design system but the Soviets thought they could do without. KISS? I don't think so.

    36. Re:Heavy lifters by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      A couple of inventors at Rice University have established a carbon nanotube production company using a new process that is industrially scaleable and potentially much less expensive. I'm sure that a lot of people are working on lengthening the strands which need to be at least a few of milimeters long for them to be fashioned into rope using epoxy. At least at this point, you can produce the stuff in abundance. I expect a lot of people will be looking to this material to solve all sorts of problems. Most of these problems could be solved easier if the darn tubes were longer.

      It's a speculative leap but I'm optimistic that the world will see a space elevator in the next few decades.

    37. Re:Heavy lifters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Call it two months and a fleet of 10+ shuttles and you reach the launch rate quite easily. At 2 months thats 6 launches a year for 10 shuttles thats 60.

      I understand what you're saying, but... given the shuttle design, the nicest thing I can say is that your figures are highly optimistic.


      The tangle of shuttle issues is a true mess... engineering problems and political all run amuck.


      Truer words were never spoken, and that's before even mentioning the ISS.


    38. Re:Heavy lifters by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      I'm interested in this actually though I think the two projects are aimed at different markets. What's the launch cost estimate per kg? What's the likely maximum weight such a system can launch and what's the stress put on the launch package, ie how many g forces will that acceleration by railgun impose?

      Somehow, I don't think you're going to lift people that way and I don't see how anything fragile gets up *or* down in this system. For space tourism, it's a bust and for arbitrarily large platforms or platforms that are relatively delicate, it won't work either.

      Different markets, but it probably has its own niche if it can be cheap enough.

    39. Re:Heavy lifters by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1
      Unfortuanately, the shuttle program was based on some incorrect assumptions.

      True.

      First, it was assumed that their cost predictions for the shuttle would be accurate (they weren't, it costs far more per launch than predicted)

      Yes, but that is mainly because the Shuttle takes much longer (both more person hours and elapsed) to turn around than originally predicted. If the Shuttle could launch every week, or even every month, then everything else being equal, the cost of the Shuttle would plummet from economies of scale. Indeed that is the primary concept of RLVs, but the Shuttle didn't manage to leverage this advantage, due to lack of funding leading to a shoddy design.

      and secondly, the increase in payloads wanting taking to orbit wasn't predicted (there was a massive increase, IIRC)

      I don't know where you get that from; increased launch rate wouldn't have increased the fixed costs, and fixed costs are the main cost point in the Shuttle program. But alas the Shuttle physically can't handle launching more often.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    40. Re:Heavy lifters by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

      Yes, this is cargo only, Ppl would get killed in this system .

      This would allow much lighter craft to take the astronauts to
      space, while the rail gun kicks up "most" types of durable cargo .

      Delicates would have to be taken up the old fashion way .

      The launch cost is unknown for this system, no one has even done
      a cost study, no one has even modelled a prototype via a computer .

      As for platform delicacy, the recoil could be avoided by a
      hydrogen blast in the reverse direction the rail gun fires .
      Counteracting the extreme recoil force .

      This system is not meant for sending large pieces up, it is meant
      for sending raw materials up , and then to have remote control
      robots assemble them if needed .

      This about putting more material up in less time, for far less than conventional methods .

      Instead of sustaining man up there and the expense of food, water, etc etc . You send several robots, and make them to where they
      are multi-tooled an can repair each other .

      Make them ultra-modular and adaptive, make it to where they
      can swap battery packs in each other as well .

      Have redundant battery packs so that while swapping one,
      they can still run on the other .

      The robots could be controlled from earth, and could assemble
      a space station, or moon base like china plans to build .

      Send up whatever materials they need via the rail gun , and fire it once a day .

      Being able to put payload in space every day would get a tremendous
      amount of payload up in a short amount of time .

      If you could get multiple launches a day you could get alot
      up there in a short amount of time .

      The "only" benefits of this system would be cheap, fast,
      and unmanned to reduce loss of life .

      The US has plans for one currently to be built on the side of
      a mountain , but it is on hold due to budget as far as I know .

      Here is ALOT of info on the subject ...

      http://www.aeiveos.com/~bradbury/MatrioshkaBrain s/ MassDrivers.html

      My twist on the whole scenario is the high altitude balloon
      portion, and the recoil system for the rail gun .

      They already plan on ground launches, I just wanted to find
      a way to avoid the incredible friction of the atmosphere .

      I'd contact those ppl at NASA for further information,
      my idea is little more than an idea like my idea for
      massive tidal power in the bay of fundy that would have
      zero environmental impact .

      At least the phillipines has decided to try a similar system .

      Well I am zonked , time to get some zzz's and get up tomorrow
      and do it again .

      Take it EZ,
      Ex-MislTech

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
    41. Re:Heavy lifters by Stuntmonkey · · Score: 1

      > So why do people persist in thinking that rockets should be reusable?

      Maybe because jet airliners are reusable? Maybe because an entire world-wide industry has evolved to build and fly them? Maybe because someone thinks that building a reusable space vehicle is not impossibly more difficult than building a 747?

      Reaching mach 30 and tolerating the 1000s of degrees of reentry heat puts enormous stress on the shuttle. It really is nothing like flying a 747. Because of this stress, most of the critical systems need to be inspected after each flight and often replaced. Performing these inspections requires large portions of the orbiter to be dismantled and reassembled between flights. These are all per-launch costs that don't get cheaper as you fly more often.

      The key point is that all of this inspection/rebuilding costs more than a simple expendable rocket would. At some point, engineering may advance to the point that a vehicle could sustain dozens of launches with no need for manual inspection. Then I would concede that reusables make sense economically. Until then, they don't.

    42. Re:Heavy lifters by Aapje · · Score: 1

      I wasn't saying that Chernobyl was a safe reactor. I was just pointing out that the disaster was caused mostly by operator error. This contradicts your statement that russian safety systems were the cause. I think that statement was misleading (IMHO).

      Of course, a nuclear reactor from the 70's shouldn't neccesarily tell us anything about the safety of their current space program. The success record is pretty good for the last century of russian space flights (manned and unmanned).

      --

      The Drowned and the Saved - Primo Levi
    43. Re:Heavy lifters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Reaching mach 30 and tolerating the 1000s of degrees of reentry heat puts enormous stress on the shuttle. It really is nothing like flying a 747. Because of this stress, most of the critical systems need to be inspected after each flight and often replaced.

      I guess I have trouble with the shuttle being held up as the pinnacle of human engineering. There's no point in even trying to solve the stress or reentry problems, the shuttle is the best we can do.

      I feel like someone back in 1903 after the Wright brothers flight saying, "Someday man will fly from coast to coast!", and being told, "Are you nuts? That thing is much too fragile and besides you can never carry enough fuel."

      Of course, if no one believes these problems are solvable, then they won't get solved, which means you're right, they are by definition insolvable.


    44. Re:Heavy lifters by tmortn · · Score: 1

      Nothing all that optimistic about it really... pulling the engines and overhauling them and waiting for all the pieces ( ET and SRB's ) to assemble the stack and payload manifesting/loading can and is all done in two months generally now. The last 4-12 weeks are final safety checks and payload snafu's then waiting for a launch window. They did 3 month turn arounds during the heaviest launch schedule for assembling the ISS... this was without Columbia in the mix also.

      Have the pieces available for an assembly line turn around with payloads that are ready to go and your biggest chores in turn around after the orbiter lands are checking the heatshield and reloading the OMS and life support systems. Those checks can be done in that time frame easily including all levels of safety checks and thats with the current aging orbiters.

      The thing is, those kinds of options make no sense without a sufficient launch load and that we don't have becasue shuttle just isn't cost effective compared to expendable boosters. IF we bit off the chunk of parts ( extra engines ramped up SRB production ) and commited to a heavy launch schedule Shuttle per launch costs could be reduced, the question is how much. Here is where what I suggest is deffinately optimistic, mostly because to even attempt it you would have to build new orbiters ( not an idea I care for ) and commit to keeping the essential shuttle design in operation for a good long while.

      Its time to take the next step, Let shuttles run their course. Make our best call on their safety and accept they are ragged edge technology stretched well beyond their intended service life. At some point enough will have to be enough

      We could probably make a Shuttle II system that maintained the same essential staged design but used liquid fuled throttleable fly back Boosters in place of the SRB's, a lighter and much smaller shuttle designed around crew return and perhaps limited cargo, with an ET designed to carry the main payload as well as fuel. we more or less get the ET to orbit now, we just don't even it out with an OMS burn. The combination of a lighter otbiter and a slightly more powerfull OMS system would probably make it quite feasible to manuever the ET into orbit, and there are lots of uses that an expended ET could be put to in orbit... like triple the space of ISS for 1/100th the cost. If the heatshield for a smaller orbiter can be reduced by 50-75k pounds from current weight, that means the empty ET and new orbiter would be very close in mass to just the current orbiter meaning the current OMS system could be used, a more powerfull system and better thermal control would enable much higher orbits ( less decay less need for reboost better MG environment ) possibly lunar orbit or even TMI ( trans mars insertion ).

      We could also use the shuttle stack components minus the orbiter and a top payload config ( on top of the ET ) or shuttle C design ( no heatshield/wings/tail, just an orbiter shell with OMS and SME's ) with a capsule for crew return. People harp about the shuttle but tend to not realize it tosses almost as much total mass into LEO as an Apollo Sat V stack did. Its just that most of it is tied up in the orbiter, and large chunk of that is the heatshield. SME's are 7k lbs each which is incredibly light considering their power (~450k lbs thrust EACH ). Then besides the heat shield the rest of the orbiter is built like a plane with similar weight IE light enough to fly. The heastshield is cumbersome and HEAVY. Build a small capsule to stow in the hold for Crew return and launch the heatshield less shell/oms system and engines which dosn't reutrn. Design it to be utilized in orbit and the shell weigth actually becomes payload instead of dead weight. Biggest problem with this idea is the need for an engine more expendable than the SME's or you have to bite extra weight for less efficient engines or provide heatshielding and a return ability for the engines, also problematic.

      Either of those options would be good interim options to replace

      --
      I don't ask you to be me. I only ask you not expect me to be you.
  6. If something goes very wrong by itchyfidget · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... then surely it would be an advantage for the stricken space-program to have the other party to fall back on?

    I'm thinking particularly of in-space rescues where the other program may have the resources ready to launch a rescue-mission, but there are probably other scenarios from which both NASA and ESA would benefit.

    Plus, competition will mean that the science thrives, particularly in the current political climate (don't kid yourself - the US and Europe are *not* friends right now).

    --
    Mod early, mod often.
    1. Re:If something goes very wrong by flyingdisc · · Score: 1
      Pretty much all the space missions are collaborative now. In space science it is too small and the disadvantages too great to be anything other than collaborative. (e.g. There was some direct Canadian involvement in the ESA mars mission, and even if there wasn't direct involvement from the US labs there would have been consultation and peer review on the various instruments).

      Science, post cold war, is not a competition. It's a collaboration.

  7. Timely by akadruid · · Score: 5, Informative

    The New Scientist report is both inaccurate and out of date.
    A more timely report was published last week at the BBC.
    All the same, this is a very interesting move for the ESA, and for Europe. A challenging move here could well help our efforts towards a more united Europe.
    This is a rare 'carrot' for UK residents, more used the threat of monetory union and other unpleasent symptoms of a united Europe.

    --
    "Those who cast the votes decide nothing; those who count the votes decide everything." (attrib. Joseph Stalin)
    1. Re:Timely by K. · · Score: 1

      You don't have to start using the Euro, you know, you can always just stay dollar-linked. After all, why would you need control over your own currency? I'm sure the US will look out for your interests when things get tough, just like they did for Argentina.

      --
      -- Proud descendant of semi-nomadic cattle-herders.
    2. Re:Timely by den_erpel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is a rare 'carrot' for UK residents, more used the threat of monetory union and other unpleasent symptoms of a united Europe.


      I think you should get off your Island more often, monetory union is hardly an unpleasent symptom as we experience it. Most Europeans in the Euro zone, that are not confined to their 20 square kilometers around their homes, would not want to go back to the pre-Euro aera.

      Most of the ppl I know, just shop around in different contries (e.g. for electronics), because prices are easily compared...

      Next to the fact that the UK is never considered as an integral part of the EU by most other member countries, you can hardly call the UK a team player... As it turns out, they'll most likely back NASA when Washington orders them to do so.
      --
      Genius doesn't work on an assembly line basis. You can't simply say, "Today I will be brilliant."
    3. Re:Timely by Hittite+Creosote · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, why would we want to be like those European countries, with their higher productivities, lower working hours, and their generally being richer than the UK. As for monetary union - well, at the moment, we're referred to as 'Treasure Island' in commercial circles, as companies can charge a whole whack more for products in the UK and get away with it.

    4. Re:Timely by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      "You don't have to start using the Euro, you know, you can always just stay dollar-linked."

      What the fuck is that supposed to mean? Since when has Sterling been 'dollar-linked'. Sterling is the ONLY currency not quoted against the US Dollar, in fact, the US Dollar is quoted against Sterling.

      Upstart.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    5. Re:Timely by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      Tell that to all the unemployed Germans and they'll laugh you out of the room.

      The UK could definitely use a bit of Europeanisation, but French and German economic policies are not conspicuously successsful at the moment. I'll vote YES to the Euro if we ever get our fabled referendum.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    6. Re:Timely by pubjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is a rare 'carrot' for UK residents, more used the threat of monetory union and other unpleasent symptoms of a united Europe.

      Unpleasent? You obviously don't travel or trade between European countries often.

      Here's a hint. 75% of the press in the UK is owned by three men. Those three men are anti-europe, and are using their control over the UK press to sway public opinion away from Europe. If you read The Sun, The Telegraph, The Times or The Daily Mirror (amongst others) then be aware that they have an agenda to feed you with negative propaganda about Europe. As a UK citizen who now spends most of his time "in Europe" I must say that my previous (and in retrospect naive) view of England as having an quality, open and honest press has changed considerably over the last five years. It is dishonest and manipulative. Don't fall for it.

    7. Re:Timely by TobascoKid · · Score: 1

      I think you should get off your Island more often, monetory union is hardly an unpleasent symptom as we experience it. Most Europeans in the Euro zone, that are not confined to their 20 square kilometers around their homes, would not want to go back to the pre-Euro aera.

      Most of the ppl I know, just shop around in different contries (e.g. for electronics), because prices are easily compared...


      I doubt joing the Euro would give people in the UK the adavantages it gives people on the continent - it's a lot harder for us (at least those who live in Great Britain) to pop over to another euro country to compare prices than it is for some one in say, Belgium (yes, there's the internet - but then I can buy from all over the world).Anyway, I don't think the 'easier to compare prices' argument is particularly strong - the conversion isn't particulary difficult and roughly the same as the conversion rate to the us dollar - so you could just as well turn around and say we should switch to the US Dollar (I would love to see the economic criteria that's suppossed to say when it's ok for the UK to join the Euro be applied to the Dollar - I wonder which one we're closer to).

      Next to the fact that the UK is never considered as an integral part of the EU by most other member countries, you can hardly call the UK a team player...

      But it's not like we've ever been made to feel like part of the team. France kept us out of the what became the EU (I forget the exact alphabet soup but I think it was what came before the EEC) until the 70s. France and Germany blatently ignore European orders without any appernt repercussions (ie - when British beef was suppossed to be able to go on sale throughout Europe, France and some German states told the EU to go jump and nothing happened). We implement most of the Council directives (no matter how mind bogglelingly stupid) when a lot of other states don't (interestingly, I've heard people in Denmark feel much the same was towards the Euro and Europe in general as people in the UK - and both countries are, or at least were the two highest implementers of EU Council directives). If every state was treated equally and fairly than maybe more people in the UK would think favourably toward Europe - but at the moment it just doesn't seem to be a level playing field. Perhaps the new constitution will change matters, but I doubt it

      I think there are a lot of people in the UK who don't see any real benefits to being in the Euro, let alone the EU itself. I think the UK would be better off with the sort of deal the swiss are getting - most of the few benefits people see to being in Europe, with fewer of the drawbacks of being a full member.

      --
      At some point, somewhere, the entire internet will be found to be illegal.
    8. Re:Timely by TobascoKid · · Score: 1

      Unpleasent? You obviously don't travel or trade between European countries often.

      Which I think is one of the reasons a lot of people see few adavantages to joing - barring booze cruises and holidays not that many people in Britain travel to Europe that often. I can see a single currency being advantageous to people on the continent, but less so to those of us stuck out here. As for trade, there are companies that like the fact that multiple currencies are in use - because they are able to make money by moving money around the different currencies. Not only that but even with the Euro a lot of companies still have to deal with the US Dollar and other currencies - once you have to deal with more than one currency I doubt it makes much difference how many you have to deal with.

      As a UK citizen who now spends most of his time "in Europe" I must say that my previous (and in retrospect naive) view of England as having an quality, open and honest press has changed considerably over the last five years. It is dishonest and manipulative

      Umm, I thought it was kinda obvious that the papers have thier own agendas (ie everybody knows that the Guardian is left wing and the Telegraph right - with attitudes to Europe to match). At least they don't seem to try to hide it very much, which I suppose is at least in someways honest - I remember when I was living in the US papers would claim to be 'unbiased and objective' and most people felt they wern't.

      To be honest though, I'm pretty much at the point at giving up on the media in general. Just looking at how often the IT press gets things wrong makes one wonder how often the main press gets it wrong. That and reporting in general seems to be getting less and less about facts and more and more about emotions - I want to know what's going on so I can make up my own mind if something's right or wrong, not some journalist telling me about how terrible something is or how wonderful something is. I think it was last weeks reporting on the Beckhams 'stealing the show' at the MTV music awards that finnaly pushed me over the edge - if they made as big an impact as the UK media would have you believe than why aren't they mentioned at all by the US media?

      --
      At some point, somewhere, the entire internet will be found to be illegal.
    9. Re:Timely by pubjames · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As for trade, there are companies that like the fact that multiple currencies are in use - because they are able to make money by moving money around the different currencies.

      I guess you're not from a business background. No company likes the fact that there are multiple currencies - it means uncertainty. Many companies have multiple currency accounts to try to counteract currency movements to reduce the uncertainty.

      Let me explain it this way. You as a Brit sell a product to, say, the USA. It costs you £5 to make, you sell it for $15. The dollar weakens (in case you haven't noticed, it just has quite considerably). Either you have to charge more for your product (making it less competitive with products produced within the USA, because of course the currency change doesn't affect them), or you make less profit. Here's the crunch - you have no control over currency fluctuations. One day you could be making a profit, the next day a loss, due to something completely out of your control. Now are you seriously going to argue that this is something that businesses like?

      Umm, I thought it was kinda obvious that the papers have thier own agendas

      There's a huge difference between the press voicing their opinions about things and deliberately lying to or misleading their readership, which is what happens in the UK these days unfortunately.

    10. Re:Timely by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      The 'unpleasant' aspect is visible on hand in the FRG today. Normally, the Bundesbank would be cutting interest rates in order to stave off a nasty recession. The ECB has to balance German need for more currency with faster growing periphery states where inflation is a higher problem. Unpleasant, indeed!

    11. Re:Timely by Nick_dm · · Score: 1

      Europe is fine as far as individual countries go, but I'm still not keen on the idea of a overly powerful EU.

      There are already laws like the EU Copyright Directive, which is pretty similar to the DMCA and ideas for allowing patenting of software ideas (fingers crossed it won't be passed). Countries can technically opt out of certain areas of this I believe, but with more levels of bureaucracy things can get messy. Its a lot easier for people to get their point across to the government when they know which area of government to aim their concerns at.

      I'm not a patriotic person, but I don't like handing too much power away for practical reasons, I think people should have as much control over issues that affect them as possible.

    12. Re:Timely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Nope. The ghost of inflation is still haunting Germany and if you think back it's not that long that everyone was complaining that the ECB was to soft.

      If you look at DM/$ rates their still much higher than in the mid 90s it's not likely that we'd have much lower interest rates without the Euro

    13. Re:Timely by cheesybagel · · Score: 1
      Yes. First the UK tried to undermine the EEC by creating EFTA. Then they expected the EEC to welcome them with open arms three years later.
      Blame De Gaulle for having half a spine.

      Even the UK will eventually realize that the future in Europe revolves around deeper unification.

    14. Re:Timely by den_erpel · · Score: 1


      I don't think the 'easier to compare prices' argument is particularly strong


      This statement is obviously made with someone with no experience in the matter whatsoever. I live from 5 different countries in a radius of 150 km, so popping over a border to shop somewhere is not that exceptional. It is _very_ handy to be able to pay with the same currency and see that e.g. a spindel of CDs is much more expensive in shop A in country X than in shop B in country Y. I assume that most frequent visitors on /. have on average a good eduction, so converting currencies is not that particularly difficult (times 6, divided in 20), but I can imagine it will serve as an integrating factor. Sure, there is the language barrier to some extend, but I would estimate that almost everybody has at least a rudimentary knowledge of a second language or third (French or English). At least everybody got at least 4 years of it in elementary and secondary school here.

      I would love to see the economic criteria that's suppossed to say when it's ok for the UK to join the Euro be applied to the Dollar - I wonder which one we're closer to

      Then you should check larger companies. Sure labour costs are more important, but rest assured that keeping all other alternatives equal, large companies will choose for the Euro zone. Why? Basically because they have to keep provisions and pay exchange rates for currencies, which can be a significant drain.

      I just hope you at least have the insight to see that the future of the UK is in Europe (and not in the States). Some might regret it on both sides of the channel, but it's a geographical fact.


      But it's not like we've ever been made to feel like part of the team.


      This goes both ways. For as far as I can remember, the UK seemed to oppose or hinder the European integration. With the new Labour government, things started to improve, but I would guess that Blair just lost any goodwill he had over the last year.


      France and Germany blatently ignore European orders without any appernt repercussions


      Excuse me? They currently have problems keeping their budgets in balance that's true, but you should not try to reverse the situation, they are still the largest integrators of the EU and compared to the UK, you cannot reproach them being bad team players.


      I think there are a lot of people in the UK who don't see any real benefits to being in the Euro, let alone the EU itself.


      Over the years, a lot of voices said that the UK is holding back the EU, and to many perspectives that's true. I should try to give a better reference, but more than once, all countries agreed on some particular issue, while the UK did not. Of course integration is not that easy and for all countries, it will goe accompanied with loss of souvereignty. The UK seems to have some dillusion of grandure that passed half a century ago. At least France and Germany understood that the only way to go is cooperation, and as far as I read it, the UK is now wondering how it is possible that these contries influence EU politics and the agenda to such a degree. For a half decent observer, this should be obvious by now, how can you expect to trust a player which seems to have, over and over again, a larger affinity with another continent. Unfortunately this doesn't bring money in, so they bet on two horses.

      I for one, would like to see the UK to have closer ties with the European continent, but any trust they gain with the ppl on the continent, the UK seems bent to destroy it.

      I would like to conclude with a statement I read some years ago in a news paper: "The future of the EU, with the Great Brittain if possible, without them if needed". Unfortunately, this is happening in many fields. I just hope that all European countries realise that together they stand much stronger than divided, we can all miss those *cough* idiot *cough* rogue players we had over the last year, and pulling the European continent in the spiral of downfall and violence that another continent's government is initiating.

      --
      Genius doesn't work on an assembly line basis. You can't simply say, "Today I will be brilliant."
  8. Good news by anagama · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I say more power to 'em. Something has to get the US off it's fat ass, and if it won't, someone else needs to carry the torch of science and progress into space.

    I say this as a US citizen BTW.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    1. Re:Good news by CausticWindow · · Score: 1

      I say this as a US citizen BTW

      Be careful of what you say in public dude.

      --
      How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    2. Re:Good news by Timesprout · · Score: 1

      I say this as a US citizen BTW.

      Not any more. We here at the dept of homeland security would like to inform you you have 24hrs to relocate your self to camp delta. You are now classifed as an enemy combatant after your unpatriotic remarks on /.

      --
      Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
      What truth?
      There is no dupe
    3. Re:Good news by Thomas+Miconi · · Score: 1

      Something has to get the US off it's fat ass, and if it won't, someone else needs to carry the torch of science and progress into space.

      It won't be us.

      European space activity is essentially 50% France and 30% Germany (not because they're smarter, just because the French have more experience with aeronautics and the Germans represent 1/3 of European economy).

      Both of these countries are simply out of money. Broke. Nothing, nada, niente, rien, nichts.

      So they're cutting out. France recently announced an unprecedented cut in science credits (they call it a "freeze" - yeah sure !)

      I'm afraid the first man on mars will probably not speak my language. :-)

      Thomas Miconi

    4. Re:Good news by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Ease up, I think that pretty much every political force is in favor of the US getting off its fat ass and competing hard to be number 1 in the world. There's nothing wrong with that. Put the paranoia back in the box.

    5. Re:Good news by Keebler71 · · Score: 1

      Its pretty sad that even when you have a socialist government with exceedingly high tax rates (at least compared with US) that you can be "out of money".

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
  9. Is there more to it than traditional exploration? by arcite · · Score: 2, Interesting

    After reading recent stories here on /. about Chinese interests in building a moon base and extracting resources, I wonder what are Europe's space program's primary goals? Are they interested mostly in hard science stuff? Or are they creating and building up an entirely new kind of space industry? Perhaps what I really want to know is, when do the orbiting space hotels go up? :)

  10. Cooperation by fridzappa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The ESA and NASA already have a history of working together. The Saturn-bound Cassini, for instance, has the ESA-designed Huygens aboard. A little competition is healthy (see the current Mars missions), but international cooperation is the only way we'll see big projects like Cassini in the future.

    1. Re:Cooperation by TheCaptain · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Actually, what makes me wonder, is why the Russian, European AND American space agencies don't work together on this stuff more - the very tone of the posting "How will NASA react?" tells me NASA probably wasn't even invited to the party. I am not saying they all need to be involved in everything each other do...but why this tone? (Making NASA sound like they are somehow in the defensive?) The tone of the writing only serves to try to foster a little mutual paranoia...rather childish actually, and certainly not helpful.

      Anyways...I thought the EU was all about international cooperation and getting along. I am glad NASA and the ESA cooperate as much as they already do...they should likely do more. I seriously doubt NASA has a problem with working with other agencies abroad...

    2. Re:Cooperation by dbrutus · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The EU *is* about everybody getting along as long as the Poles, Romanians, Bulgarians, etc. sit down and shut up when their betters speak, it works just fine and dandy.

      Jacques Chirac did more in 30 seconds to expose EU hypocricy than the entire anti-EU movement did in years. An admirable achievement, even more so as it was completely unintentional.

    3. Re:Cooperation by timeOday · · Score: 1

      Surely you've heard of the world's most expensive piece of orbiting space junk, the ISS?

    4. Re:Cooperation by BenTels0 · · Score: 1
      Anyways...I thought the EU was all about international cooperation and getting along.

      It is. That is, the EU is all about international cooperation and getting along BETWEEN EU MEMBERS. There's no reason we cannot lart everybody else. ;-)

      That aside, the ESA is not an EU-based thing.

    5. Re:Cooperation by BenTels0 · · Score: 1

      Yet another troll breaks through the surface to seek a place in the sun.....

    6. Re:Cooperation by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Jacques Chirac didn't threaten the Vilnius 10 group? He didn't scare the pants off all the new entrants and some of the more reluctant incumbant EU members?

      Wake up, man, that post was serious.

    7. Re:Cooperation by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yes, the EU is about getting along. The USA, OTOH, is about bullying the rest of the world. I wouldn't invite any bullies to my model rocket events; I can see why the Europeans didn't invite the Americans.

      Besides, the USA has such a horrible case of NIH syndrome, that it's a lot easier to get stuff done without them.

    8. Re:Cooperation by BenTels0 · · Score: 0
      Jacques Chirac didn't threaten the Vilnius 10 group?

      No -- Chirac got frustrated and shot his mouth off. Everybody told him he was being an ass and that was the end of it. Now, it's old news.

      He didn't scare the pants off all the new entrants and some of the more reluctant incumbant EU members?

      Not unless they are completely backwards when it comes to European diplomacy. Sure, most of the Union was unhappy about that letter calling for support for Bush -- the Union is supposed to seek consensus, not have everybody fly off in a million directions. But all the members also know that no member can ride roughshod over another, or even over the candidates; the other nations won't stand for it. So all the PM's quietly asked Chirac whether he was going to pry his foot from his mouth before he pulled his head out of his ass or after and that was the end of it. Stupidities happen in the Union from time to time, much like they happen in the United States (you'll recall that recent mess surrounding Strom Thurmond and Trent Lott) -- we acknowledge them, deal with them and move on. We don't flog the horse anymore once it is dead, however.

      Wake up, man, that post was serious.

      I'm sure it was -- but you're also making more of it than the incident is worth.

    9. Re:Cooperation by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      If it were a one-shot you would be right. I don't think it was a one shot. It is a situation that deserves watching, not ranting though. The idea that the EU is all love, peace, and equality so soon after that just rubbed me the wrong way.

    10. Re:Cooperation by BenTels0 · · Score: 0
      I don't think it was a one shot.

      Why? It was the first such incident within the duration of my memory, possibly the first in Union history. It wasn't a serious summons, but something born from frustration and being a little overworked. And everybody else made it very clear afterwards that that is not the way the Union treats people (or countries). Methinks you are trying to make more out of it than it is.

      The idea that the EU is all love, peace, and equality so soon after that just rubbed me the wrong way.

      Of course it isn't -- the Union never is. The Union is hardcore, intensive politics. The Union is lots of very, very long meetings to find compromises between opposing points of view of member states. The Union is laws and courts and lawyers, trade and economic policy, disagreement and working it out. Remarkably like a real country, in fact. The Union is not "peace, love, dope" and sitting around to smell the flowers, nor was it ever.

      The Union is not all roses and pretty colors. But it's not a battlefield either. No sense in pretending it is, either way.

    11. Re:Cooperation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You want to take a look at the bullying scene, you should look more closely. Jacques Chirac has some pretty choice quotes out there. I recall one about some potential EU members missing a "good opportunity to shut up" amoungst others.

      Can't imagine why Americans wouldn't trust him so much. Can't imagine why any Europeans do for that matter.

      Here's some recommended reading.

      The EU isn't about financial agreements, or trade, or fair government. First and foremost - it's about power. It's original stated purpose is pretty much irrelavant...the actions are louder than words. Watch out guys (the usual european US critics)...you are becoming the very thing you claim to be trying to fight. How does that old quote go...something about being careful fighting demons, lest you become one?

    12. Re:Cooperation by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      The US wants waivers for its troops regarding the ICC. Romania signed such a waiver agreement with the US when there was no common EU policy document on ICC waivers but individual statements by various representatives. Romania's application process for the EU was threatened in a similar fashion (though not quite so succinctly or publicly as Chirac).

      That's one more within recent memory that I remembered off the top of my head. I'm guessing that it isn't the only one but admittedly that's all I recall without doing any research whatsoever.

  11. A Good Thing (TM) for the Space Industry by stoborrobots · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This may just be a good thing for the space industry in general...

    Didn't the really great advances in space travel come about because of the intellectual battle between the US and the Soviet Union?

    If the ESA starts making inroads into space research and NASA wants to keep its top position, it will be forced to become really competitive, and this might mean that we will see missions which *succeed*!!!

    Or we may just see more missions, with more cut corners... :-(

    1. Re:A Good Thing (TM) for the Space Industry by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

      Didn't the really great advances in space travel come about because of the intellectual battle between the US and the Soviet Union?

      It was not, and never was, an intellectual battle. Both sides sought to intimidate the other, and gain influence amongst the non-aligned states, through demonstrations of superior national will and technology.

      If the ESA starts making inroads into space research and NASA wants to keep its top position, it will be forced to become really competitive

      Not at all. There's no conflict to win between the US and EU. Neither agency needs to compete, since both are funded by the taxpayers of their respective nations. You will simply see them both swell into even larger and more expensive bureaucratic monsters.

    2. Re:A Good Thing (TM) for the Space Industry by stoborrobots · · Score: 1

      By intellectual battle, I meant not related to a physical military battle (i.e. there was no war)... I didn't meant to imply that they did it for the kudos of their scientific peers....

      And for what it's worth, I think Dubya and the Europeans have clearly shown in the last few months that there is a conflict between them... And influencing non-aligned states is exactly what they have been trying to do!

  12. Hundreds of millions, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's about one shuttle flight...

    1. Re:Hundreds of millions, eh? by stoborrobots · · Score: 1

      ...after the shuttle is built/acquired...

      Think of the building costs as well...Tens of billions, anyone???...

  13. No Space War by sparkes · · Score: 2, Informative

    I don't think we are heading for a new cold war europeans have been in space for years.

    The problems are the funding (and this is what is being discussed in the article) To the best of my knowledge all the worlds space agencies are losing money. Currently the only way they make money (apart from ever reducing government grants) is by launching comercial cargo. This is why there is so much crap up their in orbit.

    We need to limit the amount of commerical launches or we risk ruining space for the next few generations. If this extra money means less satilites are launched for companies that will go bust before they are ever used then it is good money. But if the money is going to be used to subsidise the launches of this type of cargo then it good money after bad.

    The reason for a euro GPS system is also commercial. You need to be a partner of the US government to get full access to GPS data at the highest resolution. The euro GPS will sell to those companies that want to make use of accurate GPS data but can't (or are unwilling to attempt) to get the US government to play ball. This is both a good and bad thing. If access to accurate GPS helps governments and companies develop and help local peoples then it is a good idea but I personally think the data will be used by robber oil barons and weapons manufacturers making the current situations even worse for the average man on the streets.

    1. Re:No Space War by CausticWindow · · Score: 1

      Non military GPS is already +/- 1 meter, isn't it?

      I'm not sure what "robber oil barons" are, or how they're supposed to gain from a greater resolution than said 1 meter. Seeing that you're from the UK, might you be talking about Norway and their presence in the North Sea?

      If weapons manufacturers were to make GPS guided missiles with higher accuracy, then so what? Haven't you learned anthing from CNN the last ten years? "Surgical precision bombing saves civillian lives". Now, why the US is claiming to use surgical bombing while at the same time utilizing cluster bombs (which are banned by most other countries) is beyond me.

      --
      How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    2. Re:No Space War by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      "Non military GPS is already +/- 1 meter, isn't it?"

      It can be degraded whenever the US sees fit to. And who knows, with their current "elevated" threat advisory, what the current non-military accuracy is?

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    3. Re:No Space War by ColaMan · · Score: 1

      And who knows, with their current "elevated" threat advisory, what the current non-military accuracy is?

      I'd guess quite a few surveyors would.
      "Hmmm. The GPS co-ordinates don't match the ones for this datum set in concrete beside the road here.... damn GPS"

      Besides, differential GPS is good for plus or minus a few cm once you put your own GPS beacon (over a known datum) nearby. Again, surveyors do this a lot.

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    4. Re:No Space War by kirinyaga · · Score: 1

      There is nothing surgical into an object specifically designed to kill. Surgeons try to save any life whatever it is and at any cost. There is absolutely nothing linking the two. Let's talk about precise missiles, which are a very good thing, indeed, but "surgical weapon" is self-contradicting and a pure propaganda term.

      --
      Kirinyaga
    5. Re:No Space War by brunes69 · · Score: 1
      Main Entry: surgical
      Pronunciation: 's&r-ji-k&l
      Function: adjective
      Etymology: surgeon + -ical
      Date: 1770

      1 a : of or relating to surgeons or surgery <surgical skills> b : used in or in connection with surgery c : characteristic of or resembling surgery or a surgeon especially in control or incisiveness <surgical precision>

      Man, stop spouting crap, it just makes you look like a tool.

    6. Re:No Space War by kirinyaga · · Score: 1

      and you look like someone who has been successfully spin-doctored. Usage of a medical-related word is certainly not innocent.

      --
      Kirinyaga
    7. Re:No Space War by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      I thought they figured out how to degrade signal for only the war zone.

    8. Re:No Space War by brunes69 · · Score: 1

      Spin doctored? Do you know how to use a dictionary? Stop being a jackass.

  14. why should there be a conflict .. by teemu.s · · Score: 2, Insightful

    .. ? Its not very effective to compete in a field like shooting stuff to mars .. if they could work together, theyll have more advantages, than disadvantages .. look @ the ISS -
    of course I know its mainly driven by the U.S. - but I think it works out fine if they combine their knowhow and money.

    And at leat it would be a bad idea if just the U.S. would settle at the mars ..

    1. Re:why should there be a conflict .. by Wastl · · Score: 1

      ESA and NASA do in fact work together very closely. For example, radio messages from Mars Express will be received by US receiver stations when the EU receivers are not in range.

    2. Re:why should there be a conflict .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "of course I know its mainly driven by the U.S."

      the U.S. has withheld funding from the ISS which resulted in a tit for tat freeze on funding from the ESA in Nov. 2001. If driven means driving technology, OK, but if driven means funded, no way.

    3. Re:why should there be a conflict .. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You big sissie! "Can't we all just work together". That's counter to the (U.S.) American spirit! Capitalism is based on the idea of competition. If there isn't a competitor, one is made up. If there wasn't competition in the U.S. y'all would just be a bunch of socialist pansies.

    4. Re:why should there be a conflict .. by teemu.s · · Score: 1

      you missed the fact, that it about science .. what effort would it bring to capitalism, if someone finds water on mars?

  15. Conflict across the Atlantic? by jazman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Um, so what you're saying is that when America does space stuff, it's good for the world, but when Europe does space stuff, that's "conflict across the Atlantic?" How's that work then?

    Not intending to troll but that "conflict" thing does seem like an odd conclusion. Are Europeans now terrorists? How about a bit more reasoning, rather than just saying "Europe? Space? WAR!!!!!"

    1. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by sparkes · · Score: 4, Funny

      You know what they say behind every Bush is a terrorist these days ;-)

    2. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by stoborrobots · · Score: 1

      How about ... "Europe? Not willing to succumb to our lies? WAR!!! Oh, yeah, they're going into space, that's a good excuse..."

    3. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm just guessing, but I think the argument goes something like this: If you're not dependent on the US, you are a potential threat. I don't agree with that, but it seems to be the logic...

    4. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      We (those of us in the USA) have gotten jaded ever since the Cold War ended and now expect the rest of the world to just follow along and pick up the crumbs we leave behind.

      Heaven forbid anyone else should dare to lead (or try to lead) in any particular sector of industry...or in anything for that matter!!!

      Not really I suppose but that's how it seems and the maintainers of Slashdot appear to think that way too...it is just sooo much easier to have a closed mind.

      Off topic-ish but I'm personally getting tired of so much nationalism and the relentless need by everyone to overtly and aggressively demonstrate their religious, nationalistic or philosophic identity at the drop of a hat.

      I dread next year's Olympics...:(

    5. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are my hero, good to see people with common sense.

      I'm European, I like Americans, Americans are cool. But please don't fall in the super-power pit. Use your powers wisely.
      So stand up against any gov that's not thinking wisely.

      If that works out, I don't mind a super power on this earth. Recent events make me worry though.

    6. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not quite cross Atlantic, remember Europe launches from South America. So technically that is the same side of the Atlantic :p

    7. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by xyr0 · · Score: 1
      yeah, have someone think for you instead of yourself doing it. 88.

      thank you for your post.

    8. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and at least one bush is a terrorist

    9. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 1

      I dread next year's Olympics...:(
      <br><br> ...because it means that the Simpsons will be cancelled for 2 weeks.

      --
      Beep beep.
    10. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go suck an egg, you liberal blowhard. If you're so anti-american, and proud of it, go live in Europe or China. I'm sure you'll find relief in the vastly superior respect for the individual and freedom of thought afforded there. (Tiananmen?)

      Since I certainly, and I presume YOU also live in the US of A, don't you think it's good that OUR country stays on top and affords us the best opportunities? Beleive me, NASA pisses me off, and I think it either needs to go, or be seriously restructured, but what better way to do that than to have competition? From your tone, however, it sounds as if you want our competition to win! (?!?!?!)

      If you think the countries of the world are all going to magically pull together and be one happy global little village, PULL YOUR HEAD OUT OF THE SAND!!!! Unfortunately, there's always going to be an US and a THEM. I don't like it any more than you do, but that's the way it is. I hope we rise to challenge in time, because the EU, China and Russia want to defeat us, either economically, or with their terrorist minions.

      Back to the space thing: If all goes well, we'll return to an Apollo era mindset, and rise to the occasion again. I've always believed that space is the most potent factor in motivating the entire spirit, economy, and aspirations of a nation. I'm rooting for my team, I hope you do too.

    11. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

      Agreed,

      The nationalism is overboard and it is doing real harm .

      The US has done alot of good, and we have done alot of bad .

      Then again so have most other countries .

      France was first into vietnam, not us .

      They call it french guyana why ????

      The brits used to brag the sun never sets on the british empire,
      well it did I am afraid .

      The chinese hate anyone who speaks english now because of
      150 years of Hong Kong being held by the brits .

      So the US is lumped in with them even though we helped
      the chinese in WW2 .

      Hopefully The world can get past the Anti-US rhetoric, and
      hopefully we can get past the Anti-(rest of the world) rhetoric .

      We need to keep the corporate greed in check and call them
      out when they pull stunts like UnoCal is doing in Burma
      right now with slave labor .

      The Bhopal disaster needs to be cleaned up by the US companies
      that perpetuated it .

      The list goes on and on and on .

      The government is protecting these Amoral cash cows too ,
      just like they have in the past .

      So the world gets this perception of us from corporate
      representation and its Amoral greed and pollution .

      I was in the US military, I do care about the country ,
      but it has been essentially sold out to big business
      and special interest that has big bucks .

      The H1-b bill was paid for to the tune of $22 million ,
      and Professor norman matloff of UC @ Davis detailed
      the massive corruption on that one AFTER the DOT BOMB BUST hit,
      They voted to dbl the Visas coming into the country after
      the DOT BOMB BUST had hit .

      Hard to believe , but then again it is not .

      I love my country, but fear my government, I am neither
      republican or democrat, and I think the system has been
      bought off .

      No idea what it is going to take to fix it, and I am pretty
      sure it will be resisted if anyone tries to implement it .

      Well I am rambling yet again ...

      Peace,
      Ex-MislTech

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
    12. Re:Conflict across the Atlantic? by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

      Europe has turned to Socialism, a few have not, but by and large
      most have so far . One of the S's in USSR stood for Socialist ...

      EU, China, and Russia have ZERO terrorists aimed at us ,
      that is the middle east religious zealots .

      Hell even China recently admitted the North korean leader
      was off his rocker when he said he could sell nukes to whoever
      he wanted too .

      Putin and Bush agreed they have bigger issues than Iraq, and
      that the cooperation between the US and Russia will be upheld .
      I seriously doubt you will find me wanting to move
      to either one of them in my lifetime though . (big grin)

      NASA needs to be forced to face competition from
      private space industries unless astronauts lives are
      at stake, and then it will require special consideration .

      Apollo missions ??? The spirit of it was good , the cost was too high .

      It is cheaper to send remote control robots , and safer .
      You educate someone for 25+ yrs to have them burn up on re-entry .
      I say that is a REAL waste, and what if they had a world
      changing idea that will now never be realized .

      We need an off Earth launch system, and I think the moon is
      best place to build it and here is why .
      rail gun up the cargo that can be sent up that way .

      It is cheaper to build a underground moon base than a space
      station, and it can be dug by mining equipment and run by robots .

      It will not get beat up like the space station did, and it could
      very well last indefinitely if built right .

      Our biosphere project here failed on earth, so run as much as
      you can with robots for as long as you can .
      Once it is semi-Teraformed in there with breathable air ,
      then send some humans up . Making a micro-eco-system
      is going to be a tall order .

      The moons gravity will give them 1/9th the gravity to deal with ,
      and no atmosphere for wind shear or resistance .

      The near constant sunlilght on the light side of the moon
      would provide great solar power, and with no atmosphere more
      that you could ever get here on earth .

      We build a large space ship, and go to mars, and from orbit
      control robots to repeat what we did on the moon .

      The chinese already plan to mine the moon, I say we do it before
      they do it , and make the ship and go to mars .
      setting up the moon base robotically could allow you to spend
      alot of money elsewhere, like the ship to go to mars .

      Well it is all science fiction, but it is doable .

      Peace,
      Ex-MislTech

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
  16. Competition is always good by [cx] · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As in any market competition encourages the other competitors to step up the pace to beat out the latest and greatest from their foes. This is really the birth of the space race, as privatized sectors will probably get more funding than NASA these days. Lots of rich people are ignorant and very interested towards space (NSYNC Member Lance Bass) and they have the money to power their dreams. These companies will open more gateways into space and will further technology on planet Earth, Luna (The moon) and Mars (To get to Mars).

    It's hard to find a negative side other than NASA will have to be more of a space agency than a satellite monitoring system.

    I look forward to new technology that will allow me to drink Tang all day, and that chalky hard ice cream! But seriously, I look forward to new innovations in space ship design as well as thrusters that will get us out of the atmosphere with some kind of renewable fuel source and enough power to move around outside of orbit.

    (Maybe in 22nd century)

    Dont flame me I have bad karma as it is :)

    [cx]

  17. "Competition" by Jhan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    <mood type="foul">

    ESA and the russians aren't much competition right now... On the other hand neither is NASA, what with the Columbia debacle which will probably lead to a permanent moth-balling of the remaing orbiters.

    The russians will just keep cranking out 1960's era craft until the factories break down. Nothing wrong with 60's rockets, but we need to have modern designs and materials if we're going to lower the cost of space access.

    ESA is at least trying to develop new technology. Witness the Ariadne 5 a.k.a. "worlds most expensive fire cracker". Last thing I heard ESA needed 500.000.000 to redesign it from scratch. That kind of expense will cripple ESA for decades. *Sigh*. I guess I'll have to hold my thumbs for the Chinese.

    </mood>

    OT: Actual shell experience (UnixWare)

    1> df space
    df: cannot access space
    --

    I choose to remain celibate, like my father and his father before him.

    1. Re:"Competition" by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 3, Insightful
      ESA and the russians aren't much competition right now...

      Well, Arianespace owns most of the GEO satellite market where most commercial space launches go, and American launchers only launch vehicles that can't go on Ariane for one reason or another, so I don't really agree.

      The russians will just keep cranking out 1960's era craft until the factories break down. Nothing wrong with 60's rockets, but we need to have modern designs and materials if we're going to lower the cost of space access.

      Interestingly, the Russian hardware is cheaper than the Americans, even when you account for the lower wages in America. This is evidence that higher technology is not the answer and may well be counterproductive. The only trick that is needed for cheap space is to launch. Launch often. Launch really often. Economies of scale are bigger than every other known trick for reducing the cost of space, even put together. Of course the Russians use mass production techniques to build their rockets.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    2. Re:"Competition" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Some tv programs about russian moon program suggested that russians had a significant lead in boostar tech in the 60s and that lead still exists, apparently they mothballed over 50 rocket motors when they shut the program down, heard Lockheed are now interested
      Patrick (Eire)

    3. Re:"Competition" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The russians will just keep cranking out 1960's era craft until the factories break down. Nothing wrong with 60's rockets, but we need to have modern designs and materials if we're going to lower the cost of space access.

      Seems to me much of the modernity is uneccessary and is what keeps *raising* the cost of space access. The Russians seem to have had it right.

  18. European GPS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The problem with GPS, is that US can turn it off when ever they want to. This makes it hard to make security equipment that depends on GPS. Like for boats and so, Military systems already exists, and theres no need for a GPS in the European Military (From what I know). Sure the European Military wouldnt mind a new GPS system, not at all. But they dont realy _need_ it. An european GPS is good for the consumer, that gets two systems to choose from. Its good got the rescue crew (that cant use the militray systems) that in a few years can have equipment running on _both_ gps and "euro-gps"

    1. Re:European GPS by CausticWindow · · Score: 3, Interesting

      And "eruo-gps" is supposed to be hundred percent commercial. If the military want to use it, they'll have to pay like everybody else.

      How's that for free market, US?

      --
      How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    2. Re:European GPS by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      it's such a massive waste of resources though, isn't it? The USA already has Navstar GPS in place but because of their paranoia there are actually TWO entirely new networks being built! Cellphone companies cooperate more than that!

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    3. Re:European GPS by CausticWindow · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Their paranoia?

      You haven't been following politics lately, have you? The EU (in general) aren't going to trust the US again in the near future. Most Europeans are fed up with their arrogance, and scared by their military superiority. Also, the US "democracy" is converging to a plutocracy, or in the best case a corporate police state. Not something you would like to be dependant on.

      The EU doesn't trust the US, and have good reasons not to. Would you like to tell me how it's a waste for the EU to have a military too? The US already got that part covered, don't they?

      --
      How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    4. Re:European GPS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Most Europeans are fed up with their arrogance, and scared by their military superiority."

      Arrogance is the wrong word to use in that sentence. It implies that the US doesn't really have the military strength it claims. You contradict yourself by saying, "[Most Europeans are] scared by their military superiority." A better word to use would be "supremacy."

      A few other choices would be: ascendancy, dominance, domination, preponderancy, preponderation, or mastery.

    5. Re:European GPS by Daetrin · · Score: 1
      A better word to use would be "supremacy."

      A few other choices would be: ascendancy, dominance, domination, preponderancy, preponderation, or mastery.

      Speaking of arrogance...

      It's entirely possible to be arrogant about something that's true, although the military isn't the only thing America is arrogant about, and not all of those things are true.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    6. Re:European GPS by sheriff_p · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm getting quite tired of hearing the term '[US] military superiority'.

      The United Kingdom, for example, has enough nuclear missiles and sufficient delivery systems to level the US at the touch of a button. So does Russia. So does China. So does France. Give it a few years, and so will India and North Korea.

      In a situation like this, 'superiority' is not really applicable.

      --
      Score:-1, Funny
    7. Re:European GPS by CausticWindow · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying the US is arrogant about their military capabilities.

      Most Europeans perceive Americans as arrogant for a lot of other reasons.

      --
      How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    8. Re:European GPS by CausticWindow · · Score: 1

      Well, short of a "nucular" war, they are very much superior and can do pretty much what they want in that department. Sorry, that's just the way it is.

      Of course, having these kinds of weapons are one of the few ways of defending yourself against them. There's a reason Pakistan weren't part of the "axis of evil", even though they had supported Al-Queda.

      --
      How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
    9. Re:European GPS by xyr0 · · Score: 1

      well, the EU countries dont show off their weapons and think publicly of using them.

    10. Re:European GPS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well, short of a "nucular" war, they are very much superior and can do pretty much what they want in that department. Sorry, that's just the way it is.

      Yeah, "short of a nuclear war", they can do what they please, just like in the times of the USSR.

    11. Re:European GPS by Quill_28 · · Score: 1

      Let me here them I am curious.

    12. Re:European GPS by zaroastra · · Score: 1

      last time i checked the stats, US had more than 100000 nuclear warheads, former USSR about half. UK, france had about 1000 each. The rest of the world not even near that. As you can see, it's very unbalanced. Someone check the data and post it please?

      --
      I'm trying to get modded "Interesting Flamebait Informative and Insightful Redundant Troll" *-* Please Help *-*
    13. Re:European GPS by itchyfidget · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, because the UK being killed 100x over by the US would be so much more degrading than for the US, who would just be killed once by the UK...?

      Does *nobody* remember the 1980s?? Jeez, you'd think *someone* would have learned something ...

      --
      Mod early, mod often.
    14. Re:European GPS by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      the '80s are still here with Rumsfeld and Cheney in the fucking driving seat

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    15. Re:European GPS by arevos · · Score: 1

      The US is good at invading third world countries, but it hasn't ever invaded an industrialised nation on it's own, IIRC. Germany's really the only country that has had experience in that arena.

      If you ignore nukes, then I doubt that the US could invade any part of Europe very easy, and it may even be impossible. Certainly it's unlikely that they could ever invade two countries. If they went after France, for instance, Germany would probably back them up and the US couldn't win against such odds.

      Not that the US isn't the most powerful military player on the globe, just that invasion is considerably more difficult than defense. Especially against an enemy who's on a similar technological level.

    16. Re:European GPS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your overall point about the difficulty of invading a European country vs. some third world *if* we were talking about a conventional invasion across foreign borders.

      The thing to remember about the US is that we have military bases throughout Europe. In the unlikely event of an invasion by the US we would effectively already have military units behind enemy lines where they can do the most damage.

      It would not be as hard as you suspect.

    17. Re:European GPS by AntonyBartlett · · Score: 1
      The United Kingdom, for example, has enough nuclear missiles and sufficient delivery systems to level the US at the touch of a button

      Well yes, but actually they tend to US manafactured and mainly situated in US air-bases.

    18. Re:European GPS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bahaha retard, have 9 lives ?
      lol

    19. Re:European GPS by Ngwenya · · Score: 1
      Well yes, but actually they tend to US manafactured and mainly situated in US air-bases.

      50% right. The main strategic nuclear missile for the UK is Trident. US manufactured, but based in Royal Navy nuclear submarine bases in Coulport and Faslane.

      No, the problem is the Trident targetting system - it's satellite guided. Now, guess who owns the satellites? Yup, that's right...

      So, the UK could launch the nukes, but that doesn't mean they would get there. Hell, given the Trident test results, I'm not even sure they'd hit if the sats worked perfectly. Probably end up blowing the shit out of Dublin or Reykyavik.

      --Ng

    20. Re:European GPS by mark2003 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A couple for you:

      The constant banging on about how America is the home of democracy, freedom, blah, blah, blah.

      The constant re-writing of world history by Hollywood to show how America saved the day, was the best, is the best - usually at the expense of Britain, e.g. U575 (British ship captures German sub, rewritten as Yank sub capturing German sub) and The Patriot.

      The constant harping on by the Americans on talk boards about how they can kick anyone's arse.

    21. Re:European GPS by arevos · · Score: 1

      That would assume a pre-emptive attack. A very pre-emptive attack, in fact, as the US would have to spontaneously sneak-attack the hapless country targetted without alerting it or declaring war upon it until after the attack. Not something likely to happen, really.

      The EU countries wouldn't tolerate US troops within their borders if the US was attacking a member state. So the only way the US's military bases could be of use is a Pearl Harbor type assault, carried out without warning. In addition, the country involved would have to have reasonable relations with the US to agree to have troops stationed there.

      The rest of the world wouldn't be too thrilled to have the US attack a unsuspecting country in such a way, either. At the very least they'd get all US troops out of their borders just in case a similar tactic was tried on them, and probably quite a few countries, at least those in the EU, would refuse to trade with the US. That, and the increased military spending would put the US in serious financial trouble.

      Such an event would, at least in the current political climate, effectively pit the US against the world.

  19. China? HA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe, just maybe, China will have the same technology that we have now, in say, 20 years...

    1. Re:China? HA! by Shillo · · Score: 1

      Open your computer, and read the 'Made in...' stickers. Most of them don't say Taiwan any more.

      Now go around your house and read more 'Made in...' stickers.

      It's not the technology, it's the finance and (cheap) workforce and know-how and willingness to use the technology. US may get there in 20 years, you know...

      --

      --
      I refuse to use .sig
  20. GPS by jabbadabbadoo · · Score: 1

    A separate GPS system for Europe adds redundancy, which is great, but the us mil's must be shivering on the though of no longer beeing the masters of wobbling.

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

      The European GPS system uses the same frequency band (1.5 GHz) as the American GPS system, that's not a redundancy.

    2. Re:GPS by stoborrobots · · Score: 1

      And all my network connections that use the same "Ethernet" frequencies don't count as redundant?

      By providing an alternate source of signal (assuming synchronization) they are providing a redundant server serving the same content via the same protocol...

    3. Re:GPS by jabbadabbadoo · · Score: 1
      What??? Of course it adds redudancy. The signaling source, both technically and ownership-wise, is different.

      If the us mil' starts wobbling, we'll still have a working european system.

    4. Re:GPS by GrimReality · · Score: 1
      the us mil's must be shivering on the though of no longer beeing the masters of wobbling.

      Maybe. Maybe not.

      Consider this: The US has developed (and who knows deployed) EM-discharge (electromagnetic energy discharge) weapons or 'lightning weapons'.

      Wouldn't it be trivial to disable or destroy the Galeleo satellite system if things get really desperate?

      Of course, they may not do it under normal circumstances for they don't want to sour the relations with the EU (and alienate European nations who might have been sympathetic to the US before). However, when things get desperate who knows what will happen.

      I am not suggesting they would, but they could. My point is that the US military has no need to 'shiver on the though[t] of no longer beeing the masters of wobbling'.

      Thank you.
      GrimReality
      2003-06-04 16:14:48 UTC (2003-06-04 12:14:48-0400)

  21. Re:DISARM EUROPE NOW!! by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

    should I duck & cover right now?

    --
    That was classic intercourse!
  22. no need to keep 100% accurate local time by lingqi · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I was always under the impression that even with three satellites, you would be able to use the GPS signal to correct your local clock.

    Few reasons for this, IIRC:

    1) all three satellites are keeping perfect time, so if your clock is off, it is very easy to compensate for.

    2) satellites transmit positional information - this can be compared with your local positional table to correct your local time

    Besides the point - since details are sketchy, they might even be using dual-band per satellite to compensate for atmospheric delay errors.

    Of course, i might be talking out of my ass - so if you have evidence backing up what you say, prove me wrong.

    --

    My life in the land of the rising sun.

    1. Re:no need to keep 100% accurate local time by pe1rxq · · Score: 4, Informative

      Its not that hard:

      Suppose you have a bunch of satelites transmitting time and their location. When you receive that you know were that satelite was at that moment.

      Suppose you have also have a good clock, and you receive one satelite. In that case you can calculate the distance between you and the satelite (time difference between the two clocks multiplied by the speed of the radio signal, ignoring atmospheric influences for simplicity).
      No you know that your position is somewhere on a sphere around this satelite.

      When you receive two satelites you get two intersecting spheres. Two intersection spheres gives a circle of common points. So now you know that your position is somewhere on this circle.

      With a third satelite you get a two (unless you are in space exactly in between three satelites) intersect point. So now you now your exact position since one can easily be ruled out. (Unless you ARE in space ofcourse)

      But this only works if you have an accurate (as in atomic clock accurate) clock.
      If your clock is a litle bit behind the calculated distance between you and ALL three satelites becomes larger and you have no way of knowing it did. (Your still get one singular intercept point).

      If you have three satelites and a questionable clock all you know is that you are on a line intersecting the two points I mentioned earlier.

      With four satelites you can make several groups of three satelites (three groups to be exact) resulting in three of such lines.
      Were these three lines intersect is the point you are. (This method also rules out you accidently thinking you are in space btw)
      With this point you can adjust your own clock...

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    2. Re:no need to keep 100% accurate local time by pe1chl · · Score: 1

      Many GPS receivers can calculate a fix from 3 satellites, assuming the height did not change from the previous fix, or is zero (sealevel).

      In fact, you are intersecting the spheres from the satellites with the (nearly) sphere of the earth surface. When there is no single intersection, the clock can be corrected until there is, and the position is then known.

      This can be used to continue tracking in situations where 3 (or only two) satellites are visible, as is often required for car navigation systems in "urban canyon" circumstances.

    3. Re:no need to keep 100% accurate local time by xyr0 · · Score: 1

      i read that the gps satellites would send their time ahead of the coords so that the gps receiver can reverse-calculate what the exact time is.

  23. paranoid? by xyr0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    well, its really funny that some ppl might think that a space mission to mars will trigger a new cold war + even a real war. hmmm ... as far as im informed the ESA and NASA have been working together in numerous missions before with everyone depending on each other. the problem was that sometimes the europeans were only allowed to play the passengers and didnt get the science information first hand. some also mentioned the european gps system. it was started because the normal gps could be turned off at any place by the US military. so the european one is more like consumer-orientated (and not wobbling :). and the russians and chinese also have their gps system. but on the whole i think that a little competition is never bad. but why does this sort of thing upset some ppl? afraid of a multipolar world (that some governor doesnt want). oh man!

    1. Re:paranoid? by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      but why does this sort of thing upset some ppl?

      Which politician recently said, "You're either with us or against us"?

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
  24. Re:EUROPE IS A DANGEROUS EMPIRE IN THE MAKING by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd rather have a european empire than the currently growing american one - at least we can learn from our mistakes.

  25. What conflict, why? by kimmo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    >
    > "...are we heading towards a future conflict across the Atlantic?"
    >

    What kind of conflict do you mean, and what might cause it because Europe develops some tehcnological abilities of it's own?

    Does the US feel somehow threatened when it doesn't have a monopoly on many kinds of stuff anymore? Does it have a reason to be afraid in that case?

    "Hey, i'm growing potatoes, you must not research the hoe technology (because then i would lose the monopoly on producing and selling these artificially degraded and overpriced potatoes to whom i wish, whenever it might suit my needs).."

    1. Re:What conflict, why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Hey, i'm growing potatoes, you must not research the hoe technology (because then i would lose the monopoly on producing and selling these artificially degraded and overpriced potatoes to whom i wish, whenever it might suit my needs).."

      Well, just look at the downfall of Ireland after blackmarket potato technology was smuggled out and developed elsewhere. The potato industry was in complete disarray, farmers were begging on the streets, and even the Fish and Chip shops were buying imported potatos. Man, nobody even thought of the children. It was just horrible. I wouldn't wish that on anyone...

    2. Re:What conflict, why? by AndrewHowe · · Score: 0

      My hoes don't need no fancy technology, or potatoes. I use the "carrot and stick" method. Well, not literally carrots.

    3. Re:What conflict, why? by praedor · · Score: 1

      Hey, watch it Buster! If Europe and the Russkies (and the Chi-nee and Japs) get too uppity, it will hinder our ability (the USofA) to push right in and do what ever the hell we want to whomever we want. That is obviously not good (for us Mericans, who are all that matter really). It's our way or the highway...or perhaps it is, it's our way or be on the receiving end of sanctions at best or at the receiving end of a GPS bomb at worst.


      Uppity non-Mericans...sheesh. You're either with us or against us (in ALL things).

      --
      In Bushworld, they struggle to keep church and state separate in Iraq as they increasingly merge the two in America.
    4. Re:What conflict, why? by cgleba · · Score: 1

      I interpreted the "conflict" as "competition" like AMD vs Intel or WD vs Maxtor and not like US vs USSR.

      In that sense, it is a very welcome thing as it will push the US to innovate in space again.

      But on the other hand, this is under the assumption that the Europeans have leanred how to agree with each other. Over and over again they talk big, make ambitious plans together and start off great. The a few years down the line one country decies that they are better off without the plan and it starts a downward-spiral and the plan breaks down. As an example, the "unified currency" thing has been tried before -- but when the Berlin wall fell and Germany started spending big $$ building up East Germany causing monetary havoc, they all went their seperate ways again.

      And as a final not about the "conflict" thing, I saw the US vs USSR "space wars" to be less about space and more about ICBMs initially. The Soviets said "hey, look -- we have nuclear ICBMs grown from the same V2 technology that you guys have -- but our control systems are so damn good that we can not only nail your continent, but put a dog on top of it and launch it into space" -- which freaked out the US (which was already freaked out that they stole nuclear technology through espionage). This then later ran into "who can have miltary control of space first" -- thus the space race. What I don't understand is how the whole fiasco morphed into being benevolent in the end as a scientific endeavor to the moon. That "morphing" is what I find is the most fascinating politically about the space race.

      So do the US and Europe have ICMBs that they are waving between them that will scare the hell out of each other into a new space race and a "conflict"? I doubt it. Maybe the Chinses will scare the Americans into a new space race, though.

    5. Re:What conflict, why? by tenchiken · · Score: 1


      Does the US feel somehow threatened when it doesn't have a monopoly on many kinds of stuff anymore? Does it have a reason to be afraid in that case?


      Sometimes yes. For example, the latest Chinese missles that are threating Taiwan use American GPS systems. We can shutdown GPS over Taiwan if we need to to make sure that the Chinese do not use our technology to kill innocents, but when was the last time that Europe actually had the guts to do the right thing, even when it would cause a change in the status quo. I weep for the moment Galileo goes public, because it condemn the Taiwaneese.

    6. Re:What conflict, why? by RichardX · · Score: 1

      I interpreted the "conflict" as "competition" like AMD vs Intel or WD vs Maxtor and not like US vs USSR.

      Meanwhile, in other news today, AMD's headquarters was reduced to rubble in an apparent bombing attack. No suspects have as yet been named, but sources say a fragment of bomb casing was found with some kind of marking on it, which investigators hope may offer some clues. The fragment was incomplete, but was described as having "a kind of swirl, and two words. The first was illegible, but the second read 'inside'"

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  26. Heating up for all but the US/russia governments by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    china, India, Japan, EU, even North Korea are massively getting into space thanx largely to the research and development efforts of Russia and USA. But Russia is near bankruptcy, and we are heading that way all the time. One nice affect of outrageous deficits is that we will be forced to cut back NASA, which will propel private enterprise into at least leo(hopefully more). Who knows, that may allow NASA to finally expand into moving to Mars, Moon, and further.

    Personally, I am in hopes that EU will start heading for the moon now and start colinizing efforts.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  27. Few problems, many positives by Logopop · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First of all, I see no future 'conflict'. There are many players here besider the US, and the International Space Station shows us that we have no problems besides technical to cooperate when it comes to space exploration (except maybe Russian funding). Both the Chinese and the Japanese have programs with great momentum.
    The system redundancy argument is a good one. I am sure that there's a lot of obscure politics involved, but technically speaking I am looking forward to being able to utilize a GPS receiver that can correlate the results from two independent systems. There were receivers that did that with GLONASS, I don't know if that system is still operable.
    Competition is of course good, however I think that the potential for commercial competition is fairly slim for the time being due to the high cost of anything space related and that you can't 'claim' resources in space like you do on earth (AFAIK).
    All in all - the more people/equipment/systems we can bring out into space, the easier it will be to colaborate and go 'where no man has gone before'. Manned mission to Mars, anyone?

    -Kris

  28. Re:DISARM EUROPE NOW!! by xyr0 · · Score: 1

    are you referring to the the kind of war like the one fought in iraq (with the WMD that havent been found) because of the so-called "bureaucracy reasons"? if so, its called "Preemptive War". but i believe that Fox News doesnt tell you this ... economic stability? which one? btw, theres more in the world than either youre with us, or against us. just a hint. God (which one?) bless sanity.

  29. Conflict US - Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "with this and the 'European version' of GPS are we heading towards a future conflict across the Atlantic?"

    I don't think so, Europeans are quite pacifists (If we remove the uk, of course) they are not oriented to conflict aspects and try to avoid violence as much as possible.

    The GPS systems was indeed good to be launched, in Europe there is a huge ammount of GPS civilian users as well there is big investments in adding services to this system. I believe all the GPS users(like me) don't like to feel dependent of the us army to remove the resolution of the GPS location.

    In the first day of the iraque attack, I was traveling from the netherlands to austria, and believe in me, it was not funny to loose the sinal and go the wrong way!

    1. Re:Conflict US - Europe by bigboard · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I don't think so, Europeans are quite pacifists (If we remove the uk, of course) they are not oriented to conflict aspects and try to avoid violence as much as possible."

      Yeah right. The Germans asked, "How can we avoid violence at all costs? I know," they said, "Let's invade Poland."

      --
      Cynicism is the natural defence of the romantic.
    2. Re:Conflict US - Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Common...

      We are in the XXI century, get a life!

    3. Re:Conflict US - Europe by bigboard · · Score: 1

      "We are in the XXI century, get a life!"

      Then why are you still using Roman numerals Mr Chickenshit Anonymous Coward?

      --
      Cynicism is the natural defence of the romantic.
    4. Re:Conflict US - Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The native americans were almost completely wiped out by the Spanish (a european country the last time i checked.) The genocide continued by early british colonists (another european country.)

      Nearly 200 years before the US existed.
      Dumbass

    5. Re:Conflict US - Europe by Colm+Buckley · · Score: 1

      It is precisely for this reason that the modern states in Western Europe (mostly in the European Union) are so resolutely pacifist; World War II cast a long dark shadow over the continent. The European Union was born of the desire that this should never happen again in Europe - when countries are tied together by strong trading links, and when hundreds of thousands of one country's citizens are living and working in the other, war becomes unthinkable.

      It's surprising that the U.S.A. is so belligerent these days, as they committed almost as much to the anti-fascist war as any other country, and worked harder than any to rebuild the shattered economies of Europe and South-East Asia in the aftermath. Europe has learned its lessons, we wonder whether the U.S.A. has.

    6. Re:Conflict US - Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now you attack other countries together with UK and Spain on your side? What do the natives say to that?

    7. Re:Conflict US - Europe by quax · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And later the art of exterminating "Indians" was very much advanced by the US ingeniously using econmic warfare by sponsoring the killing of buffalos (Paragraph E).

      I wonder if US paranoia can in part be attributed to the fact that the US never came to grips with its violent past.

      Quite contrary to Germany. Could you imagine a US president kneeling in front of North Vietnamese monument to honor the Vietcong who died in the war with the US? Well, a German chancellor fell to his knees when visiting Poland in 1960s honoring the Polish soldiers that died in WWII.

      WWII is the reason why Europeans loath war so much. Fortunately at this point in time the meaning of war seems to be clearly embedded in the European collective memory.

    8. Re:Conflict US - Europe by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      In the first day of the iraque attack, I was traveling from the netherlands to austria, and believe in me, it was not funny to loose the signal and go the wrong way!

      There was no interruption to the GPS service during the last Gulf war, at least not here in the UK. If you lost your signal it was more likely for reasons other than the US military switching it off (because they didn't).

      Having said that, I can't think of a good reason not to have Galileo since it will double the number of GPS sstellites up there improving accuracy in areas where it is tricky to get a signal (e.g. in built up areas with tall buildings).

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    9. Re:Conflict US - Europe by Tharsis · · Score: 1

      Hey, some countries actually learn from their mistakes.

    10. Re:Conflict US - Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh ... comparing North Vietnam to Poland during ww2 is just plain ridiculous.
      Poland was invaded by Germany bend of expansion while Vietnam war was caused by North Vietnamese attacking by force the South.
      While Germans truly owed apology to Poland (and for that matter to just about everyone else in Europe) US was simply defending South Vietnam from the north and has nothing to apologize for. In fact , if US stayed the course instead of devastated and poor Vietnam you would now have devastated and poor North part and rich and relatively free South.
      Don't believe me ? Look at example of Korea where US did succeed in defending the south from the communistic rule.
      You are so fucking biased it is not even funny.

    11. Re:Conflict US - Europe by quax · · Score: 1

      Granted there is a difference. Yet, I think the US at least owes an apology to the Vietnamese civilians, many of whom are still suffering from the Dioxin poisoning of their environment (what is really nasty is that Dioxin causes genetic damages).

      Given the fact that the Nixon administration was so desperate at the end that they seriously considered using nukes I am rather glad that the US did not continue this foolish war, but rather salutate Nixon for having put an end to it.

    12. Re:Conflict US - Europe by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      Yes, but let's say that you are a persecuted minority (pick one that does not offend you: Taiwaneese, Kurdish or Jewesh) and some opponent starts throwing GPS bombs your way (which China, Syria and Turkey are building). Now if this occurs with GPS, there is a large chance the US will cut off GPS signals in that part of the world to keep people from masaceering other people (remember that smart bombs are "nice" because the US only uses them against military targets. Imagine Syria deliberatly targeting sky scrapers in Tel Aviv). Then imagine the EU's galilao system is in place. When was the last time that Europe stuck up for any minority anywhere around the world?

  30. ahh by lingqi · · Score: 1

    cool. point taken and noted. heh, maybe all the chinese recievers need a altimeter to function properly for now...

    very very unrelated: you seem to almost universally substitute "were" into places that need a "where." is there a reason for this?

    --

    My life in the land of the rising sun.

    1. Re:ahh by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      is there a reason for this?

      English is not my first language :)

      Jeroen

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    2. Re:ahh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In which case - I applaud your otherwise incredibly clear post. It was much more readable than many others for whom English is their *only* language. :)

      (And just to clarify - unlike some, this post contains no sarcasm whatsoever)

  31. Re:AMERICA IS A DANGEROUS EMPIRE - RESIST IT! by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 0

    where's my copy of Trans Europe Express when I need it?

    --
    That was classic intercourse!
  32. Conflict? Competition. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Nah... competition is the word. Why's that bad when it comes to space technology?

    One down side I could imagine: competition will not allow for much environmental cleaning... near-earth space is getting more dirty every day. Cleaning does not immediately contribute to lower cost numbers so will be ignored when there's loads of competition.

    Eventually we will not be able to send anything into space anymore (all non-dirty time-slots will be gone... it'll be too risky to launch). Then we'll have to start building space buildozers ;-)

    1. Re:Conflict? Competition. by stoborrobots · · Score: 1

      You could be on to something there...

      Let's go out and build ourselves some space bulldozers...

      I can see it now:
      1. Build space bulldozer
      2. Wait for spacejunk to fill up
      3. ???
      4. Profit

    2. Re:Conflict? Competition. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah... competition is the word. Why's that bad when it comes to space technology?

      I would even extend this to "why is it bad when some country competes in a field that has been dominated by the US?"

    3. Re:Conflict? Competition. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can 'kind of' understand it when it comes down to military power... but also in such case it's a bit weird since we're all democratic countries.

      But yeah, for the rest it would be stupid to use the word 'conflict'.

  33. NASA the dominant agency? by LeoDV · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If I remember correcty, the ESA are the only ones actually making money from space with their Ariane program. If you ask me, the dominant agency has been ESA for a long time. And before that it was Russia.

    I'd like to remind you of the fact that even though NASA is very glad to have won the race to the moon, there was no such thing. Instead of going there and back, the Russians put Mir in orbit, which is a more useful and lasting feat than putting a flag on the moon.

    1. Re:NASA the dominant agency? by spakka · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'd like to remind you of the fact that even though NASA is very glad to have won the race to the moon, there was no such thing.

      Some respected commentators would dispute this 'fact', for example James Oberg.

    2. Re:NASA the dominant agency? by paranode · · Score: 1
      The moon may be the only thing you "remember correctly." It's laughable that you think the ESA is the most superior space agency in the world. The Russians threw up a satellite first but the "useful" applications were first implemented by the US. And I don't remember the ESA being a prime financial supporter of the space station. I'm actually quite surprised to hear that Europe is trying to get into the aerospace industry, I figured Japan might have taken an interest first. Anyways, since you are obviously ignorant that there are space missions besides the 30+ year old trip to the moon, I would invite you to visit NASA's History Office. Here you can rid yourself of the notion that you are superior in every aspect conceivable.

      Have a good read.

    3. Re:NASA the dominant agency? by Herkules · · Score: 0

      "I figured Japan might have taken an interest first. Anyways, since you are obviously ignorant"

      Hmm well they are already sending stuf into space!

      And ESA is nothing new.

      Who?s the ignorant? ;)

      --
      CIA Factbook 2002 (US):"Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households
    4. Re:NASA the dominant agency? by mfrank · · Score: 1

      There was no race? Ah, that would explain the N-1 Russian moon rocket that blew up on the launch pad in the late sixties, killing dozens (or was it hundreds?) of people.

  34. Explanation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An independent, and redundant GPS system makes sense for the following reason:

    It prevents interuption of shipping and other GPS reliant services should the US temporarily downgrade the resolution of their GPS signal. (i.e. they have another independent system that will not be degraded)

    This, afaik, is the main rational for a european system - to reduce dependence on the current system.

  35. Some prospective by Eminence · · Score: 4, Informative

    They said they would put "over 1 billion euros" on that. What about some prospective? ESA's budget for 2002 was around 2,8 bn euros. With this sort of money for last four years they were able to put together a mission to Mars - and that's about it. NASA's budget is around 15 bn Euros and it is barely enough to keep the Shuttle fleet flying and make around two scientific missions a year (look for example at the state US Mars exploration is in). And that is not all the money US spends on space - there is also DoD budget.

    A single Ariane 5 launch costs around $150 M which is roughly $140 MEuros, so this is good for around ten launches. Proton and Soyuz are cheaper - $80M and $40M respectively. (a table of launch vehicles costs). But of course this money won't be spent directly on launches, you have to have something to launch first.

    Europe's space program has been so far driven mostly by France and to some extent Britain. Others were just interested, but with no real substance. All projects of manned missions were dropped along the way (and there were a few - a small shuttle designed by French that was supposed to be Ariane's payload - I forgot the name, German SSTO Sanger plane and similar British project). As a result Europe has no experience in building manned spacecraft - unless they would get it from Russians. I'm afraid that 1 bn Euros won't be enough to put together a manned mission unless it would be just flying Russian spacecrafts with Europe's yellow stars logo painted on them.

    If Europe would spend this money on building a GPS-like system, then 1 bn Euros is a significant amount, however again not enough to build the system - and keep it running (Russians build one to guide their warheads but couldn't afford to keep it up).

    What is most likely however is that this money won't be spent on a single mission or project. As the article says this money would be "pumped into the sector to overhaul its manufacturing and marketing programmes". It means that it would be divided into many small donations to various projects just to keep the industry afloat. So it is nice, but is far from enough if Europe really wants to be a player in the Space Race.

    And - BTW - Deutsche Telekom's loss for 2002 was "over" 24 billion euros.

    1. Re:Some prospective by soccerisgod · · Score: 1

      The european GPS system (dubbed "Galileo") is expected to cost 2.5 billion EUR. This project is financed by EU member countries directly, not by ESA.

      --
      If a train station is a place where a train stops, what's a workstation?
    2. Re:Some prospective by flyingdisc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's not true that ESA is primarily a French project with some British involvement. The ESA funding comes from most of the primary participants, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Denmark etc. The French contribute a large chunk of the funding but they also have a large role with their government funded labs working on research which compliments the ESA work which enhances their role in european space science. The British on the other hand pay propotionally much less than the other european partners (do you see a pattern here). British institutions will bid for research areas much like other european institutes but they don't contribute as much to the centralised european fund (ESA).

      The lander on the current mars mission is British built - but not really as a ESA project. It was cobbled together from research funding from various british university and research labs for an obscenly small sum of money. (relative to the other lander projects) - an will be a real coupe if the scientific payload pays off.

      A single Ariane 5 launch costs around $150 M which is roughly $140 MEuros, so this is good for around ten launches. Proton and Soyuz are cheaper - $80M and $40M respectively. (a table of launch vehicles costs). But of course this money won't be spent directly on launches, you have to have something to launch first.

      ESA have just announced that they intend to offer Soyuz launch vehicals from the european launch site in south america. This is partly intended to bring the cost of launch down and partly to provide a small load, reliable launch vehical which fills a gap for payloads smaller than the Ariane lifters. Ariane is designed for much larger payloads - taking 2 or 3 instruments up at a time. The newest Ariane (before it's recent suspension) could lift nearly 10 tons - making the largest active lifter.

      I don't think that europe is or will want a european space race. Europe should be able instigate and push some interesting projects in the next 10 years (venus express, rossetta etc) but most of these missions (if not all) are hugely collaborative and involve US, Canadian, European, Japanese, Russian and Chinese participants. The time when any individual agency wanted to go it alone are long gone.

    3. Re:Some prospective by joestar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Your comment makes me think nobody should trust any statement in comments unless checking the information!

      The Galileo project has been really launched now. It's a project funded by different partners (*including* ESA) : European Commision, ESA, European Investment Bank and other smaller partners to come. The goal of Galileo is double : 1) get rid of our current dependency towards the american military GPS system for strategic reasons and because there are reliability issues with the GPS (in particular for civil planes) 2) offer a better system (better precision in localization), primarily for civil usage (but not only) and make money from that.

      Galileo's price is 3.2 billions Euros which is roughly the price for building 150 kilometers of semi-urban motorway.

      All these informations were taken from the official Galileo website at:
      http://europa.eu.int/comm/dgs/energy_transport/gal ileo/index.htm

    4. Re:Some prospective by Zoxed · · Score: 1

      > ESA's budget for 2002 was around 2,8 bn euros. With this sort of money for last four years they were able to put together a mission to Mars

      Sounds like you did not do you homework - see for example: http://sci.esa.int/home/ourmissions/index.cfm

      This budget funded:
      - current science missions: Ulysses, Soho, Huygens, Cluster, XMM, Integral, Hubble(with NASA)
      - kept ERS-2 running and is now running Envisat
      - 16 missions at various stages of development
      - launched XMM, Cluster, Integral and Envisat
      - nearly (!!) launched Rosetta (post-poned)

      Regards, Simon

    5. Re:Some prospective by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Etc??? We (The Netherlands) also contribute alot! :-)

      See for example this link.
      It's our national space and air craft lab that highly cooperates with ESA and it's highly subsidiesed by our gov.

      We also built the robotic arm for the space station:

      I feel left out!!! :-)

    6. Re:Some prospective by Eminence · · Score: 1

      I tried, but it is harder to get information about ESA than NASA when it comes to budget, as ESA official budget is one thing and budgets of different project are another. So it is good that you (and others) provide additional information and correct the picture.

      However, the bigger current ESA budget turns out to be the less important this $1 bn euro donation is.

    7. Re:Some prospective by julesh · · Score: 1

      It's not true that ESA is primarily a French project with some British involvement.

      Maybe not now. But do you think its a coincidence that the ESA launch vehicle has a French name? That is because it was originally developed by the French long before the ESA existed. Today, most European countries contribute significantly to the ESA, but a large proportion of the ESA's success is due to the technology it inherited from the French national space program when it was founded.

      ESA have just announced that they intend to offer Soyuz launch vehicals from the european launch site in south america.

      You mean French Guiana, I believe.

    8. Re:Some prospective by GlowStars · · Score: 1

      Maybe not now. But do you think its a coincidence that the ESA launch vehicle has a French name? That is because it was originally developed by the French long before the ESA existed.

      Interestingly, Ariane's predecessor "Europa" already was a GB/France/Germany joint-venture where each country was responsible for one of the 3 stages of the rocket. Four launch-failures later the brits left the doomed project and the mainly french-driven Ariane-program was started.

    9. Re:Some prospective by soccerisgod · · Score: 1

      Thats the more accurate numbers, right. The European Commission will most likely pay the biggest sum, and that's just made up of the member countries.

      3.2 billions? Heck, can't even trust local tv stations anymore :( They said 2.5 ... but if it's on Galileo's site, I guess that figure will be right.

      I personally like the idea a lot. One step towards a united Europe and less dependency on the US.

      --
      If a train station is a place where a train stops, what's a workstation?
  36. But ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we pull all of our troops out of Europe, who will keep the Germans out of France?

    It frightens me deeply even thing about it.
    French-Germans.... Cheese eating, wine drinking, pisses-off, bike riding, Speedo wearing, smelly, hairy, megalomaniacs that love nothing more then to attack a neighboring country then turn around and run.

    You owe us Europe.. you owe us big.

    1. Re:But ... by -brazil- · · Score: 3, Funny
      If we pull all of our troops out of Europe, who will keep the Germans out of France?


      Frace's highway tolls will.


      It frightens me deeply even thing about it.


      Aren't odd things usually considered more frightening?


      You owe us Europe.. you owe us big.


      Not as much as we owe the Soviets.

      --

      The illegal we do immediately. The unconstitutional takes a little longer.
      --Henry Kissinger

    2. Re:But ... by KewlPC · · Score: 1

      >>If we pull all of our troops out of Europe, who will keep the Germans out of France?

      >Frace's highway tolls will.

      Yes, but what will happen when the French military goes on strike to protest having to spend more than 35 hours a week fighting off the Germans? Hmm? ;)

    3. Re:But ... by fredrik70 · · Score: 0

      Well, since the french farmers will go on sympathy strike the germans will stay out of france, noone wants to fuck with the french farmers! ;-)

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    4. Re:But ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well apart from the goats.

    5. Re:But ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One could argue that because Hitler had to keep troops on the W. front in preparation for the allied landing in France, he couldn't have sent them over to overwhelm the Soviets. Course, I'm just a clueless American. Any non-flame, thoughtful replies?

    6. Re:But ... by BenTels0 · · Score: 0, Troll
      If we pull all of our troops out of Europe, who will keep the Germans out of France?

      Get over yourself, troll. And grow up as well. Europe has left that sort of thing behind -- no matter how much you would like this not to be so. Keep Germans out of France? The whole point of the very modern Europe is that the Germans can be in France as much as they want and vice versa (let Rummy stick that one where the sun don't shine).

      You owe us Europe.. you owe us big.

      Europe doesn't owe you a single goddamned thing. We appreciate the role America played in WWII, but that doesn't make us your serfs for the rest of eternity. Not to mention that we spent the first four-and-a-half decades after WWII doing every damned thing you wanted; I'd say that if we ever owed you anything, you've been payed in full since then -- and then some.

  37. NASA would take hundreds of billions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ESA could probably take a piss cheaper than NASA. All NASA is is a huge publicly-funded trough for contractors to use for their overcharging fetish. BEAGLE 2 was made for 42 million pounds (it's a unit of currency used in "one of those loser places that aren't america") and with a bit of luck it might do very well.

    Europa Endlos

  38. trash hauling by alizard · · Score: 1
    We need to limit the amount of commerical launches or we risk ruining space for the next few generations. If this extra money means less satilites are launched for companies that will go bust before they are ever used then it is good money.

    No, it'll just mean garbage collection vehicles will be needed sooner or later.

    This will probably be needed anyway as an increasing number of manned vehicles and orbiting space stations go into orbit. There's junk up there dating from the earliest Soviet Union programs. Some is of actual historical value, some can simply have a thruster attached and deorbited into the ocean. Most is in known orbits. It's all going to either be gotten rid of or Murphy's Law dictates it's going to come through somebody's vacuum-tight window at a mile or two/second.

    1. Re:trash hauling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is not the larger objects such as old satellites, launchers etc. Sure, they are an annoyance, but they can be spotted on radar and safely avoided.

      The real problem is the millions of small fragments that come from launcher staging, damaged satellites etc. They are too small to see on radar, but still large enough to disable satellites or even punch a hole in the hull of manned vechicles. With speeds of several km/s it doesn't take much mass to do severe damage!

      Mattias

    2. Re:trash hauling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      No, it'll just mean garbage collection vehicles will be needed sooner or later.

      Stupid NASA scientists, should have used Java from the start.

    3. Re:trash hauling by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Given low enough launch costs, you would just run orbital sweepers with nice thick object catchers to sweep through space and pick up the small objects you're talking about. Think of it as a huge, fluffy pillow that's trawled around to catch the stuff. It's not practical right now but at $100/kg launch costs, I expect that people will find a way to do it.

  39. Our integrated circuit technology by alizard · · Score: 2, Interesting
    was originally invented for military / aerospace.

    For quite a few years, the military / aerospace sector has basically been building on electronic and computer technology developed for the private consumer sector.

    Perhaps it's time for another driver for new technology to show up on the market. Especially given the increasingly successful attempt to suppress new consumer technology by the *AA (RIAA/MPAA) organizations.

  40. Do it the American Way... by anubi · · Score: 1
    Patent the rocket propulsion system and sue them for patent infringement.

    --
    "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

    1. Re:Do it the American Way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... and end up paying royalties to the chinese, who used gun powder propelled rockets as early as the 12th century.

    2. Re:Do it the American Way... by ViVeLaMe · · Score: 0

      alas for the US,
      there IS prior art, in Europe... V1/V2, Germany? :-P

      --
      i had a sig, once..
    3. Re:Do it the American Way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      considering the origins of modern rocketry in Nazi Germany during the second war, you would be unlikely to find anyone who would claim that particular IP..

    4. Re:Do it the American Way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Patent the rocket propulsion system and sue them for patent infringement.

      That would be quite a feat considering they coerced it from the germans.

  41. Re:EUROPE IS A DANGEROUS EMPIRE IN THE MAKING by Branc0 · · Score: 1
    Like when we had World War I and we learnt better ways to kill people and have a World War II ? Oh wayt... maybe we learnt all that on the 100 years war...

    --

    rm -rf /home/leia

  42. ESA was already taking over . . . by Mentorix · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If I remember correctly ESA is already both marketleader launching commercial sattelites AND making money while doing it. The biggest threat to ESA's position right now is not NASA but country's like China and India.

    That's what happens when you keep launching something that was designed over 30 years ago and never reached it's design goals, like for example being a reusable vehicle(!). The current space "shuttle" is more like a pod sitting on top a big rocket that can land by itself. Almost everything else needs to be build again.

  43. Re:IF I EVER MEET YOU I WILL KICK YOUR ASS!!! by Daetrin · · Score: 0

    I know you're a troll, but i just have to say, you'd have to get through me first, and everyone else who has even the vaguest idea of the the United States of America's Bill of Rights says and what it means.

    --
    This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  44. No conflict necessary by spakka · · Score: 3, Funny

    Europe should simply wait a generation or two until creationist christians have complete control of the US government and education system. When the entire US public believes the sky to be an inverted bowl suspended over a flat earth, it will be safe to resume space travel.

    1. Re:No conflict necessary by mfrank · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Nah, what'll happen is that they'll allow vouchers for education, then all the bornagains will put their kids in their own schools and there won't be any more pressure to force prayer or teaching creationism in the other schools.

      Twenty years later, the US workforce will be highly stratified, with the lower portion good for nothing but ministering and manual labor.

  45. reflection on the space "battle" by nozpamming · · Score: 4, Informative

    See if I can contribute some bits to this topic:

    First of all both the EU and Russia are highly succesful in the launching business. The Ariane 4 was at one point responsible for over 40% of all commercial launches and still is very successful. The Ariana 5 has seen some significant setbacks with all those errors but still is (will be) a very competitive launcher. The russian launchers, while based on sixties technology have been refined and re-engineered to an enormous ammount for decades and were and still are very competitive. For most commercial apps the shuttle program is outrageously expensive and even the US itself relies on convential rockets (which they also make of course) for many launches. Another problem in general for the US, and more limited for the EU, is that the international space station is costing a lot more than expected (nuttin'new, right?) and this is affecting other projects. This problem is even larger due to the fact that -for now- we need the shuttle as a servicing vehicle for the ISS

    Now for those GPS systems: first of all to clear that bit up: you need a few dozen to make sure always at least three (but better four or five) are visible everywhere on earth (except usually the poles due to orbit mechanics) for triangulation methods. Second of all Europe is not happy with the position the military takes in the GPS system of the US: we saw this many times with both Gulf wars that the US decided to downgrade the system accuracy for everyone but themselves (the military that is). In general people are a bit tired of the US policy to foreign countries with the change from Clinton to Bush (I don't want to take sides on the last war in this comment but in general popularity and support of the US bombed in the EU recently (as in from 60% to 25%), even in the normally pro-US United Kingdom). The military funding of many system in the US is what makes the EU sometimes a bit scared and makes it want to develop its own system, and the anti-US feelings in the population make these kind of projects a lot easier to get funded. Now, wether or not we need another system if another question but it takes time to launch so many sattelites for a new GPS system, so China is still busy get everything up there, as it will also take Europe time to fully deploy. Even more, if the US and the EU can/want work together these GPS system can also complement eachother.

    1. Re:reflection on the space "battle" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, well don't feel so righteous,cause so did support of Germany and France in US from 73% to 29%.

      Who gives a fuck what people are tired of in Europe.

    2. Re:reflection on the space "battle" by SdnSeraphim · · Score: 1

      With all of the "GPS" and other satelites going into orbit, we won't be able to send manned spacecraft into orbit for the fear of collision with space junk.

      --
      It is dangerous to be right on a subject on which the established authorities are wrong. - Voltaire
  46. It's all word games by varjag · · Score: 1

    It is independent of the military, actually; the Pentagon did have input in the Shuttle program early on (they wanted to be able to use it for launching and servicing/upgrading spy satellites, which can't be done with a rocket) but these days they launch their own stuff, on rockets from Lockheed Martin.

    This is yet another legal vs. de-facto status thing. Yes, NASA isn't under Pentagon jurisdiction, but consider that both NASA and Pentagon share good part of research, launch, communication and support infrastructure, and use same contractors. Hell, even commertcal comsats were used by military during Iraq war!

    Space programs were always tightly interveined with military, and will remain so in observable future, thus it doesn't really matter if your institution is called Peaceful Space Exploration Agency or Rapid Space Militarization Headquarters.

    --
    Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
  47. Bill of Rights? I thought they repealed that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I'm sure it was repealed when they set up the Department of Fatherland SS-ecurity, since it would impede their opres^H^H^H^H^Hpatriotic duties.

    Europa Endlos

  48. Re:IF I EVER MEET YOU I WILL KICK YOUR ASS!!! by Daetrin · · Score: 0

    I didn't say that everyone who had the vaguest idea what it meant was a _large_ group. Just that there are a few of us left who still remember. Why don't you go and pick on someone who disagrees with you? =P

    --
    This Space Intentionally Left Blank
  49. Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by dackroyd · · Score: 4, Informative

    Tragically we know how the US would like to react:

    http://www.eetimes.com/sys/news/OEG20030522S0050

    The nation's largest intelligence agency by budget and in control of all U.S. spy satellites, NRO is talking openly with the U.S. Air Force Space Command about actively denying the use of space for intelligence purposes to any other nation at any time--not just adversaries, but even longtime allies, according to NRO director Peter Teets.

    At the National Space Symposium in Colorado Springs in early April, Teets proposed that U.S. resources from military, civilian and commercial satellites be combined to provide "persistence in total situational awareness, for the benefit of this nation's war fighters." If allies don't like the new paradigm of space dominance, said Air Force secretary James Roche, they'll just have to learn to accept it. The allies, he told the symposium, will have "no veto power."


    This would not go down to well at all. I know the US economy/military is the biggest in the world - but I still think that a trade war/shooting war with every other country in the world isn't the best way of improving the lives of American citizens.

    --
    "Free software as in beer, copy protection as in racket" - Telsa Gwynne
    1. Re:Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by Eminence · · Score: 1

      denying the use of space for intelligence purposes to any other nation at any time

      Why do you think it is tragic? It is just another incentive for other nations (especially EU) to put more funds into their space programs. This is actually good news for whole humanity.

      Space dominance with no challengers means stagnation (as we all see from the state US space program is in), competition, space race means progress. That's the way it goes with us, humans.

    2. Re:Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by xyr0 · · Score: 1
      persistence in total situational awareness, for the benefit of this nation's war fighters.

      this sounds Orwellian, but it doesnt surprise me anymore.

    3. Re:Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      "This is actually good news for whole humanity."

      Until the mushrooms start sprouting.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    4. Re:Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by cREW+oNE · · Score: 1

      China has a bigger military force, although not as technologically advanced.

      --

      +++ATH0

    5. Re:Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      Given that the US no longer has a "no first use" policy, we know where to look when guarding against this.

    6. Re:Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know the US economy/military is the biggest in the world

      um... actually once the current stage of enlargement completes (which should be in early '04,) the EU will be the biggest single market economy in the world, and I believe China already has the biggest military.

    7. Re:Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by ScottForbes · · Score: 1
      Given that the US no longer has a "no first use" policy,

      Um, the U.S. never had a "no first use" policy. It had an explicit "you invade West Germany and we'll make Moscow glow in the dark" policy, which had the desired effect vis-a-vis Soviet tanks and western Europe. Gorbachev tried to score propaganda points in the early 80s by pledging the Soviets would not be the first to use nuclear weapons, to which the Reagan administration more or less nodded and said "we agree, we don't think you'll be first either."

      Bush is crass enough to remind everyone that America contemplates first-use of nuclear weapons, and apparently dippy enough to propose trotting out the nukes to crack open underground bunkers -- but the policy didn't originate with him.

    8. Re:Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the article:

      "Beginning next year, NRO will be in charge of the new Offensive Counter-Space program, which will come up with plans to specifically deny the use of near-Earth space to other nations, said Teets.

      The program will include two components: the Counter Communication System, designed to disrupt other nations' communication networks from space; and the Counter Surveillance Reconnaissance System, formed to prevent other countries from using advanced intelligence-gathering technology in air or space."

      This isn't defence - it's megalomania.

      Any wonder why citizens of nations outside the US (I'm Australian) are scared shitless at where the Bush administration is taking the USA? Especially when it's obvious after Iraq that the US is quite prepared to fake unconfirmable intelligence data (WMD) to create an excuse to invade a country? And now it wants to deploy technologies that would stop other nations from launching satellites that could confirm such intelligence?

      Time for Europe to start researching ASAT systems, methinks....

      The USA - the greatest achievement of the Enlightenment is now behaving more and more like a nation of hillbillies

    9. Re:Unfortunate US reaction ahead.... by xyr0 · · Score: 1
      yeah, if my numbers are correst china has 3 million soldiers compared to 1.7 american soldiers (or even less). but chinaÂs military war built up in the cold war where big masses was the way to go. today though your forces have to be technologically advanced and have a lot of motorized units so that they can be deployed anywhere on earth in no time. thatÂs what the americans have.

      but they are putting a lot more money into their military (329.1B USD compared to 47B USD).

  50. Best bet for renewed NASA by malus · · Score: 1

    Normally, I like to keep political views away from /. so I'll try to keep this as benign as possible.

    My personal opinion about heating up NASA: Tie it into the War(!) on Terror. The rocket scientists at our beloved space agency need to come up with a plan to catch terrorists from space.

    Perhaps a space-based railgun, or a manned Osama Bin Laden tracking gizmo based on Mars?

  51. Think before you post by varjag · · Score: 1

    How will NASA react to this news after being the dominant space agency over the past three decades?

    Do you really mean that Soviet space programme in early 70's was incomparable with the one of NASA, in terms of launches, manned flights, interpanetary missions or deployed satellites?

    --
    Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
  52. Rail Gun system coming by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For many years the military and other agencies have been looking to
    put payload in space with a rail gun as a launchor assisted launch .
    A variation on that theme would be a high altitude platform using
    something like www.21stcenturyairships.com to lift the cargo to
    near 100,000 ft , then use the rail gun to kick start it and if a
    heavy payload fire a booster as well . The first 20 miles of flight would be eliminated .
    A series of MANY of these balloons could be used to hold the launch
    platform up and the tremendous cargo .
    If you run it all with remote control robots, you do not need
    to worry about life support systems on the launching pad .
    Also you use remote control robots to build your space station,
    and do your repairs up in space .
    Solar power in space is not filtered by the earth's atmosphere,
    there is ALOT more watts per sq. meter up there .
    Imagine the work that could be done with no need for food and
    water, no need for atmosphere , and protected enclosure for the
    repair robots .
    If the chinese are smart when they go to build their base on the
    moon they will start it out unmanned and built by robots ,
    the logistics are just SOOOO much cheaper than trying to keep
    humans alive and sane in deep space .
    Once they have a large Teraformed cavern underground on the moon
    then test it for problems over a period of time , with redundant
    systems and escape pod like rescue vehicles . Test it with robots .
    The majority of the moon base being underground would be shielded
    against meteors , and cosmic radiation .
    The dark side of the moon could be used to acquire cooling for
    machinery and computers, etc etc .
    The light side could be used for a permanent solar farm .
    Robots coming back and plugging into the grid when they get
    low or redundant battery packs get switched out by battery
    serving bots that change one pack at a time and every robot
    has two or three, lol .
    Once we get a moon base, we have a MUCH cheaper launching
    platform than the earth . Less Gravity, no atmosphere
    burning you up , and no wind shear .
    Then wash, rinse and repeat for mars, pretty simple plan and
    we have already sent a tiny robot there .
    Just send a larger one and start rail gunning cargo from the
    moon base , the cargo goes into orbit around mars and is picked
    up by the space station there and then sent down to the surface
    by the bouncing ball airbag method used by path finder .
    The airbag material can be saved and reused for other needs
    once humans arrive once the base is built and safely tested .
    Once again an underground base using the heat from the core of
    mars would keep the underground base somewhat liveable .
    Solar power on mars would not be that good, would need an
    alternative like geo-thermal .
    For safety reasons the drilling should be a great distance from
    the mars base in case a geological problem is let loose similar
    to a kick experienced when drilling here in north america .
    Run the geo thermal power plant with robots, and have it
    beyond a ridge or mountain to protect the colony from
    any possible disasters .
    A large low light garden would be needed to turn CO2 into O@
    to breathe , and provide food , enriched soil with bacteria
    would have to be sent to the moon and mars .
    How mars bacteria and earth bacteria interact could be dangerous,
    another reason to test it with robots for some time .
    The big dig in boston has made underground earth works much
    cheaper, this tech would be perfect for mars, just implementing
    it all the distance aways would be VERY hard .
    Due to delay a LARGE space ship/station would need to be built
    in orbit best from the moon base, then travel to mars
    and ppl could remote control the mars robots from orbit .

    Ok I am really rambling here ... my apologies ...

    Peace,
    Ex-MislTech

    --
    google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
    1. Re:Rail Gun system coming by stud9920 · · Score: 1
      The dark side of the moon could be used to acquire cooling for machinery and computers, etc etc . The light side could be used for a permanent solar farm .
      Uh ? Am I completely mistaken or is the dark side of the moon not darker than the light side ? At least when there is a solar eclipse, I have the impression the so-called dark side gets all the sunlight and the "light" side gets none.

      In other languages, like in French, it is called more correctly the hidden side of the moon. The only thing defining it is that we don't see it. Not that it's actually dark
    2. Re:Rail Gun system coming by Cerrian · · Score: 1

      The "dark" and "light" side of the moon recives about 14 days of sunlight and 14 days of eclipse at the lunar equator.

      It's only called the dark-side b/c we can never see it from our posistion on Earth. The lightside is always facing towards Earth. In fact we have very little data regarding the dark-side of the moon. Only recently the Clementine probe was able to take somewhat detailed scans of surface (1999??)

      Now the polar regions of them moon get pretty cold due to lack of sunlight during the entire lunar cycle. So if you want to cool anything continuously, then you'll probably do it at the polar regions.

      I'm not too sure you realize the magnitude of size, volume, and distance when talking about using solar cells on one side of the moon to power the other. The surface area of the moon is equivalent to that of Africa.....that's a freaking long area to be stringing power cabling...

  53. A Big Circle by Cackmobile · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Its amazing that the leadership of space has finally returned to Europe. Seeing the Germans started in all. As we all know the Americans and Russians all had German scientists at the beginning of their programs. Maybe the Germans should get heavily involved, then we would get to Mars and where ever else we want. They do generally have the best technology. Get BMW/Mercedes to build the rockets.

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
    1. Re:A Big Circle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should also recognize that throughout most of human history China has been one of the leaders of technology, military and technology. Really the last 200 years or so have been the exception not the rule. Wait until China gets back on track they will be a major dominant force. Ever read about the Chinese navy?

      5000 years of technological and intellectual leadership from China makes me think they are going to be a force to recon with now that in the words of Chairman Mao "the chinese people have stood up".

    2. Re:A Big Circle by xyr0 · · Score: 1

      btw, the people are still sitting. if they stood up, they would be shot like 14 years ago.

    3. Re:A Big Circle by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

      true. i just wanted to bring the US down a peg or 2. and yes I do know about there navy and the gold shps that made it to africa in 700AD or something

      --
      -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  54. Re:Some perspective by splateagle · · Score: 2, Interesting

    1: I think you mean perspective not prospective

    2: The "Space Race" was little more than a cold war pissing contest, and It ended decades ago.

    3: The ESA is already very much "a player" in space: for one thing it's the market leader in commercial satelite launches, and for another it's one of the few agencies with an active launch vehicle development programme (unlike NASA for example).

  55. Space- where next? by adeyadey · · Score: 1

    There is a real argument for stopping most of the ongong spending in NASA/ESA and re-assessing how and why we want to go into space. An independant project to put 2 men into space & claim the "X-prize" - a mere $10 million - may be near to fruition - see:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2956103. stm
    - if that is sucessful, it makes NASAs bill of $500 million per shuttle launch seem bad value. In fact some amateur rocket builders have been getting near-orbit performance for under $100,000..
    And since when have nationalised agencies like NASA been good at commercial exploitation anyway? What would the motor industry be if the government built cars? (think british leyland, the lada, skoda, trebant, etc..) Why not just offer a series of "prizes" (together with some sensible level of regulation) and let private firms innovate and fight it out?

    --
    "You lied to me! There is a Swansea!"
    1. Re:Space- where next? by KewlPC · · Score: 1

      What about the things that aren't profitable, require long-term commitments, or are just plain too expensive to attract the private sector?

      Do you really think that any corporations care about the atmospheric makeup of Pluto, collecting samples from Mars, landing on asteroids, etc.? Of course they don't, there's virtually no possibility of direct monetary profit, and any indirect monetary profit would likely be too far off for most companies.

      That's why we have NASA and the ESA. Sending probes is important. The experience gained from long-term human habitation of space is important (we're going to have to do it sooner or later; please, let's skip the "but manned spaceflights are worthless" arguments this time). But there isn't any money to be made doing it, so don't expect the corporations to make many advances there.

      In all likelyhood, at least for the next few decades, corporate interest in space is going to end at Earth orbits closer than the moon, for a few Space Jets, satellites, and things like that. What corporation is going to want to send a probe to Europa to see if there's a liquid ocean under all that ice?

      I'm not against the private sector getting involved in space. In fact, I think it's great and necessary. I already thought John Carmack was a cool guy, and the fact that he's bankrolling his own aerospace company makes him even cooler. But we still need to do the purely scientific stuff, and for the forseeable future that means NASA, the ESA, and whatever's left of the soviet space program.

    2. Re:Space- where next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't care about the atmospheric makeup of Pluto, collecting samples from Mars, etc. That's exactly the problem with NASA. The rest of us are paying billions of dollars satisfying the idle curiosity of a few hundred beaurocratic nerds who hijacked to space agency for their own dull whims.

      The simple minds who are in charge of "exploring" space nowadays (and for a long time since) would be just as happy categorizing pseudopod shaping on amoeba or counting sand on the beach if only there were a couple good sci-fi novels, and maybe a nerd soap opera about it.

      Give space back to the rest of us. Or give us our money back. Or show some progress (or failure) for your "research".

    3. Re:Space- where next? by BenTels0 · · Score: 1
      I don't care about the atmospheric makeup of Pluto, collecting samples from Mars, etc. That's exactly the problem with NASA. The rest of us are paying billions of dollars satisfying the idle curiosity of a few hundred beaurocratic nerds who hijacked to space agency for their own dull whims.

      And for anybody else wondering why space is the area of science and not commercialism, the above is the answer. This is the kind of attitude that would have human beings still scowering in caves, huddling together for warmth, because there's no easy money in making fire. It is the product of the kind of mind that sits, sacked out on the couch, in his baseball-cap and underpants, with a remote in one hand, a corndog in the other and potato chips in easy foot-reach, watching football on television and then complains when somebody asks him to contribute money to the very education that brought him all these things.

      The simple minds who are in charge of "exploring" space nowadays (and for a long time since) would be just as happy categorizing pseudopod shaping on amoeba or counting sand on the beach if only there were a couple good sci-fi novels, and maybe a nerd soap opera about it.

      No, they wouldn't. And only a truly spectacular idiot could believe that they would.

      Give space back to the rest of us. Or give us our money back. Or show some progress (or failure) for your "research".

      I'm sure they would be happy to, if anybody on the whole world thought you capable of understanding what it is they would be able to tell you.

    4. Re:Space- where next? by adeyadey · · Score: 1

      Maybe a traditional corperation does not care about long term research, but what I am suggesting is that NASA and the ESA are making an incredibly bad job out of doing the work now. The Space shuttle is an expensive joke - an ineffective waste of money, not to mention life. I just think that after the most recent shuttle failure, it is time to re-think how things are structured, and how the money is distributed. I suggested the idea that certain "prizes" could be offered for certain objectives. Maybe there should be a free market for launch systems, with many smaller scientific teams recieving rather more modest grants to develop probes for specific goals. You compare the cost/structure of the small privately funded Beagle-2 mars lander project to the NASA rovers.. ($50 mil vs $500 mil??) Allow a free market to operate, and watch the entreprenuers develop cheap delivery systems at a fraction of current costs. Its funny that Americans, who are champions of open-market systems in other areas, have a blindness when it comes to NASA..

      --
      "You lied to me! There is a Swansea!"
  56. American Century by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, you are seeing the final days of the American Century.

    With India and China on the rise and Europeans consolidating power the decline of the American Empire is on the horizon.

  57. WMD detected - pick up the arms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Europe needs independent access to a GP-system:

    Since WMD (Weapons of Mass Destruction) have been
    dectected across the atlantic ocean and in some
    specific place somewhere in the middle east.

    !!!!AND THIS IS NO FUD!!!!

    1. Re:WMD detected - pick up the arms by Cray+MCP · · Score: 0

      Europe has his own WMDs. France and great Britain have a lot of Nuclear Warheads in their arsenals. The british Army owns C-Weapons. But now we can aim these weapons more accurate ;)

      MfG,
      Cray MCP.

      --
      Micro$oft ist nicht die Antwort. Micro$oft ist die Frage. Und die Antwort ist NEIN.
  58. Re:DISARM EUROPE NOW!! by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

    FYI, Europe has Nukes. France could turn east-coast of USA in to nuclear wasteland without their submarines even leaving port. If they wanted to nuke rest of USA; they would have to move a bit.

    So you are a bit late with your "comments"

    --
    Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
  59. some of us are still friends... by fantomas · · Score: 1

    (don't kid yourself - the US and Europe are *not* friends right now)


    Well I'm still friends with my pals who have US passports so there are some exceptions :-))


    Seriously though this kind of simplistic statement is the sort of thing politicians come out with - come on! I'd guess that away from the politicans, most of the scientific and business community are getting on just fine, trading research and business just as they ever have done. Few influential organisations or research teams are bounded along strictly national lines these days, I'm sure...



    1. Re:some of us are still friends... by itchyfidget · · Score: 1

      Oh, I know! On a personal level I (a European) am friends with many Americans as well as hoping to work with some of them someday.

      While scientifically, polite and friendly international collaborations are - thankfully - very common, IMO political rivalries can tip over into the workplace and are ever-present in the public consciousness.

      Don't tell me there wouldn't be jubilation and some slightly nasty nose-thumbing on one side or other of the Atlantic if one space agency scored a major 'first'... I suspect the current political climate would reinforce that. Social psychology also suggests that the second you give someone a 'team' identity, they will discriminate against people who do not belong to that team.

      Call me cynical but we'll all work together until there's a possibility for victory/Nobel Prizes/being first at something big, and then it's us against them, full-tilt, 'cause we can't let "the other guys" win.

      --
      Mod early, mod often.
  60. Werner von Braun by Burb · · Score: 1

    Once the rockets are up, who cares where they come down - That's not my department, says Wernher von Braun.
    Tom Leher

    --

    1. Re:Werner von Braun by Detritus · · Score: 1

      I reach for the stars, but sometimes I hit London.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  61. Not 3, You need 4 to resolve time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You need a minimum of 4 satellites to provide any coverage, three for the three dimensions of space and another to resolve the time differences between the receiver and the satellites.

    The receiver and satellites cannot be perfectly synchronised and any errors in the time will give (massive) errors in position (by a factor of the speed of light!). A fourth satellite is needed to resolve the time shift between the satellites and receiver. It's a very cool technique in my opinion and avoids the problem of every receiver needing its own atomic clock!

  62. US negation policy raises concern abroad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a team to work together, you need each participant to volunteer...

    http://www.eet.com/sys/news/OEG20030522S0050

    Of course, I sincerly think people (whether US, EU, or other world citizen) want cooperation. But I seriously doubt governements reflect their people opinion.

  63. Re:EUROPE IS A DANGEROUS EMPIRE IN THE MAKING by quax · · Score: 0

    Is this guy serious? Are there actually people in the US that paranoid?

  64. Re:FRANCE HAS WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION! by xyr0 · · Score: 0

    some ppl urge to liberate the american ppl from this evil regime.

  65. Re:Some perspective by Eminence · · Score: 1

    The "Space Race" was little more than a cold war pissing contest, and It ended decades ago.

    And that's a pity. Without a contest we (humans) can't do much more than launch a few men a year into low orbit for a few weeks. Not much progress ever since that pissing contest ended, hm?

    I don't like it, but the fact is that people don't care about space exploration unless there is financial gain in sight or a competition ("pissing contest") to be won (especially a military one).

  66. Re:EUROPE IS A DANGEROUS EMPIRE IN THE MAKING by xyr0 · · Score: 1

    well, if mass media can make ppl believe that saddam could strike with WMD within 45 min although he counldnt even piss over the tigris (Rice said in 2000 that saddam wouldnt be the slightest threat), then they can also make ppl afraid and paranoid. thats the power of the media and it will even grow if the big companies get bigger and are owned by only few in the end.

  67. As for me knowing anything about missile systems . by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

    Yes, I worked on guided missile radar for the US Navy .

    www.geocities.com/duanenavarre

    --
    google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
  68. and it's a terrorist nation ! by The+Famous+Druid · · Score: 2, Funny

    Those of us who live in the pacific region remember the French terrorist bombing of the Rainbow Warrior (a Greenpeace protest vessel) in a New Zealand harbour.

    The terrorists were French Secret Service agents, and were caught, convicted, and sentenced to prison terms in NZ. The French government made a deal with the NZ government where they would serve their terms in French prisons, and once they were back in France they broke this agreement and set them free.

    So, Weapons of Mass Destruction (which actually exist) and proven terrorist links, but no oil. Sadly the conditions for war are not met.

    --
    Quidquid Latine dictum sit, altum videtur (anything said in Latin sounds important)
    1. Re:and it's a terrorist nation ! by bfsmith9 · · Score: 1

      Like the United States. Those who live in the region of the Middle East might remember the U.S. bombing (and invasion) of a certain country (against international law?). The terrorists were members of the U.S. military, with support from certain high-ranking members of the U.S. political establishment. The U.S. government made a deal with the British government where they would agree to invade whether or not any other country or group of countries had anything to say about it, and once the war was over (which war? I find it all very confusing. The War against Iraq? The war against Terror? Is it over? Is it rhetorical or real?) the Iraqi people would be set "free." We'll see how that shakes down. So, the U.S. has Weapons of Mass Destruction and proven terrorist links ... and oil! The conditions for war are met! Watch out for the imminent invasion, from somewhere... What level alert are we at today? I forget - orange, yellow... Orange is worse, right?

    2. Re:and it's a terrorist nation ! by El · · Score: 1

      Your compairson fails the laugh test. How can you compare attacking an unarmed ship full of pacifists under cover of darkness with attacking a country run by a known nut with a history of attacking his neighbors after giving said nut several months worth of warnings? Funny how the French change their minds about aggression when face with an opponent that can actualy fight back...

      --

      "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

    3. Re:and it's a terrorist nation ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No oil in France????

      Then what makes the hair of the unbathed masses so greasy???

  69. ESA may revive the Hermes spaceplane by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

    I think this sounds more and more like ESA is definitely interested in its own manned launcher systems.

    The loss of Columbia and the problems with the newest Soyuz spacecraft concerns ESA, especially since they are a major contributor to the International Space Station. I think we may see the French dust off plans for the Hermes spaceplane and get it into production as soon as possible, since that's the fastest way to get manned space launches. If I remember correctly, Hermes had actually reached the point of a mockup being built when the project was shelved; this means not much more engineering will be necessary to start producing the real thing.

  70. Re:IF I EVER MEET YOU I WILL KICK YOUR ASS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Settle down George. You are suppose to be paying attention to the middle east problem rather than being here.

  71. yes, major conflict brewing by 73939133 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not intending to troll but that "conflict" thing does seem like an odd conclusion. Are Europeans now terrorists?

    I think the problem is that Americans like to think of themselves as the most powerful nation on earth and have gotten used to being first in everything. But, objectively, the US is a mid-size nation with an economy that is in deep trouble ($3 trillion in foreign debt and growing rapidly), that depends on skilled immigration for its competitiveness, and that faces enormous inequalities and social problems. The preeminent role of the US was an artifact of the aftermath of WWII. Now that Europe is pretty close to a federation and that China and India have caught up technologically, America becomes merely one among several large players, and not the biggest or most important one.

    The only area where the US is clearly first is in military spending. But that really worries foreign nations. What is the US going to do when (and it's "when", not "if") foreign investments slow down, the dollar crumbles, skilled workers stay away, and the economy falters? Is it going to dismantle its military and quietly accept being a second-rate player on the world stage? Or is the US going to try to get by force what it won't be able to get by other means? Using the US military for economic reasons has happened before.

    It is completely natural for European and Asian space programs, which represent larger populations and economies, to surpass the US programs. This is only the beginning of many changes. The question is whether Americans can get used to it.

    1. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by zaroastra · · Score: 1

      I agree with your line of reasoning, and even go a step further, thinking that US is now at the verge of getting total military supremacy over the world. And using it to control world economy.

      Just look at what they did in iraq, a war for oil, based on lies (still waiting for the links to al qaeda, and WMD) and the countries that speaked against it, imediatly considered as semi-enemies (or all that french/freedom fries stuff, thats just what a 10 year old would do)
      After all, america is just a VERY young country, with americans being nice persons when isolated, but when seen as a whole, from this side of the atlantic, very childish, rude and dumb.
      And people in power (US) just like you to be that way, because its the only way then can use you to defend their "democratic" view of the world.
      Ever wondered how things proceed outside your little belly, I sugest reading a bit about holland, denmark, sweden, and even france and germany. How the society cares about persons, and even if you're born in a gheto, you've the right and means to study in the university, go to a doctor, feed your childs.

      Anyway, I've lost my reasoning, but it was like this:
      Americans are strong enough to worry the rest of the world.
      The rest of the world should know better than let US take the lead in everything.
      It should try to take the lead at least in education, science and economy, and have a complete independence of US (economic and otherwise) because if things go shitty with the US, better have a backup plan.

      Z

      --
      I'm trying to get modded "Interesting Flamebait Informative and Insightful Redundant Troll" *-* Please Help *-*
    2. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by ScottForbes · · Score: 2, Informative
      But, objectively, the US is a mid-size nation with an economy that is in deep trouble ($3 trillion in foreign debt and growing rapidly), that depends on skilled immigration for its competitiveness, and that faces enormous inequalities and social problems.

      Um, what? The United States alone had a GDP of $10 trillion in 2001, compared to $7.8 trillion for the entire EU -- and an apples-to-apples comparison would measure the EU against NAFTA. The EU is approaching self-imposed limits on its geographic expansion, has a birth rate significantly below the replacement rate, and has economic, cultural, and legal fracture lines that the U.S. eliminated centuries ago.

      China and India may have pockets of technological expertise, but they are not "caught up" in any meaningful sense -- they are not inventing radical new technologies or approaching first-world levels of infrastructure, health care or political stability. It will be a long, long time, measured in centuries, before either country equals the U.S. in an economic, scientific or military sense, even if the U.S. stops advancing.

      What is the US going to do when (and it's "when", not "if") foreign investments slow down, the dollar crumbles, skilled workers stay away, and the economy falters?

      You're describing the 1970s. America's dominance is not a passing phase that started with WWII and ended on 9/11 -- it's a phenomenon that will last as long as America lasts, or until other nations become so much like America that one can't tell them apart. European and Asian space programs may leapfrog the moribund NASA in the short term, especially in light of the Columbia disaster -- but in America private citizens are building their own launch vehicles, and may well put people into orbit before China does.

    3. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was a waste of moderation... I was already at 0, and wasn't gonna get any higher. Who in their right mind mods ACs down... from zero?

    4. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by CreationLtd · · Score: 1
      You say the US is a mid-sized nation. Isn't it #3 in both population and size?

      You're right in that the United States rates as third in population and size.

      But consider the fact that China is essentially the same size as the United States but has 4.5 times the population. Also, India is almost a third the size of the US but has 3.7 times the population. The US population is larger than Indonesia's population by 1/5th but Indonesia is more than 5 times smaller than the United States.

      So in terms of densities, the United States ranks as a midsize country. If the European Union was considered a country it would edge out the US by around 100 million people. If the EU accepts Russia into the fold than it will be always twice the population of the US.

      It is true that most of Europe is near zero-growth but I wouldn't use the word stagnant. That implies there's something wrong with zero-growth. It will undoubtedly mean a change in social spending but in positive direction. Fewer mouths to feed means better food for others.

    5. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by 73939133 · · Score: 1

      You say the US is a mid-sized nation. Isn't it #3 in both population and size?

      I didn't put that very well. In terms of nation states, I believe the US is fourth in terms of area (with Australia and Brazil close behind) and third in terms of population.

      But while the US is a nation and wants to act autonomously, other nations increasingly act as groups: Europe, the Arab nations, OPEC, sub-Saharan Africa, China, Japan, and Latin America. Among those half-dozen or so entities, the US is a fairly mid-size entity.

      Also, is it not true the population of Europe is stagnant, or even declining? Won't that require a change in social spending?

      Yes, but what is your point? Older populations also entail many savings (lower crime rates, lower educational expenses, better productivity), and the major issue, a mismatch between life expectancy and retirement age, can be addressed fairly easily. I don't view that as a serious problem. Also, the impact is reduced by European expansion. And, finally, Europeans don't have unrealistic expectations: Europe doesn't expect to lead the world.

      At issue to me is the mismatch between the apparent American sense of indefinite entitlement to world leadership on the one hand, and the shaky foundations of its economy and moderate size on the other hand.

    6. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. I wish people would stop moderating based on whether they disagree with something; if an argument is well-presented, it should be modded up, and if it seems to contain logical errors, those should be pointed out in a response.

    7. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for the explanation. Also, my point about the aging population of Europe was that, as Europe has more social safety nets, won't said aging population lead to an increasing healthcare-payment burden for young Europeans? Anyway, thanks again for answering my questions. And I tend to agree that we should try to work together (as nations and as humans) more, but also think it's useless to have superficial relationships as well... that's what Hollywood is for.

    8. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by 73939133 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      America's dominance is not a passing phase that started with WWII and ended on 9/11

      The beginning of the decline probably was some time in the 1980's when the US started going into debt more and more (see here). Ultimately, the whole idea of "America" itself becomes fuzzy, when a significant fraction of its assets are foreign-owned.

      I think 9/11 is mostly irrelevant to the long term position of the US in the world. If anything, it has harmed US power because of Bush's foreign policy blunders.

      and an apples-to-apples comparison would measure the EU against NAFTA

      No. NAFTA is primarily a trade arrangement, while the EU is much closer to a federation (free movement of people, harmonized laws, etc.).

      it's a phenomenon that will last as long as America lasts,

      Well, you reiterate common attitudes among Americans; the question is: are there any rational reasons to believe this?

      or until other nations become so much like America that one can't tell them apart.

      That's impossible: there simply isn't enough foreign investment (or oil, for that matter) to run other large nations like the US.

      In any case, the issue is not whether Europe or the US is "better" or a little bigger. The issue is whether the US is clearly predominant or whether it is just one of many centers of power in the world. I think the world will actually consist of half a dozen or so roughly equally powerful blocks or regions, one of which is the US. The question is whether Americans will accept that fact willingly.

    9. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree.

      A very nice rebuttal to an American in denial.

    10. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, my point about the aging population of Europe was that, as Europe has more social safety nets, won't said aging population lead to an increasing healthcare-payment burden for young Europeans?

      I believe per capita spending on healthcare is about half in Europe compared to the US (with comparable outcomes, one might add), so there is plenty of room for aging before European health care costs reach US health care costs.

      In any case, my point is merely that US power is balanced not only by Europe, but also by China, Russia, Japan, India, the Arab nations, and Africa. It's one of half a dozen comparable powers, not a single power that naturally dominates the entire rest of the world. Whether the US is a little bigger or smaller than any particular one of the other powers doesn't matter to that argument.

    11. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And using it to control world economy.

      Read what the people running the US government think about that. It really is no secret that is their exact goal.

    12. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Ngwenya · · Score: 1
      Um, what? The United States alone had a GDP of $10 trillion in 2001, compared to $7.8 trillion for the entire EU

      I'm not contradicting you here - but I would point out that (as I found to my cost on K5), measuring GDP is hellishly difficult. The latest OECD snapshot (2002) gives the EU-15 a GDP of $8591.60 billion dollars, versus the USA's $10365 billion. Which backs up your point, right?

      Well, maybe - but this is going purely by variable currency values (ie, strong dollar, weak euro). If we take the values fixed to 1995 dollar values and prices (so the trend gets measured), the USA stands at $9186 billion, versus the EU-15 at $10062 billion.

      Now, since then, the dollar has dropped versus the euro, so God knows what the relative values are - or even if it matters that much. The productivity is higher in the USA, the productivity per hour worked is higher in Europe (read into that what you will!).

      When the Eastern European nations join the EU, that provides a boatload of cheap ... err ... competitively priced labour (with higher birth rates, BTW).

      All I'm really saying here is that the dynamic is changing, and historical point data is of limited value in discerning the directions of both the USA and Europe.

      --Ng

    13. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      America's dominance is not a passing phase that started with WWII and ended on 9/11 -- it's a phenomenon that will last as long as America lasts, or until other nations become so much like America that one can't tell them apart.

      That is not true. America depends to a large extent on "soft power" which is in large part goodwill, moral leadership and ideology. Bush is pissing that away by offending everyone else in the world. If this trend continues unchecked, America will be an international pariah and that will have implications in commerce. Of course it is unlikely that the next president will be as much of a "divider, not a uniter" as Bush so a lot depends upon what happens next.

    14. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by GrimReality · · Score: 1
      ...Now that Europe is pretty close to a federation...

      True, but there is a lot of division still within the EU. Think of Norway, UK, Portugal and Spain. (I am not talking about support for 'Operation Iraqi Freedom', in which case I would have included Italy also.) It would take some time to bring any real mount of unity --enough to counteract the power of the US as you stated.

      ...and that China and India have caught up technologically...

      China: True they have made a lot of advances, and this statement is quite applicable. Still, they are quite far behind the US.

      India: This statement is pretty inaccurate in the case of India. If you are referring to internally developed technologies such as nuclear bombs, helicopters, satellites, rocket launchers etc., look closer: The development model in India is heavily biassed towards using off-the-shelf components and this makes them heavily dependent on US based suppliers. Maybe, this is a step forward, but far, far, far from saying that India has 'caught up technologically'. [Note: I know this because I have been following the developments closely, basically to quench my curiosity.]

      It is completely natural for European and Asian space programs, which represent larger populations and economies, to surpass the US programs...

      A logical conclusion, but this won't happen for a long time to come. A time-frame that is long enough to accomodate some disaster in the way (say Wold War 3) with a substantial probability; and this disaster could potentially set back these nations/unions by decades.

      Thank you.
      GrimReality
      2003-06-04 16:07:10 UTC (2003-06-04 12:07:10-0400)

    15. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by SETY · · Score: 1
      You can't compare:

      a GDP of $10 trillion in 2001, compared to $7.8 trillion for the entire EU

      The EU doesn't use dollars it uses euros. You need to take into account purchasing power.It WAS generally accepted that the US dollar WAS overvalued. Not sure if this is still true now (it might have dropped enough?).


      So the difference is not as great now. I'm pretty sure the US is still ahead....

    16. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by bromodrosis · · Score: 1

      Bush is pissing that away by offending everyone else in the world. If this trend continues unchecked, America will be an international pariah and that will have implications in commerce. Are you suggesting that in 4 his years of office, Bush will have the power to alienate every other country, regardless of our overall historic relationships? That seems a bit shortsighted to me. I'm no Bush fan, but the guy isn't anywhere near the Destroyer he's being made out to be here. If other world leaders can't see this as a 4 year blip instead of a political apocalypse, we're all in a lot more trouble than we think.

    17. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by tenchiken · · Score: 1


      Well, you reiterate common attitudes among Americans; the question is: are there any rational reasons to believe this?


      How about the fact that for 200 years America's "Great Experement" has forced every nation (to one degree or another) to start to emulate the system of government and rights.

      How about the fact that the American navy has never been defeated in open battle, and as early as 1812 was forcing the British navy (then the most powerful) to stay away from American frigates.

      How about the fact that the entire root of the industrial age was invented in America (interchangable parts), and were it not for the civil war, America, not Britian, would have been calling the shots during the Industrial revolution. How about the fact that for the last 100 years, American power has been decisive in every major confrontation across the world (and no, vietnam was not a major confrontation). In World War I, the entry of America stabilized a French army that was in a state of mutiny and American goods overwelmed and keep the Germany U-Boats at bay. In WWII we proped up two different nations that were facing complete defeat (UK and USSR) and proceeded with the largest invasion and land battle in History.

      How about the fact that we landed a man on the moon, put in place the first space telescope and invented almost every major piece of technology (transitors, video, rockets, packetized digital communications) that enables our current standard of living over the last 100 years?

    18. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      EU expansion is does not allow the newcomer state's citizens to work in the EU for 5 years. I live in Cyprus I know.

    19. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by tenchiken · · Score: 1


      But while the US is a nation and wants to act autonomously, other nations increasingly act as groups: Europe, the Arab nations, OPEC, sub-Saharan Africa, China, Japan, and Latin America. Among those half-dozen or so entities, the US is a fairly mid-size entity.


      Yep. Guess what. Contrary to European opinion we have no interest in following 2000 years of disasterous european policy and form a empire. Anyone is welcome to trade with us. Just don't abuse your population.


      At issue to me is the mismatch between the apparent American sense of indefinite entitlement to world leadership on the one hand, and the shaky foundations of its economy and moderate size on the other hand.


      As opposed to say the British/Spain/Roman empires. Yes. America is a empire, but when was the last time anyone payed tributary to us? For the most part, we just want the world to be peaceful and prosperous. Beyond that we don't much care.

    20. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what is it, are you people genetically better than us? Should we just give up living because there's just no point in our existence? Should we just bend over and take it? It seems I was not lucky enough to have been born in the chosen land. I guess I'm just a second class citizen of the world. We would never have invented transistors in a million years. Thanks for setting me straight by the way, there I was thinking that rockets were invented by the ancient Chinese.

    21. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Rxke · · Score: 1

      no private company is planning to put a launcher, capable of (manned) orbital operation into space in the short timeframe. Rutan, Xcor, et.c. are going to do a SUB orbital jump. That's something completely different. China OTOH will put their astronauts in orbit by the end of this year, if all works out according to plan.

    22. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Fireworks != rockets.

      The Germans invented rockets, not Americans. The famous name here is Werner von Braun. Americans just brought in the Germans after WWII to do their space program for them.

    23. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought Goddard was the Rocketman, Elton John be-damned?

    24. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yep, Goddard predates von Braun. It's amazing what a little googling will find. Goddard was an American who pioneered rocketry in the 20's and 30's. He had the idea of sending a rocket to the moon, proved that a rocket would work in a vacuum, etc. Americans didn't think much of his ideas and ridiculed him. But his research and findings inspired more research into rockets in Germany, where von Braun worked. He made the famous V-4, but later he and his team snuck out and surrendered to the Americans, and went to work in the US.

      Goddard sounds like a familiar story of a brilliant American pioneer whose ideas are shunned and ridiculed in his own country, and take root elsewhere. There's lots of instances of this, such as in the car industry. Americans in power can't tell a good idea when it slaps them in the face.

    25. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Dumbush · · Score: 1

      nah, if you are to trace the root of rocket design, then ultimately it goes back to China.

    26. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      As I said before, fireworks != rocketry.

      This is like saying you can trace the root of automobiles back to the caveman who invented the wheel.

      The chinese invented gunpowder and figured out how to use it as a propellant for small objects. This doesn't equate with the work necessary to create rockets with guidance systems, which were necessary both for space-bound launches and for launching V-4 rockets into Britain in WWII.

    27. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Aapje · · Score: 1

      In WWII we proped up two different nations that were facing complete defeat (UK and USSR) and proceeded with the largest invasion and land battle in History.

      Right. You gave some trucks and weapons to the USSR and that turned the war around??!! The truth is that Hitler overextended his army and the russians were able to quickly ramp up production in East-Russia and could expend millions of soldiers. Last, but not least, Hitler was an idiot (choosing an insignificant city as the most important military goal, even if it caused him to lose half his army). If Stalin had been a good leader, he would have won (relatively) easily. He dismantled the defense line just before the war, disregarded all reports of a pending attack, cleansed the army of many good commanders around 1937 and prevented effective leadership by giving communist party officials the right to negate orders (which was changed in 1942 and had an immediate effect on combat effectiveness).

      The heaviest fighting took place in Russia, they made the greatest sacrifices and caused the heaviest damage to the German army. I'm not saying this to take away from the valiant achievements by American soldiers, but you should realize that the war was more than an American Victory(tm).

      --

      The Drowned and the Saved - Primo Levi
    28. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by smallpaul · · Score: 1

      Did you read the ret of my post? I pointed out that the next president could fix things if he was so inclined. On the other hand, we don't know who the next president will be nor how long they will be in power.

    29. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The four-year blip has killed thousands of people (including citizens of "supportive" countries) and has enacted laws that severely curtail civil rights of the US citizens themselves (and we all know how difficult it will be to get rid of those laws if at all possible). When all this is observed by outsiders over a long period of time, it is easy to characterize the blip as something more significant and worrisome. All the more so when apparently most US citizens continue to support ignorance, fear, elitism and entitlement mindsets.

    30. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by mobius_stripper · · Score: 1

      ScottForbes said:

      China and India may have pockets of technological expertise, but they are not "caught up" in any meaningful sense -- they are not inventing radical new technologies or approaching first-world levels of infrastructure, health care or political stability. It will be a long, long time, measured in centuries, before either country equals the U.S. in an economic, scientific or military sense, even if the U.S. stops advancing.



      My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
      Look on my works ye mighty and despair!
      - Shelley, Ozymandias

      Look up the quote. You might find it interesting.

      China is economically about 10-15 years behind the US. India is about 20-25 years behind.
      Militarily, the US is overwhelmingly superior, but all that is required for an effective deterrent is a small fleet of nuclear missile subs, coupled with a reasonably convincing conventional defensive force.
      Around half the people driving the US technology industry are of Chinese and Indian origin. When the economies of these countries begin to be comparable with the US, the brain drain will stop and possibly reverse. The currently xenophobic and increasingly paranoid nature of US society and government will act as a catalyst.

      Krishna

      --
      --- I'd love to go out with you, but I have to study for a Turing test.
    31. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Around half the people driving the US technology industry are of Chinese and Indian origin"

      What have you been smoking? Where did you get that figure from?

    32. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by 73939133 · · Score: 1

      The US has clearly been very important globally in terms of technology, politics, and the advancement of freedom and liberty in the world. Overall, the US is generally a nice, well-behaved country. But you make it sound like the US did everything single-handedly and that's just not true. And I don't even want to get into all the areas where the positive US self-image corresponds to a rather negative historical reality.

      You also make the assumption that the first 200 years of the US are predictive of the future. There is no reason to believe that that's the case. Compared to most other nations, the US had it really easy over the first 200 years of its existence: it had vast natural resources, relative isolation both from other nations and of states within the nation, huge waves of skilled and motivated immigrants, etc. All that has been gradually changing over the last half century.

      Overall, thank you for illustrating my point so clearly: your posting is probably quite representative of the self-image of the US public, and it is just stunning in both its arrogance and its ignorance of world history.

    33. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by ScottForbes · · Score: 1

      The beginning of the decline probably was some time in the 1980's when the US started going into debt more and more [...]

      If you're asserting that the 1980s marked the beginning of a decline in American dominance of world affairs, then I'm afraid I have to ask what you're smoking. You may have some rational concerns about fiscal policy lurking in here (and we'd probably agree that Bush's tax cuts are less than useful in that regard), but your opening premise boggles the mind: What exactly would you consider an increase in American dominance of world affairs, if you view the era from 1980 to the present as a decline?

      That's impossible: there simply isn't enough foreign investment (or oil, for that matter) to run other large nations like the US.

      That logic is circular: If the rest of the world were producing at U.S. levels of efficiency, there would be enough foreign capital floating through the system to terraform Mars, much less build four or five competing GPS networks. Foreign investment is not resource-limited in the manner you imply, which suggests the world outside America has reached its peak efficiency and can generate no more wealth to invest with. There is an absolute abundance of untapped human potential in the world's economy, and the not-so-dark secret of America's rise to power is that it's been tapping that potential better than any other nation on earth.

      Don't believe me? Take the poorest, hungriest citizen of any other nation, teleport them to America, and see if they're richer or poorer after five years. Nine times out of ten the hapless person you pluck from poverty will be vastly better off, and the person hasn't changed one iota. It's the American package of personal freedoms and political rights which enables that person to earn a standard of living far higher than what they could achieve in China or Peru or Somalia, and conversely the ability of other nations to turn their resources into wealth is a function of how close they are to the American package.

      As for your parenthetical comment about oil, the problem is less the lack of oil resources and more that the supply expands and contracts unexpectedly, often in response to political events (e.g., a revolution in Saudi Arabia would whipsaw the price of oil right quick). If the world were full of stable democracies, you'd worry about oil about as often as you worry about tungsten or tuna; it wouldn't be The One Limited Resource whose lack prevents world prosperity. (If anything, the tuna is a higher candidate on that score -- overfishing will become a problem long before we drain the planet of oil.)

      In a sense you're right about one thing: China and India and Europe should be more productive than America. They have more resources and higher populations -- and if, say, China ever got its act together and bedded down basic concepts like the rule of law, property rights, and freedom of speech, it could become a real challenger to American dominance. And, personally, I think America would be tickled pink if that happened. I think we'd study their example and push ourselves harder, as we did with Japan in the 1980s -- but I don't think the U.S. will send the Navy to deal with economic threats, in the absence of a military threat that would affect our better judgement. (You can cite America's history of intervention in Central America as a counter-example, if you like, but I think that age has long since passed.)

      At most I think the EU might give America an economic run for its money for a decade or two, after which the Americans will study how the Europeans did it, adapt, and beat them at their own game. Militarily the U.S. has moved beyond dominance and is heading into "why bother trying?" territory: Even if China or the EU started building an army to rival America's, American tanks will have photon torpedoes by the time they're ready to ro

    34. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by ablair · · Score: 1


      "The United States alone had a GDP of $10 trillion in 2001, compared to $7.8 trillion for the entire EU -- and an apples-to-apples comparison would measure the EU against NAFTA"

      Um, you can count us out. Not interested in getting lumped in with 'borrow & spend' policies dragging down our "combined" economies.

      -Canada

    35. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      Sorry to burst your bubble, but _every_ jeep that went thru to Berlin, every piece of artillary, and every plane was from the UK and the USA. The tanks were the only thing that was locally produced. In addition, had it not been for normandy, Hitler would have overrun either Moscow or the oil fields. Either one would have let him solidify that front.

    36. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by tenchiken · · Score: 1
      Really? I have a degree in World History (focusing on German History and WWII history in particular). The biggest reasons why this trend will continue are the following:

      Europe's rabid anti-immigration policies.

      America's diversity.

      Europe's declining population.

      Radicilization of minorities in Europe.

      We didn't do everything single handidly, no, but on the other hand, we took the abstract ideas of Locke et all and made them concrete.

      Second, American isolationism is a myth. It has always been a myth. Go see "Savage Wars for Peace" and "Special Providence: American Foreign Policy" to see why.

    37. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Aapje · · Score: 1

      Right, those Stalin Organs were US artillery. Har Har. You can find some data here. As you can see, AA Lend-lease was the only significant artillery contribution. It was still less than a quarter of what the russians produced themselves (26thou vs 6thou). AT and field guns from the US and UK constituted an even smaller part of the russians artillery force.

      Hitler couldn't take either Moscow or the oil fields because he overextended his army and diverted troops to try to take an unimportant city. After he lost at Stalingrad, he no longer had the ability to take either Moscow or the oil fields. Especially after a major part of his army got encircled and destroyed. Many months later, Hitler was losing on the eastern front and the western Allieds invaded France. So perhaps you should check your timeline again, before you start making ridiculous claims. I would recommend Antony Beevor's The Fall of Berlin 1945 and Stalingrad: The Fateful Siege, 1942-1943

      --

      The Drowned and the Saved - Primo Levi
    38. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      I read the Faithful Siege, and I disagree with his conclusions. The Western European forces prior to the battle of the buldge were even lower in manpower and morale then many of the eastern front soilders, and they managed a counter attack. If Rommel had gone to the USSR rather then to Normandy, the soviets would have gotten clocked.

      As for production, just like in the US, most of that production was not forward deployed. On the other hand, lend lease equipment (which predated Stalingrad and America's entry into WWII) was. I remember talking to a WWII survivor who mentioned how unconfortable jeeps could be.

    39. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by Aapje · · Score: 1

      There were some pretty good german commanders in the east. The major problem was that Hitler was micromanaging everything (badly). He became extremely paranoid towards his generals (just like Stalin, dictators make bad military leaders, it seems). I think that Rommel had quite a bit of leeway in the Ardennes (where his only task was to counter the allieds), which he probably wouldnÂt have had in the east (Hitler wouldnÂt think of giving up Stalingrad, even when his men became surrounded). Hitler had become such a liability that I donÂt think that Germany had any chance after 1943.

      Lend-lease was important, especially in Â42 when the russians were still ramping up their production, but I really donÂt believe that it was decisive. The more comfortable US jeeps were certainly not the key to germanyÂs defeat :)

      --

      The Drowned and the Saved - Primo Levi
    40. Re:yes, major conflict brewing by 73939133 · · Score: 1

      Europe's rabid anti-immigration policies.

      Many European nations have larger immigrant populations than the US as a fraction of their populations, so their policies can't be all that "rabidly anti-immigrant".

      Also, I have first hand experience with immigration policies in both the US and Europe. US immigration was degrading, threatening, and unpredictable. The US has quotas and (what amounts to) racial restrictions. If it weren't for US politicians who are keeping the borders open for skilled immigrants and laborers because they know they would be destroying their local economies, popular attitudes in the US are strongly anti-immigration.

      America's diversity.

      I don't see much diversity in the US, only a lot of bickering about skin color and "heritage" by people who speak the same language, drive the same SUVs, watch the same TV shows, and eat at the same fast food restaurants.

      Europe's declining population.

      And why is that a problem? China and India are trying to achieve that goal. The idea that high fertility is the solution to economic and social woes is some 19th century myth. Sooner or later, every nation has to stop growing.

      Radicilization of minorities in Europe.

      Even with all that supposed radicalization, violent crime, and terrorism generally seem less of a problem in Europe than in the US.

      Really? I have a degree in World History (focusing on German History and WWII history in particular).

      Well, it sounds to me like you didn't get your money's worth.

      In any case, you are missing the real point. If a nation of 300 million people unilaterally makes political decisions for the remaining 6 billion people, that is undemocratic and violates the principles that the US supposedly stands for; if Americans enjoy unparalleld freedoms domestically, as you keep arguing, that only is adding insult to injury.

  72. What bait do you use? by Doctor+Dark · · Score: 1

    Or did you mean bated breath...

    --

    The original Doctor Dark.

  73. US, EU, Russia, China, etc.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    don't forget - India also has major space launch capability.

    Just to give the paranoids something to chew on, bear in mind that when the international agreements outlawing nuclear equipment in space were signed, India was not a spacefaring nation.
    They were not a signatory to these agreements, and thus are not bound by them..

  74. Gallileo (European GPS) wichtig f�r Europa. by Cray+MCP · · Score: 0

    Gallileo ist ein wichtiges Unternehmen für Europa. Eine eigenständige Flotte von Navigations-Satelliten wird Europa wesentlich unabhängiger machen von den US-Militärs. Ebenso der zivile Sektor, der immer von den Störaktionen des US-GPS-Systems durch das US-Miltär bedroht war. Jetzt fehlt der Europäischen Union nur noch eine Flotte von Spionage-Satelliten, die Bilder die die US-Miltärs rausrücken sind bekanntermaßen recht dürftig (und evtl. manipuliert). Ebenso sollte die geplante Europäische Streitmacht dazu beitragen, dem amerikanischen Imperialismus entgegenzuwirken, und eigenständig militärische Aktionen durchführen zu können. Da passt ein eigenes Nav-System natürlich perfekt. Translatet by Babelfish: Gallileo (European Satellite System) is importantly for Europe. Gallileo is an important enterprise for Europe. Its own fleet of navigation satellites will make Europe substantially more independent of US military. Likewise the civilian sector, which was threatened by the US Miltaer always by the interfering reactions of the US government inspection department system. Now only a fleet of spy satellites, which rausruecken pictures those the US Miltaers are well-known-measured quite, is missing to the European union poorly (and possibly manipulates). Likewise the planned European armed force should contribute to work against the American imperialism to be able to accomplish and independently military actions. There its own Nav system fits naturally perfectly. Mfg, Cray MCP

    --
    Micro$oft ist nicht die Antwort. Micro$oft ist die Frage. Und die Antwort ist NEIN.
  75. The real shuttle tragedy.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is that we're still using shuttles. They should have been replaced with a better design 5 years ago.

  76. Re:EUROPE IS A DANGEROUS EMPIRE IN THE MAKING by quax · · Score: 0

    Scary prospect.

  77. Re:DISARM EUROPE NOW!! by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

    um, not really, france got mostly tactical nukes, no city-busters.

    --
    if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
  78. GDP and Reality by SunPin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That's because you can spend it on hospitals. While 15% of the US GDP goes to the military, only three percent of the EU GDP goes to the military. The result is that, right or wrong, defense is something that trumps social programs. Europe has social programs as a higher *spending* priority than defense. Spending is the key word because European governments know that US bases are all over the place to protect them. While you may be delighted if the US leaves Europe (and I would be delighted also), it would cause massive budget priority changes across the continent. You might have to ask the private sector for that hospital or that upgraded public transit system. Basically, saying that Europe is better because they build hospitals instead of tanks is a demonstration of ignorance and a troll at best.

    --
    Laws are for people with no friends.
    1. Re:GDP and Reality by Betcour · · Score: 1

      When you have ICBMs, you don't really need that much more military to keep your enemies quiet.

    2. Re:GDP and Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. You can't exactly fire ICBMs at terrorists. The general trend has been away from Cold War staples like nukes and toward lighter, highly mobile ground units.

    3. Re:GDP and Reality by krisp · · Score: 1

      Just because you have ICBM's does not mean you are willing to use them on a whim. If you don't have a conventional military, you are shit out of luck when one of your satelitte colonies gets invaded.

    4. Re:GDP and Reality by paranode · · Score: 1
      I appreciate your efforts to try and say something nice about the US. However, you should get your facts straight first.

      The 2003 Budget projected real GDP of the United States is about $9.7 trillion. The 2003 spending budget of the Department of Defense is $358.2 billion. This includes more than just the military spending, and it is a mere 3.7% of the GDP.

      Thanks!

    5. Re:GDP and Reality by dbrutus · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The EU figure is around 1% of GDP by comparison. Neither figure is adequate for wartime. I believe that the day we got hit at Pearl Harbor we were at 3% of GDP.

      The EU considers it can get by with 1/3 of minimum peacetime military because it has a security subsidy from the US worth about 2% of their GDP and they get it by being nice and fuzzy and rolling over every time the US needs to do something military in the world. I wonder how long that 2% subsidy is going to last if they continue to pretend full independence like a spoiled brat teenager who wants to stay at home with his parents but without any of their rules?

      It would be a useful exercise for EU voters to ask their local legislator what would have to give if their nation's defense budget had to be tripled. The social services carnage would be awesomely horrific I think but you all should check, just to get the real information from your local experts.

    6. Re:GDP and Reality by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      You're also SOL if a plane is crashed into the Eiffel Tower, Big Ben, or whatever your local landmark is. Nukes are useless for states fighting terrorists.

    7. Re:GDP and Reality by CreationLtd · · Score: 2
      Nukes are useless for states fighting terrorists.

      As are tanks, fighter jets, bombers, submarines, aircraft carriers, destoyers, etc.

    8. Re:GDP and Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try 3-4% of US GDP, dimwit.

      15% of GDP would be a 1.5 TRILLION dollar military. While Bush would love this, it's unrealistic.

      As far as 25 EU countries being greater GDP than US, big deal. The fact you have to add 25 countries to match the US says a lot.

    9. Re:GDP and Reality by BenTels0 · · Score: 1
      I wonder how long that 2% subsidy is going to last if they continue to pretend full independence like a spoiled brat teenager who wants to stay at home with his parents but without any of their rules?

      Who cares? With or without the United States, the European Union has no military enemies capable of taking on the combined EU nations. The United States concentrates ont he fact that the US is so far ahead of Europe in military terms, but everybody very casually forgets that Europe is still equally far ahead of everybody but Russia and the US.

    10. Re:GDP and Reality by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      The EU, AFAIK does not have a military existance outside of NATO. Without the US pretty much means without NATO. After the shabby treatment NATO member Turkey received when it invoked it's NATO obligations, is everybody 100% sure that all the other EU nations would respond?

      In reality, the EU is likely to skate through for at least a decade more but after US patience is exhausted its likely to face a choice of mending fences with the US or finance its own defense.

      The nature of wolves never change. They always like hunting undefended sheep.

    11. Re:GDP and Reality by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      UCAV's, on the other hand, have provided some demonstrated some real usefulness.

      Every once in awhile you can hear shrieks of pain from the Pentagon. That's Rumsfeld extracting another Cold War relic arms system from the hands of another dead general. The problem of reworking our armed forces to handle the new style of attack from weak 'non-integrating gap' nations is real and you're right to point it out. But the classic ratios say a 3:1 attack against regular enemy forces is a slam dunk. The ratio for irregulars is 10:1. Given that reality, the new style warfare may require more, not less money, just in different places.

    12. Re:GDP and Reality by BenTels0 · · Score: 0
      The EU, AFAIK does not have a military existance outside of NATO.

      In fact, it does. The EU has subsumed the old WEU and as such it comprises a mutual defense pact of its members. And of course there is ongoing effort wrt the RRF, whose status is somewhere between "being founded" and "usable". However, the old WEU component of the EU is the relevant thing here.

      Without the US pretty much means without NATO.

      Quite frankly, I'm tempted to say "So what?". With NATO doesn't mean very much anymore either, thanks to Georgie-boy and his cowboy diplomacy.

      After the shabby treatment NATO member Turkey received when it invoked it's NATO obligations, is everybody 100% sure that all the other EU nations would respond?

      Let's not get things mixed up here. In the case of Turkey, we weren't talking about a real territorial threat as under Article 4 of the NATO Treaty (it was, however, an unlikely threat brought about by the actions of another NATO member state) and honoring Turkey's request at that time could indeed have been interpreted as giving tacit consent to military action against Iraq. What you are talking about now is something completely different: you're talking about a direct assault on the territory of the Union by outside forces. No provocation, no question of illicit support of any other military intervention, but direct attack of a Union member by outside forces. Oh yeah, everybody would show up, no question.

      That aside, you'll note that Turkey still got its Patriots, both from us and from Germany.

      And that aside, an interesting thought occurs to me -- in the absence of permission from the UN Security Council, NATO support for an invasion of Iraq of any kind may very well have been illegal. There is a real possibility, you see, that such an action would be incompatible with Article 1 of the Treaty.

      its likely to face a choice of mending fences with the US or finance its own defense.

      We do finance our own defense; we just don't maintain the totally unnecessary overcapacity that the US does. We all have standing armies and usually quite modern equiptment as well, you know; for the life of me I don't understand why Americans persist in believing we don't. Just because we couldn't defeat the United States or Russia, doesn't mean that we are suddenly easy pickings for everybody else.

      And if we did have to go it alone, what would be so bad about that? We can do that. God only knows, we've proven ourselves good enough at killing other human beings indiscriminately over the past centuries. We might even be better at it than the US; consider, for instance, that almost without exception there has been no weapon of great destructive capability in the world that was not invented at least by Europeans and usually in Europe. The Chinese came up with gunpowder and cannon, plus a primitive rocket, but the steel cannon, mortar, rifle, repeating rifle, flame thrower, the tank, the fighter jet, the bomb, the ballistic missile, the atom bomb, the gas bomb, the biological weapon -- all of them essentially European in origin. Even the United States with its massive arsenal has never been very inventive; the new EM-pulse bomb is moderately original, but everything else has just been heavier and heavier variations of stuff we came up with (even the Daisy Cutter is, really, just a very heavy bomb). That may even be part of why Europeans so loathe to go to war -- fear of what godawful horror we might come up with next.

      The nature of wolves never change. They always like hunting undefended sheep.

      Perhaps. But I fear for their sakes that the wolves would find Europe slim pickings.

    13. Re:GDP and Reality by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      You're quite right about the WEU and I'm sure there are equally relevant defense pacts from before the war that could just as easily be ressurected.

      As for Turkey, you're repeating the arguments of France, Germany, and Belgium. All the remaining NATO powers disagreed. The unravelling of alliances are usually not sudden, but happen over long periods of time and repeated insult. The situation with Turkey is a sign that the alliance might be getting a bit frayed. The final rupture might take decades if nothing is done about it. The rupture between Constantinople and Rome took centuries. It's still a worrisome situation.

      You're essentially correct that europeans are historically very good at war. But history wins no battles without well-funded, well-trained forces. The future threat situation might very well require going into a Congo or Zimbabwe to root out a future Al Queda before they can get their nukes up and running for a simple smuggling run into Marseilles. Europe seems particularly ill suited to project power these days.

      I fear for the return of another charming rogue to the US presidency who will bring the US into another decade of navel gazing. I don't see anybody else stepping up and providing adult supervision.

    14. Re:GDP and Reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Right.


      After all, if the US removes its occupational forces, er, "forces that defend us", we'll be wide open to invasion by, erm, er, Turkey! SHIT! We'd better pump up the spending on defense then.


      I wonder where Americans get the idea that America has troops in Europe for any other reason than pure self interest? Where do they get the idea that the EU would be in incredible danger if it were not for these troops? Why do they throw screaming hissy fits when the EU says "OK, think we'll create a small army", and then piss and moan about "providing our defense" against some invisible threat that apparantly the USians are protecting us from?


      Jesus you're ignorant.

    15. Re:GDP and Reality by BenTels0 · · Score: 0
      As for Turkey, you're repeating the arguments of France, Germany, and Belgium.

      Of course I am -- they were right. NATO is first and foremost a defense alliance; it was never a united attack force. Going on the offensive (not as a response to attack, but as in starting a war) is something completely different than helping to defend an ally against attack and NATO membership includes no obligation in that area -- for good reason. Just because we are all NATO allies, that doesn't mean we have to help the US start a war (especially on the weak and ever-crumbling basis that the US provided in the case of Iraq). Nor is NATO alliance a backdoor for procuring support for a war from people who don't want to give it -- and you're not supposed to ask for Article 4 or 5 support if you don't really need it either.

      All the remaining NATO powers disagreed.

      They disagreed insofar that withholding support from an ally is always dangerous to an alliance that is based around mutual defense. That is not the same as saying that they disagreed with the underlying position.

      The situation with Turkey is a sign that the alliance might be getting a bit frayed.

      "A bit frayed?" Where have you been for the past ten years? NATO is dying the death of uselessness, of being a military alliance whose enemy has croaked. That's not enough to support an alliance in which one partner acts like king and dictator the way the US does. NATO is pretty much a thing of the past; only time remains.

      The rupture between Constantinople and Rome took centuries.

      No it didn't. The separation was administrative and done in a day. After that, Rome fell.

      Europe seems particularly ill suited to project power these days.

      Not as ill-suited as the US likes to think. The US is very impressed with its Seals and Rangers and other special forces and their ability to insert them stealthily. Here's news for you: we can all do that. Europe's forces (particularly France and Britain) can take out terrorists. Europe is not equipped to invade entire nations and occupy them. But then, we don't want to do that -- we already know what the US is learning right now, you see: nothing good ever comes of that. Either you lose in which case you look stupid, or you win and then you have to occupy and administer a country where you are not wanted -- which is a hell of a lot worse.

      I don't see anybody else stepping up and providing adult supervision.

      It is the idea that the US has the right to bully everybody and push everybody around (providing "adult supervision", in your words) that makes the US so many enemies. And alienates so many of its friends.

    16. Re:GDP and Reality by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      In the Congo people are raping, killing, and even eating one another. In wide portions of the muslim world somebody who can wave a theology degree around without any sort of state sanction or even heirarchical religious oversight can write a judicial judgement that passes a death sentence and expect his followers to attempt to carry it out (anywhere in the world) without going to jail for conspiracy to commit murder.

      These are just two situations that require adult supervision by *somebody* and since the traditional adults of the last few centuries seem to have decided to retreat into their own european countries in a funk, that leaves the US carrying an awful lot more of the burden than it should as it has a form of government designed to make it *really* bad at this sort of action.

      So France is taking a shot in the Congo and good luck to it. All of that infrastructure that you say the EU doesn't need is suddenly both necessary and simply not there. You have to give the French credit for taking a step towards growing up on great power military responsibilities and truly reclaiming their place in the community of nations. Their forces are likely to be stretched quite badly by the lack of power projection capability and I hope that the results are just burnt out troops (see 3rd ID in Iraq) and not surplus casualties.

      The relations between Rome and Constantinople weren't all great friendship between the Patriarch and the Pope and then one day somebody got pissed off and a thousand year rupture ensued. There were problems gathering for at least two centuries prior.

      It gives me chills as an american lecturing a european to study history more.

      The world is coming to an end!
      B-)

  79. Unbelievable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wars start over stuff like that. I am amazed that the US could even dare consider it.

    1. Re:Unbelievable by tektrix · · Score: 1

      Uh, better turn that amazement into something like "extremely concerned", or better yet, "not suprised". Take a good look around . . . the US is rapidly becoming an autonomous power-machine without a user interface . . . or even effective closed-loop feedback. A few wild oscillations that quickly turn into chaotic behavior pretty well describes the future of the US, unless something dampens the system. Global competition might do it.

    2. Re:Unbelievable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dream on dude.
      Europe economy is dying under the heavy burden of the "soft cushion of socialism" and what's worse , the population got so lazy that even the slightest attempt at any reform causes massive strikes and unrest.
      True legacy of socialism.

      The old saying that the democracy will end when people figure out that they can vote themselves more and more money is becoming reality in EU.

    3. Re:Unbelievable by mfrank · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and the sad thing is that the eastern European countries, the ones that have a chance at prospering, see joining the EU as a *good* thing.

      You'd think that they'd at least know that socialism sucks.

  80. What will NASA do? by analog_line · · Score: 1

    How will NASA react to this news after being the dominant space agency over the past three decades?

    Nothing, because no one wants to give them enough money to do anything. Not enough people care about space in America to fund it.

  81. Very unlikely on both counts by EnglishTim · · Score: 2, Interesting

    War is not going to break out between the US and Europe - both sides have enough nuclear missiles to completely wipe the other off the face of the Earth. It's not going to happen. Even if we could resist falling back on nukes, neither side has a sufficiently powerful military to overtake the other - it's just not feasible.

    The recent tiff over Iraq is nothing to worry about, and will largely blow over. There's far too much trade in both directions, and there's a lot of Europeans in America and a lot of Americans in Europe. We're just too close to go to war.

    As for The UK splitting off from Europe to join with America - I really can't see that happening. The loss of sovereignty in joining Europe is small fry compared to becoming a state of the US.

    1. Re:Very unlikely on both counts by Fesh · · Score: 1

      Yeah, countries within the EU for the moment are still for the most part self-determining nations. Hell, even though Canada and Australia revere the British monarchy, they're independant entities. Become a State of the Union however, and the Federal apparatus will emasculate that real quick. Probably why Puerto Rico keeps waffling. Can't say I blame them.

      --
      --Fesh
      Kill -9 'em all, let root@localhost sort 'em out.
    2. Re:Very unlikely on both counts by brsmith4 · · Score: 1

      Um, not counting russia, but what European countries have enough nukes to match the U.S.? Plus, we are busy building a missile shield which will soon render most ICBMs fairly useless against us.

    3. Re:Very unlikely on both counts by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      I'd actually agree that the UK in NAFTA instead of the EU isn't going to happen but you have the sovereignty issues backwards. NAFTA rules are *much* easier on sovereignty than EU rules. We don't care whether you use pounds or kilograms and whether you keep traditional english hedgerows.

      Becoming a state might be an option but it's unlikely in the extreme both because you wouldn't want it and neither would we. The US is not in an expansive mood and hasn't been for quite a long time. We've gotten picky about who can become a state.

    4. Re:Very unlikely on both counts by avdp · · Score: 1

      Yes, the US probably has more nukes than European nations, but unfortunately it just doesn't take that many nukes to do the job. Probably why both Russia and the US have agreed to reduce their arsenal over the years. Good PR, does little to reduce their might.

    5. Re:Very unlikely on both counts by tenchiken · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree with most of your points, except the argument that neither side has a sufficently powerful militay to overtake the other. Europe has around 1 division that is "independent" of NATO (all of the logistics in NATO are US-owned. We are the only ones who would pay for it), and even that unit is not independent until it gets some heavy lift capacity.

      The US on the other had can deploy 3 divisions a month (we have 12 total, I believe), 3 additional Marine divisions (MEU) and 12 super carrier groups. If it came down to a war anywhere in the world, unless there is a act of supreme incompetence or a act of God, you don't want to root against the US.

      The Iraq tiff will blow over, but there are people in Europe who make no bones about wanting to challange American power. Frankly, with how poor Europe is doing with minority populations (see Monyiham's(sp) book) I suspect that Europe will have to challange radical islamists (ala Russia and the middle east) before they challange the US.

      As for the UK, poll after poll states that the English trust America to come to Englands need in case of emergency far more then the commonwealth (Canada, Australia) and orders of magnitude above the EU. I suspect the anglosphere will continue to gain momentum.

    6. Re:Very unlikely on both counts by EnglishTim · · Score: 1

      Well, I confess I'm not that well informed on the exact sizes of our national armies, but I'd be surprised if the combined national armies of the EU were much smaller that the US army. It seems you know quite a lot about it though - I'd certainly apperciate some clarification...

      The total amount of money spent on the military in the US is probably about double what is spent in the EU though...

    7. Re:Very unlikely on both counts by tenchiken · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The only nation that has anything approximating the forces of the United States is the UK. Here is a dirty little secret, the US Navy and the UK navy are completly in bed already. American commanders can tap into british ships and vice versus (I believe that Canada and Japan can as well). While America does not spend a much larger percentage of GDP on the military (about 2.8-3.1 percent last I looked) the size of the US economy alone, and the fact that the spending has been pretty static for a while results in us having a huge lead in tatics and equipment.

      The other large factor (again) is NATO. Countries that have military units "lend" them to NATO (for example, I believe that the US lends NATO three American divisions). Over time, the European units have focused on front line units, giving them punch in NATO (while the US does all of the logistical concerns). Outside of NATO, they simply do not have the logistical or C2 (command and control) structures neccesary to fight a war.

      The UK and France both have "independent" systems. France however has huge issues with their navy. The UK OTOH under UKUSA and other "anglosphere" agreements focueses much more on integration with the US then anythign else.

    8. Re:Very unlikely on both counts by fini · · Score: 1


      Um, not counting Russia, but what European countries have enough nukes to match the U.S.?

      US and Russia both have in the order of 6000 deliverable nukes (deliverable as in when the crazy guy at the top pushed the big red button). But Russia's not really in Europe, at least so far. France has about 600 deliverables nukes and the UK 200. UK doesn't really count 'cause those nukes are under US control. 600 nukes don't look like much compared to 6000 but with 1 or 2 thermonukes per city, that's still 300 to 500 major cities completely leveled. Enough to send back a country to the stone age. BTW, while the US and USSR (Russia) spent most of the Cold War devising very intricate nuclear doctrines of graduated strikes against military targets and so on yada yada, France has always been very straight forward regarding its doctrine: "If you attack us or threaten to attack with nukes, we nuke as many of your cities as possible and kill as many of your people as possible." Raw anti-metropolis stuff.

      Plus, we are busy building a missile shield which will soon render most ICBMs fairly useless against us.

      I suspect that's a attempt at humoring us.

      This fancy "shield" GWB, Rumsfeld and Co are so busy deploying is targeted at very primitive ballistic missiles (North Korea or Iranian flying junk) and even then it's not working and not at risk of working any time soon. Needless to say, there won't be any working shield for the next 20 years against maneuverable hardened warheads masked by tons of decoys.

      --
      SNS Not Sig
    9. Re:Very unlikely on both counts by EnglishTim · · Score: 1

      I suppose this is another reason why war is exceptionally unlikely - NATO would have to disintergrate before such a thing could happen.

      This had me thinking, though. I was reading recently (sorry, I forget the URL) about the US wish to have the ability to deny any country (including allies) of the ability to use their satellites. I'd like to know the ramifications would be for NATO if they ever used something like that against an allied country (As they have said they are prepared to do)...

  82. 'Nucular' by EnglishTim · · Score: 0

    Er... I think that was a joke...

    All this from a guy whose Slashdot id is 'SkewlD00d'...

  83. Re:Some perspective by splateagle · · Score: 1

    Not much progress ever since that pissing contest ended, hm?

    Oh I don't know, it's debatable wether either the Shuttle fleet or Mir could really be said to be part of the 'contest' since both took development in such utterly different directions.

    I'm as disapointed as you that we (humans) are making such slow progress as we are, but I see plenty of examples that co-operation can drive that progress just as well as competition can... here's hoping we'll see the two driving forces ballanced better in future, it might just speed things up a little.

  84. Military vehicles and weapons .. by braun · · Score: 2, Informative

    .. aren't only manufactured in Russia and Usa. The beautiful land of Sweden, with companies like Bofors, Space Universities and more, is a big manufacturer and exporter of both military and space technology. Go Fugelsand!

  85. Conflict by theolein · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The relations were shown to be not as convivial as as some had hoped in the Iraq war. But to think it started there is naive. The idea of a European military initiative has been a thorn in the side of US military for some years now, and the US was opposed to the Gallileo system as well. While the US might try to increase other countries dependance on the US, a lot of countries have seen that this is not necessarily in their own best interests.

    The EU is not alone in this kind of thinking, India also tries to minimise it's dependance on the US, as does China.

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

      Great, now that we have that all out in the clear, maybe we can start kicking some of those smelly bastards out of our country.

  86. What choice do you think the Europeans have? by Fefe · · Score: 4, Informative
    The USA has repeatedly threatened to use their GPS monopoly to deny service to people they don't like. Here is one story from 2001:

    wired: U.S. Could Deny GPS To Taliban

    The international fear and uncertainty has become so large that the Pentagon even feld compelled to say they wouldn't enact a global GPS blackout during war time. This is obviously a completely unbearable situation for anyone besides the US government. Here is a link:

    Reuters: Pentagon pledges 'no global GPS blackout'

    I don't know what happened to the Russian space positioning system that was once discussed as alternative, but the European Union is completely right in that they think they have to create an alternative to GPS. Even more puzzling is the fierceness with which the USA have tried to stop Galileo (why would they do that if not to leverage their monopoly pressure?). Here is a satnews.com story about it:

    EU Postpones Decision on Galileo System Until 2002

    The argument of the US government against Galileo was that it "could be abused by future enemies". So you can see how the US government is using GPS to pressure others. It is very important to create an alternative to GPS, even if it's just to stop the US from bullying other nations.

    So much about Galileo, but what about other reasons for a non-US space program? I think one of the most dramatic display of bullying ever to be seen by any government is what the US government semi-openly discussed according to a Reuters story this February: to deny other nations access to space:

    U.S. Pentagon Sees Space as Military 'High Ground'

    If any sovereign nation sees something like this, it is obvious that a big space program besides the US one is absolutely necessary. The USA have proven time and again that they are a very volatile friend who on a whim decides to deny their resources to their friends.

    There was one well documented case in the Bosnian war that is quite telling. The US vehemently denied ground troops and any real war involvement of theirs in Bosnia, on the grounds that Clinton thought his political career would be over of pictures of dead soldiers arrived home. So the role of the USA was mostly reconnaissance and intelligence and they did help keeping the air space empty. However, it later turned out that they gave weapons to the rebels, in violation of NATO orders. Here is one link about it:

    Washington finances ethnic warfare

    This is a very serious issue, please don't take my word for it, look for yourself. There was a good joint European documentary about it a while ago, where they interviewed the NATO official in Bosnia, a Norwegian military official, and he said that the USA basically denied their allies the contractually guaranteed intelligence to cover up their covert operations.

    In my eyes this kind of behaviour leaves Europe no other choice but to go for independence in space and military. Most nations have given in to US surveillance and intelligence superiority, some like Australia and Britain even joined the Echelon system. There are stories that even those very close allies do not have full access to the jointly generated intelligence. In effect, the USA is exploiting and abusing everyone else around them, and now Mr Bush has stepped over the line with his excessive bullying and the other nations are banding together.

    I have been waiting for this for many years, and I am happy that it finally happened. While I despise Bush on all levels, he did something very valuable for the world. He gave them enough motivati

    1. Re:What choice do you think the Europeans have? by smallpaul · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I followed one of your links and found this: Our space assets now are probably more important to warfighters and more important to our ability to win this global war on terrorism than they ever have been historically.

      Here's what amazes me. America learned one lesson with 9/11: there are people who want to destroy it. But America seems to be oblivious to another lesson: they do not need high-tech weapons, weapons of mass destruction, ballistic missiles etc. They can use commercial airlines. They can use fertilizer. They can use off-the-shelf explosives. They can use box cutters. The Military/Industrial complex wants to fight Al Queada as if it were the Soviet Union: "we'll have bigger guns than them and then we'll win." "Iraq is developing big guns so we better invade them." But that shows a complete misunderstanding of the tactics of the real enemy. They shocked the world by using innovation rather than big guns.

    2. Re:What choice do you think the Europeans have? by ktorn · · Score: 1

      Wow, things are moving fast now.

      As an European I'm happy to see Europe uniting and producing exciting technologies, but I wouldn't go as far as calling the USA "the enemy".

      I don't agree with President Bush's foreign policy but I don't blame the USA and the American people for it. In fact, I think those who are backing Mr Bush (quite a few) are revolted with the rest of the world for things like 9/11. I understand their feelings, and hope that reason will be restored with time. We're not all out to destroy them. We value freedom just like the Americans do.

      Developing technologies that compete with the US is a good thing. Not because they're the enemy, but because competition stirs people to work harder and produce "giant leaps" that will benefit us all.

      It's about time we have another tech race, but amongst friends ;)

    3. Re:What choice do you think the Europeans have? by Sloppy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You don't have to forsake your high-tech weapons in order to fight a low-tech enemy.

      If you are facing an enemy who uses trucks full of fertilizer, are you supposed to fight them by driving your own fertilizer trucks at them? No, you spy on them from your Electric Eye in the sky, and then drop a GPS-guided bomb on 'em.

      Ok, maybe it's not really that simple, but high-tech weapons will always be useful and have advantages over not having high-tech weapons.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    4. Re:What choice do you think the Europeans have? by dogfart · · Score: 1
      There was a more disturbing article I think in EE Times, where the US basically states it has a military monopoly in space, that ALL spacecraft (civilian or military) exist at its sufferance, and that the US has the option to take out any other nation's satellites.

      I swear I read this recently, and can't seem to dig it up. Anyone else know the article I am talking about?

      --

      "dope will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no dope"

    5. Re:What choice do you think the Europeans have? by multi+io · · Score: 1
      Ok, maybe it's not really that simple, but high-tech weapons will always be useful and have advantages over not having high-tech weapons.

      Well, no. This argument assumes that developing high-tech weapons costs no money at all. But if there are anti-terror strategies other than "high-tech weapons" which reduce the terrorist threat 10 times more than high-tech weapons for the same price, then having high-tech weapons may in fact have disadvantages over not having them.

    6. Re:What choice do you think the Europeans have? by xyr0 · · Score: 1
      why do you always think of destroying terrorists with weapons, may they be high-tech or just simple kalaschnikovs? why dont you think about drying the terrorists support in countries in the third world where ppl live in poverty and then see how we in the first world live in our luxury (half of the worldÂs population have to live with less than 1$/day)? the problem is that almost everything is actio-reactio. "an eye for an eye leaves the world blind".

      if bush is really serious about protecting america, then he shouldnt upgrade the military but support other countries humanitarily. the "war on terrorism" is leading no where. al qaeda gets more support than ever.

      but there are also ppl saying that bush and his team doesnt really want to get the terrorists. they say that this war (which bush says to be endless) is only the cover for doing things like the recent war on iraq. say they got WMD and make them have to prove it (i still cant understand it), get in, protect the oil and leave hospitals without protection, then have no idea whatÂs going on the country that is in anarchy. oh, and btw, the WMD havent been found.

  87. Russia is a European country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "As a result Europe has no experience in building manned spacecraft - unless they would get it from Russians."

    The Russians ARE Europeans. Where did this Russians-are-not-Europeans PC nonsense come from?

    1. Re:Russia is a European country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where did this Russians-are-not-Europeans PC nonsense come from?

      Their history maybe?

    2. Re:Russia is a European country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think it's a PC thing - the confusion comes from people refering to the EU as "Europe". You're quite right however" Russia is indeed a European country... wonder if they'll ever join the EU?

  88. Re:DISARM EUROPE NOW!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, sorry, plenty there

    The U.K can level a few cities, too

    Isreal probably can too but they're not technically in Europe, they have not declared their nuclear capability, and they're unlikly to attack the U.S (Even less likely than France and the U.K are!)

  89. Re:Is there more to it than traditional exploratio by d_strand · · Score: 1

    ESA / EU isnt doing much at all in space at the moment.. launching a probe now and then and small work on the ISS is about it... and the Ariane of course.

    Biggest reason is money. Historically the EU hasnt thought space very important, only France has spent any money worth mentioning on space (and it is still nothing compared to what the US has spent)... mostly because of their US-envy, and no matter what you Yanks think, France isnt very popular in the rest of EU who tends to think the Frence government a bunch of pathetic has-beens :-)

  90. encouraging private space industry by KavanaghNY · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sadly, the Russian Space Agency has encouraged private enterprise more in the last decade than has it's cold-war capitalist rival, NASA.

    To effectively stimulate the commercial launch industry NASA must stop competing with private start-ups. The most important first step it could take would be to competitively bid resupply for the Internation Space Station. In this transport sector, the space shuttle is hogging potential commercial business that NASA could otherwise outsource.

    "The government should seek to cultivate a commercial launch industry in the same way that postal airmail did with civil aviation in the early 20th century."

    Letter to Senators from NY on NASA's future
    http://stellarlink.com/blog/archives/00000 9.html

  91. Which side are you on? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All I know is with recent events there are definite wedges being placed between EU/Russia/China and the US.

    The question is which side are you going to be on?

    Someone had mentioned earlier about a WWIII, and I don't doubt it. China has always been suspicious to the US, the euro is in direct competition with the US dollar. A war could easily errupt between these factions. Like always, it will be about money. Time to move to europe!

  92. Re:DISARM EUROPE NOW!! by 10Ghz · · Score: 0

    They have submarines that have strategic missiles.

    --
    Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
  93. Dominant space agency? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    How will NASA react to this news after being the dominant space agency over the past three decades?



    That's like saying Microsoft had the domininant disk operating system for over ten years.

  94. further simple recoil reduction system by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

    A equal payload could be fired down in the direction the earth
    but it is captured in a hydraulic or pneumatic piston .

    The 2 guns firing simultaneous to each other cancel
    each others recoil , piggy backing one on the other .

    Hydrogen based thrusters for a short fire burn would
    or could also achieve this effect .

    The rail gun weapons planned for SDI were of a similar mind .

    Peace,
    Ex-MislTech

    --
    google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
  95. China is in the same boat as Europe by Fefe · · Score: 1

    Currently everyone is afraid of US hegemony.

    The driving force between the Chinese space program is the fear of US dominance. It's in their interest (and in the interest of everyone else) that no single nation has significantly more power than others; that means world wide and concerning a small region.

    That's why China sold the nukes to Pakistan. One nation being significantly more powerful than everyone around them is a recipe for instability and desaster. It's the same axiom by which the US and Israel governments act as well, when they give Taiwan weapons or access to espionage satellites.

    The only detail that is not obvious about this is why the world has let the US become so dominant in the first place. Maybe because there was nobody powerful enough to stop them?

    1. Re:China is in the same boat as Europe by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      The US has become so dominant because a third of the world was under the sway of a dead end ideology (communism) and most of the rest of the world decided that they were willing to settle for their current level of achievement. The US never slowed down on its quest to improve after the wakeup call in the 70s and it's built up a fairly good lead. It has a natural growth rate of about 3% of GDP every year, sometimes slower, sometimes faster. That's what we're comfortable with and anybody in the world can catch up and surpass the US. All they have to do is have a sustainable natural growth rate of 4% or higher and the societal structure that will support it.

      So far, no takers.

    2. Re:China is in the same boat as Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what's going to happen, are we destined to become your slaves? Bend over? Yes massa! Would you like me to part my butt cheeks for you massa?
      If you're so smart, maybe you can think of a way to use your monopoly that doesn't cause the rest of the planet to wish you dead.

    3. Re:China is in the same boat as Europe by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      And of course, it was fears about American dominance that made the Chinese take over tibet, threaten Taiwan and forcibly move a huge portion of their population in rural areas to concrete buildings that make Gheto's look humane?

      Never mind crackdowns on student protests, arrest and torture of Chinese Christians and dissidents?

      These are bad dudes. Not everything is America's fault.

    4. Re:China is in the same boat as Europe by Fefe · · Score: 1

      I did not say America is at fault for China's human rights behaviour, I said fear of US superiority is the reason for their space program. Or do you really want to argue here that wants to go to space out of pure villainy? ;-)

      Besides, US citizen should be really quiet about human rights after what they let their government do e.g. at Guantanamo Bay. Not to mention recent laws like PATRIOT.

    5. Re:China is in the same boat as Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When it comes to pointing fingers no major state or country can stand on a moral high ground. .. They've all done despicable things to many many people. And U.S. citizens should not be quiet about human rights we should be vocal, we need to keep pressuring the government to act responsibly.

    6. Re:China is in the same boat as Europe by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Inevitably, a persistently faster growing society will dominate and expand while slower ones will stagnate, change (if they're flexible enough), or outright die. The winners have always been hated by the losers for this.

      In no other era has it been more true than this one that the losers *don't* have to be losers. The roadmap to catching up and overtaking the US is crystal clear. It's the collective decision of the other societies not to take that route that is astounding to me. It's not like the US has any built in secrets that can't be copied. There is *no* monopoly.

    7. Re:China is in the same boat as Europe by Ex-MislTech · · Score: 1

      China is growing much faster than 4% and they are the fastest
      growing country in the world economically .

      The Three gorges damn is hoped to provide alot of the power
      for that growth, but even it will not be enough, and they will
      need to find more power . China has the best chance at this time
      to over take the US if it can get its ppl to believe in it .

      The way SARS went down , ppl started to seriously question it .
      China just needs to focus on capitalism which is kinda funny if
      you think about it . (smile)

      They have the largest work force, and they have ALOT of
      resources too , they just need to educate and modernize .
      As far as Europe goes, we need to pull all of our bases out
      the countries that have given us grief . Germany and France foremost .

      We can do better, and to be honest it is already in the works
      with a couple of eastern bloc countries . There has been bad
      blood with germans since WW2 , who would have thought ????

      The funny part is the countries that were stomped by germany
      and saved by us and the brits and the russians are now best
      friends with germany . Go figure ????? Well no accounting for common sense .

      The US has huge flaws, and we have corporate corruption
      beyond the Wazoo , and it bleeds into the government likewise .

      Europe would not want what Afghanistan experienced and definitely
      not from a Military that could be made to be 10 times the size of
      the one that rolled thru Iraq .

      Like the other side said, nukes are out of the question, the US
      has too many subs right off the shore of Europe with MERV warheads .
      Even if Europe won the war, you'd be forced to live underground
      for years, and all animal life on our continents would be
      annihilated , it would be hellish at best .

      The rad. poisoning of the water table would make living at all
      quite a challenge for those wanting to try to live thru
      the nuclear holocaust .

      All of this is really blather, and europe was on our side
      in Afghanistan . Only when we attacked So-damn Insane
      did they waffle immensely .

      Alot of this was due to a constant source of revenue from Iraq,
      and that would end now as there was most likely illict trades
      being made outside the scope of the embargo .

      The immense amount of oil that was going to the black market via
      syria comes to mind in particular , we have solid evidence of it .
      The majority of germans did not like us prior to Iraq, so
      I say we give them what they want and get out of their country
      immediately .

      We have been offered very good bases in other countries nearby .
      France, not sure we have anything there, if we do , let's
      get it out of there ASAP .

      The rest of europe we will play it by ear, and see how it goes .
      Meanwhile US countries abroad need to be held accountable for their
      terrible business practices like UnoCal's slave labor in Burma right now .

      Like DuPont and Union Carbide's chemical spill in Bhopal .
      These things need to be sent before a world commitee .

      Well , again , enough rambling ....Ex-MislTech

      --
      google "32 trillion offshore needs IRS attention"
  96. NASA Won't React by StAugustineLovesYou · · Score: 3, Insightful
    "How will NASA react to this news after being the dominant space agency over the past three decades?"

    NASA won't react. The sad truth is that right now American society is leaning far more towards guns than butter. The reality for NASA is that American pride no longer sores on NASA wings. (Note: I'm not endorsing this view, just expressing popular culture). The reality is that the drive in congress is just not there for supporting NASA, as it's far easier to woo voters with bribes and fears on TV, than with pictures of engineers behind control stations.

    There will be speeches at NASA HQ, but no money from congress.

  97. Space War was Great! by jussikin · · Score: 1

    Anyone remeber playing computer game named space war? Now that was a great game. 2 small spaceships circling around screen and planet on the centre. That was somewhere in late eighties i think. Oh those were the days.

    --
    jk
  98. Historical correction by NullProg · · Score: 1

    Seeing the Germans started in all.

    Goddard, if alive, would argue this point.
    http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/gsfc/service/gall ery/fact _sheets/general/frocket/frocket.htm

    Enjoy,

    --
    It's just the normal noises in here.
  99. EU's Collosal Waste of Money by SolidBrass · · Score: 1

    Continental Europe is suffering from a combination of stangant economic growth, high unemployment, and the threat of deflation, and yet it wastes billions duplicating GPS and propping up an uncompetitive space launch capability. When countries in Europe, in spite of the punishing tax load they place on their citizens, can't even afford the demographic time bomb created by their below-replacement level birth rates and economically absurd pension plans, why piss away money on something that already works (GPS and everyone else's commercial space launch) and that they don't need (because the Chinese and the US do it cheaper and always will)?

    Is it really worth billions of dollars for the EU to play make believe that it is a world power by duplicating a US system that is more than 20 years old? EU spending on space launch is the result of the same blinkered reasoning that tries to homogenize the population by punishing people who work hard by taxing them more to pay the lazy bastards who want to sit in a cafe and sip coffee on a government hand out.

    1. Re:EU's Collosal Waste of Money by arevos · · Score: 2, Informative

      The US is also suffering from "a combination of stangant economic growth, high unemployment, and the threat of deflation", and it could be argued that the EUSA is more cost efficient than NASA, who insist on using the rather cost inefficient shuttle system. The Ariane system has been quite successful commercially, and, as one poster pointed out, the Ariane 4 made up 40% of all launches at one point.

      Furthermore, Galileo obviously won't be using 20 year old technology. It'll be more up to date, and it's meant to be far more accurate than the GPS system.

      Since this is seems to be the only comment of your account, I'm assuming you're a troll here, but I'll continue on with my reply anyway.

      Some EU countries do have vastly inflated tax rates that could come down a bit, but mostly it's a system that works well. The majority of the taxes go to health care and schooling, rather than to the unemploymed (which is hardly a desirable situation by any means). It costs an awful lot to run a national health service, but you can hardly claim it's wrong to help the injured, or to provide cheaper education to people.

      And a lower birth rate isn't necessarily bad. The EU has many more people packed into a smaller area than the US, and the world's population is increasing at an undesirable rate. Less people might be better. Besides which, the current rate things are going, the EU is still going to have more people per square mile than the US for quite some time, so there's hardly a danger of depopulation.

    2. Re:EU's Collosal Waste of Money by jesco · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The economic problems (which there are many of, as in the U.S.) aside, Arianespace and ESA are two rather successful operations.

      A single ariane is a) cheaper in total than a shuttle launch and b) able of lifting more cargo into space than any other space craft. About 40% of all satellite launches are done by Arianespace. That's hardly unsuccessful.

      About Galileo. Did you ever hear the word 'competition'. GPS is the only vendor in the global positioning market. Monopolies are, however, from an economical point of view highly unwanted for they tend to provide inferior products for higher prices. And, while the concept is the same, Galileo is hardly anymore a rip-off GPS than a Mercedes is off a Ford :)

    3. Re:EU's Collosal Waste of Money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Some EU countries do have vastly inflated tax rates that could come down a bit, but mostly it's a system that works well."
      You got to be fucking kidding me.
      At this very fuckign moment France and Germany are attempting to bring their spending under control because these days everyone , left or right, recognizes that this kind of madness cannot go forever and look what is happening.
      People in EU gotten so lazy that any attempt at reforms cause masive unrests.
      Of course, nobody should be suprised , this is a basic human nature - large numbers of people in Europe gotten so used being provided with basically free income that they cannnot understand that the system is bankrupt and things will have to change.

    4. Re:EU's Collosal Waste of Money by arevos · · Score: 1

      A free income? Pardon? I take it you've never actually lived in the EU, because you, sir, are talking out of your arse.

      Furthermore, bankrupt? Only Portugal exceeds the US's current budget deficit, at 3.4% in 2003 compared to around 3% for the US, so you can hardly claim the EU is having money controls unless you admit the US is in equal danger. In which case, you can hardly blame the generally higher tax rate of the EU for the problems!

      In fact, France and Germany have deficits of 2.9% and 3.1% respectively, which is almost exactly that of the US. So if France and Germany's spending is not under control, and is 'madness', then the US is clearly in exactly the same position!

      Since you have obviously never lived in the EU, and you obviously have no grasp for figures, I'll assume you're a troll or an ill informed moron.

  100. Re:DISARM EUROPE NOW!! by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

    Ah, stand corrected.

    --
    if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
  101. Comparison by mobileskimo · · Score: 1

    Quantifying them is of little value when the quality makes the difference. I suggest you (all of you) do a little traveling and find out the difference in peoples attitudes, quality of life, work ethic, policies of state, policies of companies, policies of personal protocol, and generally how people live in each area being compared, before you apply some of these theories. Even a couple a weeks of light-weight tourism will teach you alot and sway your perspective. I mean this for anyone in this discussion. I have my opinions but won't share them here in the hope that this advice is will be heard by all camps. This is the road to world understanding. Hopefully this is the road to achieving peace in space.

    --
    "Last one in is a rotten goblin!" - Kepp
  102. "hundreds" of millions! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what'll that buy, two toilet seats and a coffee maker?
    Get real, just as NASA's been a boondogle for spending vast sums of cash on a comparably miniscule amount of success, the EU better pony up trillions if it wants to compete with the big boys!

    Give me 2 billion- yes billion!- for our next Mars orbiter and I'll figure a way to blow it up, and I'll guarrantee at least 3 press conferences with a power point demo. I certainly shoudn't do better than the big brains lest I show them up.

  103. Yes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > are we heading towards a future conflict across the Atlantic?

    Yupp, since 70% of you fat assho^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H "Americans" do not vote or prevent dictators like bushman who think they own the world to come to power there WILL be war, and i've already stockpiled Cola, CD-R's and 7.62mm.

  104. I heard this from Sean O'Keefe.... by Shafe · · Score: 1

    NASA plans to sit around and do nothing exciting. Oh, they also plan to wait until some of their cutting-edge technologies are ready, then axe the programs. Like Project Prometheus? That'll be dead when it's about a month from completion. NASA just loves pulling the plug on really cool technologies.

    It's almost like NASA _wants_ to keep humans grounded. Perhaps Armstrong & Aldrin really did see extraterrestrials on the moon and they're keeping us on Earth so we don't move in on their territory. I'm open to the possibility. :)

  105. Conflict across the 49th parallel by DeadVulcan · · Score: 1

    Heaven forbid anyone else should dare to lead (or try to lead) in any particular sector of industry...or in anything for that matter!!!

    In Canada, there is a popular conspiracy theory about the Avro Arrow, a fighter-interceptor that was being developed up here in the 50s.

    If you believe the hype that was around it, it was destined to be the fastest interceptor in the world, necessitated by the fact that Canada has such an enormous northern territory to protect.

    The conspiracy theorists claim that it was killed by political pressure from the U.S., who was worried about its northern neighbour commanding such advanced technology.

    --
    Accountability on the heads of the powerful.
    Power in the hands of the accountable.
    1. Re:Conflict across the 49th parallel by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      At the time of Avro's cancelation the US millitary was actually looking at buying and using the Avro Arrow instead of then (proposed then cancled) F-108. General D.C. Putt who I believe ran the AF at the time wanted it, but got shot down by Sec of Defense.

      Canada canceled Avro because it was moving to a all balistic defense/offense. (The US tried to do the same thing). The United States agreed to give Canada the same technology we were using and used NATO to co-ordinate defenese between the two nations.

    2. Re:Conflict across the 49th parallel by n3r0.m4dski11z · · Score: 0

      "At the time of Avro's cancelation the US millitary was actually looking at buying and using the Avro Arrow"

      or ala microsoft/direct tv/softwood lumber/mad cow (the cow aparently came from the states) canada said fuck you we'll keep our plane, or they simply offered a stupidly low amount and then the great republic of america covertly broke some knees. its like living next to tony suprano on a bender. (although i never watched that show i feel confident using the analogy)

      --
      -
    3. Re:Conflict across the 49th parallel by cheesybagel · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Yes.

      IMHO the US ended up not buying the plane because of the NIH syndrome and the fact that the US really does not buy weapons technology from abroad: period.

      Regarding the Canadian government pulling the plug, at that time several governments considered that bombers were obsolete, hence fighters were unnecessary. Missiles were all the rage.

      The UK RAF also suffered terribly from this misguided perception.

  106. Re:EUROPE IS A DANGEROUS EMPIRE IN THE MAKING by anagama · · Score: 1

    I can't tell either. He sounds so goofy I'm tending to believe he was being humorous, but failed to give enough clues to that fact.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  107. American way of thinking. by skandalfo · · Score: 1

    with this and the 'European version' of GPS are we heading towards a future conflict across the Atlantic?

    Hey! What's this?

    It seems to me that this is a very American way of thinking (at least lately). What has been left unsaid is: 'Hey! Let's do some preventive war against the whole Europe, just in case they do develop an independent positioning system (obviously for guiding terrorist missiles) and we can't disable all their navigation-dependent systems just by pressing a button'.

    Other countries' dependency on GPS is like having someone pointing a gun to our head. The gun holder may be your friend (now), but it feels still a little uncomfortable...

    Moreover after seeing the latest samples of the American respect for international laws and treatises...

    1. Re:American way of thinking. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The guy who posted this isn't American... he's British.

    2. Re:American way of thinking. by skandalfo · · Score: 1

      Uhm... Did you figure it out because of the login name? ;)

    3. Re:American way of thinking. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No,I figured it out because I *am* the guy who posted it. I just didn't want to use my /. account :-)

  108. Go China! by axxackall · · Score: 1
    although not as technologically advanced.

    Give them some time (I mean - don't bomb them like Iraq) and they advance technologically. Remember? The later you get into the game the better your startup. And I see China moves in the right direction. Go China!

    --

    Less is more !
    1. Re:Go China! by mfrank · · Score: 1

      With China and India both aborting all their baby girls for the last decade or so, in about 10, 20 years they'll have a big surplus of horny guys with nobody to date. Expect a good ground war in that part of the world to get rid of the surplus male population around that time.

    2. Re:Go China! by axxackall · · Score: 1
      Expect a good ground war in that part of the world to get rid of the surplus male population around that time.

      Why that part pf the world? They may deploy their male surplus cross ocean, to liberate States from Bush's dynasty :)

      --

      Less is more !
  109. How will NASA react? by axxackall · · Score: 1
    As usually - send Bill Gates with a suitcase full of money cash to convince Europians that they don't need any space program.

    Oh wait, Bill works for the other company. Anyway, Bill or not Bill - you got a point :)

    --

    Less is more !
  110. How it all started ! by Le_Saint · · Score: 1

    Hi all,

    Maybe we need to remember how it started :)...

    Once upon a time...

    In 72 Germany and France developped a the most advanced Telecommunication satelitte of that time : Symphonie. Missing a reliable launcher they turned to their American friend who had always been telling them how stupid and a waste of money it was to developp their own launcher when they could rely on the american one !
    What a relief ! Then someone had the good idea to get a closer look to the contract... "No commercial use" ! This "incident" finished to decide France&Germany to get their own rocket and Arianne was born...

    Another little story :
    A couple of month ago, the american friend wrote a letter to all responsibles in european countries just couple of days before the Galileo space program had to be signed. The friend was just nicely trying to make them realize the hawfull cost and waste of money it was to invest in a European GPS equivalent when the GPS was globaly free to use !... It almost worked...

    Do you want the Concorde plane story ? :)

    But of course this friend has been such a help in the past and you will always remember it ! that's why you can forgive for a while even if he hasn't been so nice recently...

    My wife told me :
    "you know, One day you'll have to tell him... what ? you did it ? Good, I hope he'll understand so you'll stay good friend..."

    Read the full story here :
    http://www.airspacemag.com/ASM/Mag/Index/1996/A M/f rss.html

  111. who cares? by goreking · · Score: 0

    Hey, why do we have to be the BEST at everything. Let Europe spend their money the way they want to. I'm sick of them sniping at us from the cheap-seats, anyway. The world is big enough for all (and so is space).

    --
    No...it's okay...I wasn't using my Civil Liberties anyway
  112. NASA is dead by heroine · · Score: 1

    America's space capability was terminated on 9/11/01. The desire to be a technological giant was already far gone. It just took a final gust of wind to knock it down forever. The strays who still want to go into space all have to butter up India for cash.

  113. Re:The biggest obstacles to Europeans in Space.... by Le_Saint · · Score: 1

    you're a shame for your country poor guy ;) Fortunatly I know your people better than you know mine !

  114. Watching TV lately? by skandalfo · · Score: 1

    What do you know about the world? It seems to me that it's only what the mass media (mainly cartoons, probably) want you to believe.

    • Europe's not France alone.
    • Even French people eat more things than cheese and croissants, and drink more things than wine.
    • Sadly enough, corrupt politicians abound in every country. Yes, it's true. In yours too. Didn't you know?
    • Probably you don't know that smoking is forbidden in European flights.
    • Uhm... About bathing... yes it's true. After all, you didn't see any European bathing on the TV, did you?
    • About cramming people, yes, we have been here for a long time, and we got short of Indians to eject from their lands quite a while ago... so we have to adapt.
    • And, sadly again, it's true: some country's companies/government are far more skilled than European ones about de-stabilization techniques abroad.

    Please... go read some real book. Some Europeans were able to write some of these some time ago. I would recommend Huxley's or Orwell's ones. Please, don't be misled by the fact that none of these two people were French. They were indeed Europeans, whether they thought of themselves in such terms or not.

  115. Successfull cooperation live.... by Uzull · · Score: 1

    Marsexpress : a european project, launched 2 days ago by a russian soyuz rocket !

  116. Found It! US pursues policy of "negation" by dogfart · · Score: 1
    The article is http://www.eetimes.com/story/OEG20030522S0050, titled U.S. 'negation' policy in space raises concerns abroad.

    Some choice quotes:

    Beginning next year, NRO will be in charge of the new Offensive Counter-Space program, which will come up with plans to specifically deny the use of near-Earth space to other nations, said Teets.
    So we reserve the right to wack ANY other nation's spacecraft. And..
    Meanwhile, Maj. Gen. Judd Blaisdell, director of the Air Force Space Operations Office, said recently, "We are so dominant in space that I pity a country that would come up against us."
    Finally.
    After the administration renounced the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty last year, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld made it clear that the abrogation of treaty constraints in the use of radar and tracking devices was not just for the benefit of fielding a missile-defense system, but to build better unilateral networks to manage the planet from space.
    "unilateral networks to manage the planet from space" indeed!!
    --

    "dope will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no dope"

    1. Re:Found It! US pursues policy of "negation" by RichardX · · Score: 1

      Good link, thanks!
      Unfortunately I have no modpoints with which to give you a +informative (typically, I let unused modpoints expire just yesterday due to lack of anything worth modding), but nonetheless, just wanted to say thanks for that link

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  117. Military purchases by Efreet · · Score: 1

    Most european countries just purchase American or Russian military vehicles and weapons anyway.

    Not at all. The French, Germans, and English all have their own assault rifles and tanks; and they are often better than the US equivalent.

    --
    This sig wasn't worth reading, was it.
  118. YAHC (Yet Another Historical Correction) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Er... how about Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, sonny. Goddard, like Edison and most other us "inventors" merely reproduced the work of others before them, but their society was better at promoting them as the originator.


    http://www.informatics.org/museum/

  119. Guardian and Independent.. by Endimiao · · Score: 1

    You still have quality papers :p Im portuguese and read the Guardian daily.

    1. Re:Guardian and Independent.. by pubjames · · Score: 1

      You still have quality papers :p Im portuguese and read the Guardian daily.

      Yep, the Guardian is good. And the BBC. The Independent can be good too.

  120. Conflict?! WTF? Mental Americans by node159 · · Score: 1

    Conflict?! WTF? You americans are menal, all it seems you have on your mind is world domination and war (the ends and the means). Maybe other countries feel they should not have to deal americas problems to go about their own business. And don't even begin to tell me that america does not have problems and doesn't drag the world through em. BTW, Hows the economic forcast, hope your on your way to the hills all ready.

    --
    GPLv2: I want my rights, I want my phone call! DRM: What use is a phone call, if you are unable to speak?
  121. Being independent isn't a conflict! by Neurotensor · · Score: 1

    A lot of money is going into rocket technology also; with this and the 'European version' of GPS are we heading towards a future conflict across the Atlantic?

    I don't see why a group of countries, who were previously totally dependent on a distant country for a particular service (GPS), should cause a conflict when they eventually decide to do it for themselves.

    Although considering the history, acknowledged or otherwise, of the US when it comes to these things, they will definitely be considering whether to allow this to go ahead. After all, you can't deny other countries access to space if there's another player willing to grant it. It's all about US freedoms, not everybody else's.

    Stay tuned for more rampant cynicism the next time I respond to a post discussing conflict and the US!

  122. Europa history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually you should add Italy for that. And I understand Australia was also a full partner for providing the Woomera range.

    Division of labour was:

    Booster: Britain (Blue Streak) (which worked perfectly on every launch)

    2nd stage: France (first lauched on Europa F4, fourth firing; rocket destroyed when it looked like crossing range safety boundaries. Supposedly it resulted in a near fist-fight between Woomera range personnel and the French there. You can see the remains of F4 at Woomera's Missile Park)

    3rd stage: Germany. This was the real problem child and I think had three failures

    4th stage/satellite: Italy. The last (10th) Woomera Europa launch was the first one where this got its chance; it didn't fire properly and so the satellite re-entered after half and orbit. Then the British govt pulled out. I really believe that given the simplicity of the fourth stage one more launch would have seen Europa orbit a satellite.

    There was a follow-on program continued in French Guiana (one launch or two?) but really the heart had gone out of it by that stage.

    At the time ('60's) Europa became regarded as a bit of a joke compared to the USSR and USA space efforts, but in retrospect it laid the foundations for the less ambitious, more directed and ultimately successful Ariane and also pioneered international cooperation in space launcher development.

    Yet another case where the British pioneered, dropped the ball, and the French picked it up and ran with it :-( (And let's not forget Black Arrow - Britain's own launcher which launched a satellite on its fourth launch - a week after the program had been cancelled.)

  123. Conflict? Who wrote this crap! by pHaze · · Score: 1

    Typical fucking Yanks! If we dont own it, but we're interested in it, and you're doing it, then you're in conflict with us.

    I'd say that summarises the general xenophobic, arrogant american attitude of late.

    ps: I live in Orange County, so keep the johnnie foreigner comments to yourself.

  124. The US has plenty of resources by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately they spent them on a useless war, and since Linux and FreeBSD are FREE, Europe has no need to license buggy software from the US !!

  125. Re:EUROPE IS A DANGEROUS EMPIRE IN THE MAKING by xyr0 · · Score: 1

    the problem is that even a lot of newspapers are owned by big companies. or single persons like murdoch owning all non-quality newspapers that reach more ppl than the quality ones. i usually read the nytimes online and it was the only newspaper that i found to be some kind of objective. if you have found another one plz tell me.

  126. Dear American friend... by Le_Saint · · Score: 1

    Maybe we need to remember how it started :)... Once upon a time... In 72 Germany and France developped a the most advanced Telecommunication satelitte of that time : Symphonie. Missing a reliable launcher they turned to their American friend who had always been telling them how stupid and a waste of money it was to developp their own launcher when they could rely on the american one ! What a relief ! Then someone had the good idea to get a closer look to the contract... "No commercial use" ! This "incident" finished to decide France&Germany to get their own rocket and Arianne was born... Another little story : A couple of month ago, the american friend wrote a letter to all responsibles in european countries just couple of days before the Galileo space program had to be signed. The friend was just nicely trying to make them realize the hawfull cost and waste of money it was to invest in a European GPS equivalent when the GPS was globaly free to use !... It almost worked... Do you want the Concorde plane story ? :) But of course this friend has been such a help in the past and you will always remember it ! that's why you can forgive for a while even if he hasn't been so nice recently... My wife told me : "you know, One day you'll have to tell him... what ? you did it ? Good, I hope he'll understand so you'll stay good friend..." Read the full story here : http://www.airspacemag.com/ASM/Mag/Index/1996/AM/f rss.html

  127. Commercial Space Agencies by SpaceJunkie · · Score: 1

    Why are there not more commercial space agencies pushing the boundaries. Instead of government funded ones, who only just scrape by- I am talking about ones who dont mind sticking coke and McDonalds advertising on the side to get funding, who invest in mining projects, or profitable exploration projects. It might be difficult to get initial funding - but I am sure there are some manufacturing processes which would be considerably easier in Zero-G. The big boundary is getting there and back, but if enough businesses are trying to do this - then the technology WILL be advanced- the systems of transit will become safer, cheaper and quicker.
    Of course all things said- lets hope Bill Gates never builds a deathstar for zapping non-conforming companies...

    --
    OrionRobots.co.uk - Robots From sol
  128. Re:Some perspective by Kris+Magnusson · · Score: 1

    #3 is wrong. NASA is developing the new Delta rocket, which will have a lifting capacity of 7 tons, the highest of any launch vehicle on the market upon its release in 2006.

    .............. kris

    --
    "I thought I could organize freedom. How Scandinavian of me."