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Spirit Rover Lands Successfully

So, as I write this, the latest word is: the Spirit rover has landed and NASA has received a signal indicating it landed right-side up (so it shouldn't have any problems in the unfolding process) and will shortly be retracting the protective airbags which kept it from splattering all over the countryside. Y'all can fill in later news in the comments below. There's a nice site with up-to-the-minute text updates.

849 comments

  1. Yay by rsmith-mac · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yahoo! We beat the Martian Defense Grid. Up yours Mars!

    1. Re:Yay by radicalskeptic · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't know, judging from the first images sent back there might still be a problem....

      --
      WARNING: If accidentally read, induce vomiting.
    2. Re:Yay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I for one welcome our new surface roaming martian overlords.

    3. Re:Yay by n0nsensical · · Score: 4, Funny

      The most recent update on this story:
      NASA: We get signal! Main screen turn on!
      Mars Goblin: How are you gentlemen! All your probe are belong to us!
      NASA: What you say!
      Mars Goblin: Ha ha ha! You are on the way to destruction! All your probe are belong to us!
      NO CARRIER

    4. Re:Yay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha ha ha! Hooooo! I sure hope your razor-sharp comedy isn't silenced when you're run over by a bus or something.

    5. Re:Yay by n0nsensical · · Score: 1

      You're in luck; it wasn't the last time I got run over by a bus.

    6. Re:Yay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dateline - Utopia Planitia
      The Mars Defense Forces announced today a major failure of the EarthProbe Repulser System. Supreme Commander Grz%#zp explained that both the deep space defense grid as well as the low altitude disrupter fields failed to scramble the electronics of the Hu-man's intruder vehicle. Chief Spirit-talker Mp^@r urged all sentients with mobility to help those immobile to leave the area of the invasion to prevent their capture, torture, and death in the maw of the Earther Machine.

    7. Re:Yay by rackman · · Score: 1

      Next we'll land a nuclear defense grid of our own.......

    8. Re:Yay by benna · · Score: 4, Informative

      Real first image here

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    9. Re:Yay by spectre_240sx · · Score: 1

      Aww, come on. I was just waiting for an all your base remark. It would have been a shame to waste the opportunity.

    10. Re:Yay by benploni · · Score: 1

      What Window Manager or OS is being used in that picture?

    11. Re:Yay by Xzzy · · Score: 3, Funny

      That's definetly not a shot of a unix desktop, because it fails the unwritten rule where every desktop shot must have an IRC session open somewhere, with the author commenting on what he's doing. ;)

    12. Re:Yay by Lord+Apathy · · Score: 1

      I don't know about that. There are some windows under those picture windows that look a lot like irc windows.

      --

      Supporting World Peace Through Nuclear Pacification

    13. Re:Yay by kommakazi · · Score: 1

      It looks like a twisted cross between Classic Mac OS 8/9 Platinum with Windows buttons jammed on the right side...

  2. Take that Beagle 2! by benna · · Score: 5, Funny

    I have been waiting all week to say that!

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    1. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Ah you say that, but today (January 4th) we should know if Beagle 2 is actually alive or not. As I understand it, when The Beagle goes this long without having made successful communication, it starts to transmit all the time. This, coinciding with the oribiter being in the right orbit to pick it up, should let us know whether it's ok or not.

      Fingers crossed!

    2. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by daveashcroft · · Score: 2, Flamebait

      what a pathetic little man. Rather than be sad that valuable science wont be done with the demise of beagle 2, you start whooping at USA being #1. Pathetic narrowminded asshole. Wait till the twin probe kills this one by friendly fire.

    3. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good to see you take the high road of just choosing a different bias than trying to simply be truley objective. Even if you're joking, badly, this post is still depressing.

    4. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by ixplodestuff8 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Technically Beagle 2 did make it first. So what if it was shot down by the martians, some of it had to of touched the ground. It should be noted that the US is getting pretty advanced in military technology, I mean getting through the martian's defenses is a great feat, as soon as the next scout lands, we can map out their defense system for holes, and once it's done We'll invade them, no one ever excpects the humans to do the invading, it's always the ET's that invade us, but NOW WE'LL GET THEM mwahahahahahha

    5. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by BigHungryJoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Take it easy on Beagle 2.

      The primary purpose of Beagle 2 was to find evidence of life on Mars. Spirit Rover's was to find evidence of water. Beagle 2's mission was far more exciting, and I'm disappointed that it seems to have failed.

      That being said, the anti-US "u r teh fat and stupids" rhetoric does get annoying sometimes, but those posters are in the minority.

    6. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by eggoeater · · Score: 1

      "The goal of this expidition is to find out what happened to last years expidition" said the flight controller with a hand over one eye.

    7. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by benna · · Score: 1

      I have to agree that it is sad that Beagle 2 will not get to carry out its mition. I really didn't mean it as an anti european stab at all.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    8. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't read slashdot much do you? American slamming is a ritual by non-Americans on here. Ours made it, theirs didn't. It's a crying shame theirs didn't but if you read what "valuable science" would have come from Beagle you would retract your statement. It was a camera with an antennae on it. That was already done 5 yrs ago.

    9. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your ethnocentrism and the stigma it brings to all citizens of the U.S. is most unappreciated.

    10. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by kervel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As an european, i want to congratulate america for its achievements. The beagle was not comparable by far to the polar rover (in all areas). Beagle's only merit was to be cheaper. Well, seems we've had bad luck and you had good luck, and we could even say you deserved the good luck and we deserved the bad luck.

      So there is no need to party you are number 1 now... we believe you. and luckily nasa officials also don't do that : nasa assisted the projects of its little brothers (esa could even use nasa equipment when we were in trouble, and nasa helped us out a bit in creating the mars express as you can see on nasa's site)

    11. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      #1 in failed probes and dead astronauts. Hoo rah!

    12. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      Nods. Same here. I really hoped it would make it & I'm an American. It's sad it didn't. But some people get really defensive & too much & react to it.

      Long live the queens Beagle 2!

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    13. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Attaturk · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Don't mod that up ffs. :(

    14. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Crispin+Cowan · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Technically Beagle 2 did make it first.
      Well, technically Viking made first :-)

      Crispin
      ----
      Crispin Cowan, Ph.D.
      CTO, Immunix Inc.

    15. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're quite right apart from one detail, it's the 7th and not the 4th.

      See here for evidence

    16. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 1

      geezez

      every freaking day I log into /. and I see stupid crap that without any sort of reasoning desmisses anyone who doesn't think like they as being ignorant fools. I make a stupid comment, that wasn't even deragatory towards anyone, and I get modded down and called a pathetic asshole, among other things i'm sure. Please. Yes i'm gloating a bit, being a bit pro-america and i get flamed.

      And as for valuebale science, i consider it expected to have these projects fail, and unexpected to succeed. yes i'm excitied, I even cheered when i read the good news that this one landed.

    17. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 3, Informative

      http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/chronology_ma rs.html

      Mars 3 - 28 May 1971 - Mars Orbiter/ Lander

      "Mars 3 was launched towards Mars from a Tyazheliy Sputnik (71-049C) Earth orbiting platform. A mid-course correction was made on 8 June. The descent module (71-049F) was released at 09:14 UT on 2 December 1971, 4 hours 35 minutes before reaching Mars. The descent module entered the martian atmosphere at roughly 5.7 km/s. Through aerodynamic braking, parachutes, and retro-rockets, the lander achieved a soft landing at 45 S, 158 W and began operations. However, after 20 sec the instruments stopped working for unknown reasons, perhaps as a result of the massive surface dust storms raging at the time of landing. Meanwhile, the orbiter had suffered from a partial loss of fuel and did not have enough to put itself into a planned 25 hour orbit. The engine instead performed a truncated burn to put the spacecraft into a long 12 day, 19 hour period orbit about Mars with an inclination thought to be similar to that of Mars 2 (48.9 degrees). The Mars 2 and 3 orbiters sent back a large volume of data covering the period from December 1971 to March 1972, although transmissions continued through August. It was announced that Mars 2 and 3 had completed their missions by 22 August 1972, after 362 orbits completed by Mars 2 and 20 orbits by Mars 3. The probes sent back a total of 60 pictures. The images and data revealed mountains as high as 22 km, atomic hydrogen and oxygen in the upper atmosphere, surface temperatures ranging from -110 C to +13 C, surface pressures of 5.5 to 6 mb, water vapor concentrations 5000 times less than in Earth's atmosphere, the base of the ionosphere starting at 80 to 110 km altitude, and grains from dust storms as high as 7 km in the atmosphere. The data enabled creation of surface relief maps, and gave information on the martian gravity and magnetic fields."

      The Vikings were the first really successful landers on Mars, like the above poster stated.

    18. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 0

      dunno about failed probes, but dead astronauts, nope. The soviets have far more dead than us.. of course they're causmonauts(sp?) so maybe the us is #1 in dead astronauts.

    19. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by baryon351 · · Score: 5, Funny

      It was a very small, very tiny detail that was forgotten on the UK mission.

      Nasa's lander had, among all its technology, a slice of buttered toast, buttered side down, on the bottom of the lander. That's the only way to ensure it landed the correct way up

      The lack of buttered toast is what doomed Beagle2

    20. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by kervel · · Score: 1

      beagle 2 is offcourse less-featured than the mars rovers, but nasa, esa, russia work together to avoid 'feature duplications' or to give experiments from failed mars missions a new home. We see experiments from mars 96 now reappearing in other spacecraft (not sure if its the mars express). Each mission sent to another planet has a worthwhile (ambitious or less ambitious) goal, missions that make no sense apart from 'i want to do this too' don't exist (atleast not between esa/russia/nasa)

      beagle 2 was small, had only limited number of experiments and limited powersource, but it had equipment that was never transported to mars before - see nasa site, they helped), and that would be useful, even if the rovers would provide much more information

    21. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 1

      Seeing as how i'm an american and I am entitled to free speach, kiss my ass. Ethonocentrism?? on what? the stigma? i gloated a bit, get over it. as i've said in other posts look at all the anti US Bullcrap you see on /.

    22. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Joey7F · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You mean we should take the same attitude as the Europeans did when our last mars mission failed. They sure had a lot to say about it. If the Beagle had landed...in one piece (which isn't totally out of the question) they would certainly be pointing it out to us as another case of America throwing its money around.

      I hope the Beagle is successful because I take a science uber alles pov. But you got to admit, it is nice for them to get a taste of their own arrogant medicine from time to time. Newsflash for everyone on the other side of the pond: That brown stuff you pinch out...yeah...it stinks. You all are not gods, not masters of technology, and you screw up stuff all the time, as much if not more than we do. So eat it, try again next time and may science continue to win...

      --Joey

    23. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The lack of buttered toast is what doomed Beagle2

      No, the UK uses metric equipment.

      Metric toast falls buttered side UP, and ESA launched Beagle 2 with the butter down, so their rover is sitting there on the surface, wheels and buttered side up in the air.

    24. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 0, Troll

      depressing? in what? saying we're number 1? damned depressing.. come on don't you ever watch sports? don't you compete? it's a bit of gloating, so what, hopefully the ESA will in turn whoop nasa at something, or the china space agency whatevr tht's called and we can have a three way space race again. I'd love to see that. I'm rather excited.. 4 big space exploration projects in 1 month? wow. It's amazing really.

    25. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I really just hope we're seeing the start of a space race again. Even if it's a race to catch up to nasa for now.. Once that's achieved well.. maybe we can see man on mars soon.

    26. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, I'll try to explain. People are pissed off because you noticed a very real problem, anti-whatever bias, and took the low road. It's like someone discovering racist sentiment to their ethnic background, and instead of discovering the evils of racisim, just becoming himself racist to whatever ethnic group the racist was a member of. In short, I at least, am annoyed more by the fact that you're being blatently hypocritical.

    27. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A single russian accident killed 126 people. Not all cosmonauts, but still...

    28. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am entitled to free speach

      Wonderful, give them another reason to call Americans stupid.

    29. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another MFISUSC (Motherfucking Idiot Stupid United States Citizen.)

      Take your chauvinism and shove it up your stinking hairy white ass.

      We couldn't care less!

    30. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 1

      Your point is made, but i don't think that's true. I said basically, I'm sick of all this anti US, and said go US. So I think this, to use your example would be more like racist vs someone supporting diversity

    31. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, they could have strapped a
      cat to the bottom of the thing, feet
      pointing downward!

      It would probably work even better
      than buttered bread.

      J

    32. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 1

      if you consider someone stupid because of bad spelling.. well.. i think you'd better look in the mirror first.

    33. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by CrowScape · · Score: 1

      and instead of discovering the evils of racisim, just becoming himself racist to whatever ethnic group the racist was a member of.

      Since the only nationality mentioned in his post is American, I'd have to say you're wrong there. People are simply pissed off because he thinks the US is great. It's sad really, and annoying. It should be noted that this treatment is not solely directed to US supporters, but they certainly get the brunt of it.

      --
      common sense: noun
      What those who are ignorant of the subject matter think; usually wrong.
    34. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      first "speach", now "causmonauts". can't you dumb americans learn to fucking spell? its -cosmonauts-, dumbass.

    35. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't spell the word speech, then yes, you are stupid.

      Anyone that reads books or the newspaper - or anything for that matter - would have never misspelled that word.

    36. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      wow ... no response for your obvious superior intellectual ability. I suppose Mr. Malda is a complete incompetent moron then, I mean he has only created one of the most popular sites on the web. Not to mention the audience he has.. wow. What a freaking dumbass.

    37. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      The British were using outdated Crumpet technology.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    38. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol

    39. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by WindBourne · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, I agree with the sentiment on the first paragraph; Lucky. We have lost a number of earlier crafts to mars, including several just recently. I would rather that we have a bit of humility rather than doing a self congratulations. But I am sure that anybody from the line who sees your comment will appreciate it.

      I do hope that Beagle2 is alive and well. It is good science that will be surely missed.

      So far, we are 100% on this form of landing (Sojourner and Mer-A). As I have mentioned before, I am hopeful that we can start a production line of this vehicle for other countries as well as USA. The British ship was only 60 million, but if we do it right, we can get a production line explorer for less than 100 million. Just add Sci. equipment.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    40. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by John_Booty · · Score: 1

      Well, seems we've had bad luck and you had good luck, and we could even say you deserved the good luck and we deserved the bad luck.

      On the subject of space exploration, this "we" and "you" business seems especially... I don't know... kind of pointless. We're all humans. :)

      --

      OtakuBooty.com: Smart, funny, sexy nerds.
    41. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Yeah well, it's nice and all that NASA got their rover landed successfully, but the Beagle had some instrumentation on it that the NASA Rover doesn't. It's the possible loss of the experiments that could have been performed with Beagle that I am upset about more than the fact that it wasn't American or what have you.

    42. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by wmspringer · · Score: 1

      I dunno, I'm not sure space travel really agrees with cats.

    43. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by leecho · · Score: 4, Funny

      The primary purpose of Beagle 2 was to find evidence of life on Mars. And it was shot down by a bunch of country-side martian inbreds carryin' big ol' shotguns; so I think the mission was, uhh... successful. We just need to prove that this, in fact, happened.

    44. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by flacco · · Score: 1

      you know what wuld be totally hilarious? if the US rover located and rescued the british rover :-)

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    45. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by weileong · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If I had mod points I wouldn't know whether to mod this flamebait (for the "pathetic narrowminded asshole" bit) or funny ("kills this one by friendly fire").

      But in any case, you've got to admit - there IS no doubt some feeling of rivalry (if not by the scientists themselves, then at least by their paymasters and governmental types) and I would be very surprised to find that the European project funders would be rather... well if not actually "dismayed by the success of the American mission as opposed to the failure of Beagle", and would have, at least on some level, preferred it if this probe had bombed as well.

      That said, I've always had a fond image of the "British Boffin" building some really cool high-tech device and it's really sad Beagle didn't make it... .

    46. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I said basically, I'm sick of all this anti US, and said go US

      Actually (my 2 cents here) this is more the fault of the (stereotypical) "arrogant american types" than anything - it is BECAUSE of them that people like you are no longer able to just say "yay! go USA!" without being lumped together with the assholes who want to bomb everybody.

      It's a little like how because of the things the various racist bastards have done, that the whole scene has been so polarised, that professor (I don't have a link, can anybody help?) can no longer even use the word "niggardly" (which has nothing to do with the derogatory word... see, I don't even feel like typing it out) and effectively got fired because of that. The reaction by the black community to that is way crazy, and also counterproductive because the closet racists will get to chuckle and laugh about how "those poor sad ignorant niggers really don't know English that well, do they?"

      That's insane, that is.

    47. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't you learn to capitalize? Please sir, remove the plank from your eye before attempting to remove the splinter from another's.

    48. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do hope that Beagle2 is alive and well. It is good science that will be surely missed

      Almost important, perhaps even more so, is the important engineering lessons learned from Beagle 2.

      Costly, as all such lessons are. But should we choose to heed them, they are a British gift to everyone.

    49. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by justinkim · · Score: 1

      I don't think that's correct. The two shuttles full of astronauts that were lost probably put the US well ahead of the USSR/Russia. The Russians lost Soyuz 1 (one cosmonaut) and another three in Soyuz 11. Can't think of any other (publicized) losses during missions.

      If you take into account the pad explosions the USSR had, they come out ahead - but most of those fatalities were engineers and not cosmonauts.

    50. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the contraction of "it is" is "it's," not "its." Don't be such a fucking pedant.

    51. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A word a big as cosmonauts, is far too advanced for them, just look at the way they spell colour ( that's color, for you americans ).

    52. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 1

      I read somewhere that they had like 50 or so deaths of cosmonauts, but nasa's death total is still smaller than i'd expect

    53. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason we spell color without the "u" is because of all you British English speakers darn near hunting the "u" to extinction... plus it saves on the cost of ink.

    54. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anenga · · Score: 0, Redundant
      That being said, the anti-US "u r teh fat and stupids" rhetoric does get annoying sometimes, but those posters are in the minority.
      Your new here, aren't you?
    55. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by M1FCJ · · Score: 1
      Sorry, that's not the way NASA works. Every probe/vehicle has to be redesigned so that any form of testing & experience used before gets lost.

      Otherwise I can't explain myself why we didn't see a stream of Vikings, Voyagers or even Hubbles, never mention the abandoned Shuttle and Saturn productions.

      Although in most cases mission requirements place constraints on the design, it would have been possible to use the information, over and over again.

    56. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by eatdave13 · · Score: 1

      You know what, call it whatever you want, but I think America rocks.

      In fact, here's a traditional response from New York, made right here in the USA:

      Fuck you, buddy!

      --
      "Verbing weirds language." -- Calvin
    57. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Schrodinder's was okay with it, but he had to be pu in a box.

    58. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Europe provided important tools on NASA's twin Mars Exploration Rovers. The German Space Agency and the Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz, Germany, supplied each rover's alpha particle X-ray spectrometer instrument. The German Space Agency and the University of Mainz supplied the Mossbauer spectrometer. The Neils Bohr Institute, Copenhagen, Denmark, supplied the magnet array for observation by rover cameras. Plans call for Mars Express to relay signals from a NASA rover at least once. In addition, Europeans make up about one-sixth of the members of the rovers' science team. The rovers, scheduled to land on Mars on Jan. 4 and on Jan. 25 (Universal time) respectively, will seek evidence about whether the environment in two regions might once have been capable of supporting life."

      Sorry pal, but the Rovers are an international success. We all are number 1. :)

    59. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (1) The Vikings, Voyagers, and Hubble were 1970s and 1980s technology. They cost billions of dollars to do. They served basically one purpose, and served them well, but they'd be poor models for what we can do with the technology today.

      (2) NASA space craft use extensive amounts of standardized components. They don't design everything from scratch; the communication systems, computers, rockets, and so on are very often commercially standardized components, used in commercial satellite applications. NASA contracts the construction of its space probes out to companies like Lockheed.

      That said, the landers/rovers are a little more cutting edge than your average orbiter, so it's reasonable to expect more experimentation there.

    60. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well actually, Americans aren't entitled to free speech. They killed a lot of monarchists, Nazis, communists, and terrorists to preserve it. The price of freedom and all that.

    61. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by rapiddescent · · Score: 5, Interesting

      remember that each NASA lander costs $545m, whereas beagle 2 cost a mere $35m. EU should have thrown 31 Beagles at Mars and some of them would have worked!

    62. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      Take that Beagle 2!

      It was never a competition. Well, maybe in your mind, but I doubt in the mind of NASA or the mind of ESA. They are more mature than falling to those levels. :-)

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    63. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, this attempt at humor uses a basic mechanism - introducing two unrelated ideas and connect them in an unexpected way. The resulting FRISSION can be hilarity, but it isn't guaranteed. As we can see in this case, these types of jokes have to be evaluated for funnyness before posting.

    64. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by thrillseeker · · Score: 1
      remember that each NASA lander costs $545m, whereas beagle 2 cost a mere $35m. EU should have thrown 31 Beagles at Mars and some of them would have worked!

      So it's better to spend $35 MM a few dozen times for something known to fail than $545 MM once for something known to work?

    65. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I keep seeing this argument, and it is false. There is a 0% success rate (1 lander, bad sample admittedly), so if they threw 31 Beagles at mars then 31 would fail... wouldn't THAT look bad. The design is not proven to be successful.

      Just because it is "cheaper" does not mean "it will work some of the time". Example: If I take a $10 brick and throw it in the air, but it doesn't reach mars, I certainly can't throw 54,500,000 of them into the air and *eventually* have one land on mars safely.

    66. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      Actually, the parent was right that they should have thrown 31 beagles at mars. It failed, but no one knows why, do they? Maybe if they had thrown more than one, they could have learned why one failed, and probably gotten more than one working on the surface. In that event, they would have been able to collect much more information than a single $545m mission, and would show a much more cost-effective operation, even if it had 90% of the landers fail.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    67. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      A big part of why NASA does not do production line is that congress funds bits and pieces such that it helps their community, rather than simply give NASA a set amount and let NASA decide how to spend it. As to the production line, that would be initially, for other countries. I am sure that NASA would see the value in a sending the same base system to mars that is tested for launch, arrival, landing, and control that simply differs by the packages that it takes there.

      Too be honest, many of the NASA scientists would be very happy to send a mission a year to mars surface with different instruments esp when they are cheap.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    68. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      Seeing as how i'm an american and I am entitled to free speach

      Um, actually, you're only entitled to speech not regulated by Congress. Hardly Free.

      As an American, I consider it my duty to periodically review my government and it's founding documentation to determine if my government is fulfilling its purpose as is properly laid out. I prefer not to lean on that document as the reason I can do shit. :)

      That said, it is stupid that you got flamed for making a comment that would otherwise have been received as "friendly competition". We've been engaged in friendly competition with the Brits for years and maintain a strong relationship with them as part of the deal. Friendship means a lot more than just not talking trash about people. In fact, if a person defines "friendship" as "not talking trash about me", they're not my friend. :)

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    69. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Phragmen-Lindelof · · Score: 1

      I am just curious; does the $35m include launch and "transit" costs? I would be surprised if a launch vehicle, etc. and a lander could all be obtained for only $35m. (Does the $545m include launch costs for the NASA lander?)

    70. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or - get this clever idea! - they could have just spent some more $$$ on testing the actual landing (remember it was untested...)

      Time was their main problem, as beagle was an "afterthought"

    71. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Glock27 · · Score: 1
      whereas beagle 2 cost a mere $35m.

      Wrong, Beagle 2 cost $375 million.

      Not such a great deal after all, eh? ;-) Did it have a British electrical system?

      --
      Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
      Score: -1 100% Flamebait
    72. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by gangien · · Score: 1

      Really, i'm surprised at the reaction i got from this post. It was a light hearted and true statement. But this is /. i suppose.

    73. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      Doubt it, it was piggybacking on Mars express, which is the primary mission, hence it had severe weight constraints. etc, etc. They also had to prove that beagle couldn't screw up mars express before ESA let the little lander onboard. So there would be a rather significant additional cost of getting those 31 beagles over there as well...

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
    74. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Ed_Moyse · · Score: 2, Informative
      Er, I think yahoo are confused: Beagle2 is a small part of the Mars Express mission, which (in total) cost around 300 million euros and the beagle itself cost around 35m ($62m).

      (and as far as I know the british electrical system is extremely good - less cabling needed, and safer than most alternatives ;-)

    75. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by arevos · · Score: 1

      How do you know it's a 0% success rate? Are you party to knowledge of some fatal flaw in the lander module? Whilst "The design is not proven to be successful", the design isn't proven to be inherently unsuccessful. Any number of things could have gone wrong, after all. Perhaps some component that wasn't correctly made, or perhaps the airbags hit a snag, or perhaps a number of different things.

      Your example is also flawed. Beagle 2, in theory, was supposed to work, whereas your bricks, according to scientific theory, almost certainly wouldn't work. Beagle 2 certainly reached Mars successfully. Just, apparently, not all in one piece ;)

    76. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How do you know it's a 0% success rate?

      Hey genius. Sent one lander. One lander did not work. 0%.

    77. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Moofie · · Score: 1

      You've never had to drive a Triumph in the rain, have you?

      It's important to remember that launch costs are HUGE. Beagle 2 might not have cost very much all by itself, but the rocket that launched it (with its Mars Express companion ship) certainly wasn't cheap.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    78. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Ed_Moyse · · Score: 1

      Okay, I would never try and defend a Triumph!

      On your other point, yeah I realise that the launch costs are huge and I never meant to suggest that the figure I quote was the TOTAL cost of the mission. Nevertheless, the original poster seemed to be confusing the cost of the whole Mars Express, with the cost of Beadle2, which is just plain wrong. The figure he (and yahoo) quoted, was almost certainly wrong. And bear in mind that Beadle2 was an addition to an already existing mission ... so in a sense the total cost of it WAS 35 million GBP. After all, Mars Express would have been launched with or without Beadle2.

    79. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Moofie · · Score: 1

      launched on a smaller, and less expensive rocket.

      Launch costs aren't linear with throw weight, of course, but several thousand dollars/pound is not a bad estimate.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    80. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, its possible to be sad that valuable science wont be done because of beagle 2 AND be proud of the achievements of NASA and the USA.

      I don't know what you are so upset about. It is true that the USA is #1 on Mars right now. He was just stating the facts.

    81. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In your pathetic little mind.

      How many probes have you crashed on mars or sent hurtling off into space?

      I fucking hate yanks.

    82. Re:Take that Beagle 2! by Ed_Moyse · · Score: 1

      Okay, I'll bow to your superior knowledge here, because I certainly am not a rocket scientist (I'm a high energy physicist). Do you know this is true though, or are you guessing? I imagine that there is a limited choice of available rockets, and if the mass of mars express without beadle, and with beadle, both fall into the same payload range, that the same rocket would be used (I didn't explain that very well, but I hope you get what I mean?)

  3. Martians With-holding Comment by Alt_Cognito · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Apparently they are going to ambush on the third day.

  4. Obligatory Sarcasm. by Professor+D · · Score: 0

    I guess we finally got one past the Martian Interstellar Defense Force ...

  5. Sweet.....now just one question. by inteller · · Score: 1, Funny

    When will the ESA officially ask us to go find their rover?

    1. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by McAddress · · Score: 4, Funny

      I can't figure out how the euros were unable to get there rover to work. its not rocket science.

    2. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by dev_alac · · Score: 1
      I can't figure out how the euros were unable to get there rover to work. its not rocket science.

      Ahhh... that's the thing. They can get rocket science but not rocket SCIENCE!. Not mad enough.

    3. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps because they didn't have a rover.

    4. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      They forgot to add wheels.

    5. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They forgot to add wheels.

      Nah, the ran out of money so they decided to use an rc car they got off ebay.

    6. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How to send missions to Mars?

    7. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      How to remove a man's liver with our bare hands.

      Tssssssssssss!

    8. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sadly enough, this sort of distinction is exactly what most of us are supposed to learn during school.

    9. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I can't figure out how the euros were unable to get there rover to work. its not rocket science.

      I can't speak for the british, but Spirit used rockets to slow its decent.

    10. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The English language is not rocket science, and you aren't able to get it to work.

    11. Re:Sweet.....now just one question. by DjReagan · · Score: 1

      The Spirit Rover is in the middle of a large crater (as it is thought to be an ancient lake formation, and likely to contain signs of water)

      It's probably going to be a touch difficult for it to climb out and go looking for Beagle2

      --
      "When I grow up, I want to be a weirdo"
  6. BBC News Mars Rover Report by aheath · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. Re:BBC News Mars Rover Report by BigHungryJoe · · Score: 4, Funny

      Check out this news report from SFGate -

      Mission officials said that means that if time permitted before the Martian dusk, the rover could start snapping pitchers of Mars late Saturday night.

      I hope them pitchers look perty!

    2. Re:BBC News Mars Rover Report by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy crap, it really does say "pitchers" and not "pictures."

      I refuse to believe that journalists are this stupid - it must be intentional, some sort of joke.

      I wish I could axe the author what he meant.

    3. Re:BBC News Mars Rover Report by BigHungryJoe · · Score: 1

      They've corrected it. What a novel concept. Perhaps /. could take a cue from sfgate.

    4. Re:BBC News Mars Rover Report by fenix+down · · Score: 2, Funny

      We are talking about the same journalists, aren't we? Short, weasely little things? Live in caves, spend a lot of time worrying about Marylin Manson and which common household items are made of deadly poison? Hang around the White House filling their humps with doughnuts and coffee for the summer migration to Florida and waiting for the press secratary to finish writing their articles for them?

    5. Re:BBC News Mars Rover Report by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'The 545m rovers will roam the planet and examine rocks in a three-month mission to map out the history of water on Mars.'

      Holy shit! For that kind of money Britain would have been able to make a manned mission to Mars instead of Beagle2...

  7. NASA TV press conference by dev_alac · · Score: 5, Informative

    Press conference here at 9:30pm PST, so in about 25 min.

    1. Re:NASA TV press conference by dev_alac · · Score: 3, Informative

      More coverage at Spacedaily, Space.com, and of course the usual news outlets CNN et al...

  8. Pleasant news... by __aatgod8309 · · Score: 1

    Nice to hear 'Mars' and 'Successful' in the same post for a change...

    1. Re:Pleasant news... by Xeth · · Score: 1

      That's simply not true. Successful is a valid subtring of "Not Successful", right?

      --
      If your theory is different from practice, then your theory is wrong.
    2. Re:Pleasant news... by __aatgod8309 · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, i guess it's more 'Not Yet Unsuccessful' then...

    3. Re:Pleasant news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice to hear 'Mars' and 'Successful' in the same post for a change...

      Yeah, it really balances out all the "Europe" and "Failure" news.

  9. For once... by djward · · Score: 0

    It's NASA's craft that works when others have failed. Perhaps this is a good sign for things to come...

    1. Re:For once... by Cat_Byte · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Perhaps it's a sign we'll get back some of the 2/3 cut in spending Clinton did. Since that cut we've lost several lives & probes. You can't do rocket science on entry lvl I.T. salaries.

      It's also a good sign that putting more spending in the program by Bush actually helped.

      Premature but hopefully a good sign. Any president of either party that cuts spending on something so important gets my thumbs down. They use their cell phones developed by NASA to make the phone call to cut their spending.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    2. Re:For once... by glitch! · · Score: 1

      It's NASA's craft that works when others have failed. Perhaps this is a good sign for things to come...
      It is certainly good news to hear of a successful landing, and to anticipate all the information we will receive from this project. And as for the Beagle 2, it was a lot cheaper than Spirit, and if nothing else, we can hopefully use its failure as a useful data point. In other words, the experts may be able to learn the boundaries of exactly what is necessary for a succesful Mars mission, so even a "damn! it failed!" gives us some useful information.

      --
      A dingo ate my sig...
    3. Re:For once... by CrowScape · · Score: 1

      Now now, although I enjoy a good Clinton bashing as much as the next guy, Republicans were in charge of Congress, and thus the purse strings, for the bulk of his tenure. So don't just blame him.

      --
      common sense: noun
      What those who are ignorant of the subject matter think; usually wrong.
    4. Re:For once... by CrowScape · · Score: 1

      Hey, if "Opportunity" makes it as well, NASA will have performed quite the hat trick when you include Stardust.

      --
      common sense: noun
      What those who are ignorant of the subject matter think; usually wrong.
    5. Re:For once... by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      Never mind the cell phones. What about all the Tylenol and Ibuprofen sold as Motrin? Sometimes some really lo-tech stuff comes out of it all, too.

      --
      C|N>K
    6. Re:For once... by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      I hear ya but look it up. He used his line item veto power on this right after he got it. 2/3 spending cuts on defense & in the fine print it included nasa.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    7. Re:For once... by Rotten168 · · Score: 1

      Why is throwing money at something considered good policy?

    8. Re:For once... by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it's a sign we'll get back some of the 2/3 cut in spending Clinton did. Since that cut we've lost several lives & probes. You can't do rocket science on entry lvl I.T. salaries.

      It's also a good sign that putting more spending in the program by Bush actually helped.


      I hate to break it to you, but the Mars Exploration Rover budget was set years ago, long before Bush took office. It's definitely part of the "better, faster, cheaper" program, with a budget of well under a billion dollars. There's virtually nothing Bush could have done - throwing more money at it couldn't have increased the chance of success, and there would have been no way to take money away without basically cancelling the whole mission. Maybe sending one rover instead of two, but that wouldn't have saved much except the fuel.

    9. Re:For once... by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      Since throwing 1/3 less $$ meant no redundancy or error checking budget and lives were lost.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    10. Re:For once... by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      Cutting spending by 2/3 hurt the program. You can't deny that. Giving them more $$ had to help. I don't see how you can deny that.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    11. Re:For once... by forgetful · · Score: 1

      Nixon pulled the plug on Apollo and Johnson was more than happy to spend a little pork. They both ran into a little budget problem in SE Asia. Today we need more positive politics for Space from both parties in the US, and to give credit where credit is due: to the Euros, the Russians, the Japanese, the Chinese, and all the rest. Goodwill to humans and Martians alike!

      --
      "...while history is usually explicable it is often irrational" --Roger Spiller
    12. Re:For once... by killthiskid · · Score: 1

      Hmm... cat_byte, I just skipped over a metamoding a mod on your post as interesting because I can't find any proof of what you speak. So I am curious. Could you please point me to hard numbers and facts that prove your point... it will not help the metamod, but it will help me in knowing if what you say is true.

    13. Re:For once... by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      Even though I feel a hint of sarcasm here I'll cut & paste so you don't have to look up the very first google hit I found.

      http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/2/ 4/ 123904.shtml
      NASA budgets since fiscal year 1992:

      1993 $14.309 billion, existing NASA budget when Clinton took office;

      1994 $14.568 billion, $259 million increase, first Clinton budget;

      1995 $13.853 billion, $715 million decrease;

      1996 $13.885 billion, $32 million increase;

      1997 $13.709 billion, $176 million decrease;

      1998 $13.648 billion, $61 million decrease;

      1999 $13.654 billion, $6 million increase;

      2000 $13.601 billion, $53 million decrease;

      2001 $14.253 billion, $652 million increase;

      2002 $14.892 billion, $639 million increase, first Bush budget;

      2003 $15.000 billion, $108 million increase (estimated);

      2004 $15.469 billion, $469 million increase (proposed);


      So, during the Clinton years it was cut by 784 million dollars. During these 10 years the expenses naturally increase as their income substantially decreased.

      George W. Bush has increased NASA's funding in each of his three submitted budgets since taking office. Those increases have totaled $1.216 billion.

      Notice now our landers are actually making it there and for the first time I heard them actually talking about redundant systems. For the last 10 years all I heard about was how they had to build a spacecraft on a budget as small as a car dealership spends on a prototype car. Also remember how much of their budget has been redirected to launches for the ISS and keeping vehicles twice the age of my car running.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    14. Re:For once... by killthiskid · · Score: 1

      Thanks!

  10. CNN live by Zed2K · · Score: 1

    CNN had it live, it was pretty cool. If it landed all in one piece and rolls on out in 9 days or so give all those engineers a raise.

    1. Re:CNN live by Teese · · Score: 1

      I saw the live feed from cnn too, and it was very cool. A very tense few minutes between the landing tones and the "all things are really cool" signal.

      I was almost as excited for that signal as I was for the packers making it to the playoffs last week (woo-hoo go packers!). It makes me wonder what other geeky events should the be showing live on tv? I'm also curios to know how long they would've stayed with the NASA feed if things had gone badly.

      --
      "I'm a Genius!"*


      *Not an actual Genius
    2. Re:CNN live by Drantin · · Score: 1

      Yeah... I saw it live too... but from NASA TV ;)

      --
      Actio personalis moritur cum persona. (Dead men don't sue)
    3. Re:CNN live by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      The nasa web feed started 30 mins before & it is still going. No interruptions by reporters showing their faces during transmissions either. That bugged me. Computer feed full screen with TV on mute with captions enabled was the best way to watch.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    4. Re:CNN live by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      I watched the last unsuccessful landing on the NASA web page feed. It abrubtly cut me off with a "not found" message when trying to reconnect. I turned on CNN & saw that it had problems. Feed from NASA on there had been shut off as well.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
  11. American Engineering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's important to not about the last month's missions to Mars is that the Americans were able to put their vehicle on the Death Planet while the rest of the world failed miserably.

    1. Re:American Engineering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmmm... Beagle 2, Mars Polar Lander... maybe they're not so bad after all ? At least they did get their orbiter in orbit (unlike Mars Climate Orbiter). Ooops. ;)

  12. Faked! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Notice how they lost contact, then the live stream stopped for 5 mins, then the stream came back jsut as they "discover" that the rover has landed. I guess they needed those 5 misn to find the prerecorded tape.

    1. Re:Faked! by GabrielF · · Score: 1

      You know, thanks for posting that! Those tricksy NASA hobbits had me for a moment! I was especially impressed at how they were able to seamlessly fake the live CNN feed from JPL.

    2. Re:Faked! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I think you would have trouble sending a signal 10 lightminutes to Earth too if the Earth had set below the horizon. They had to wait for MGS to orbit over it and send back data...

    3. Re:Faked! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No you twat, they stopped the live feed from *mission control* when everything went wrong...

  13. One down...one to go by Sabalon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hopefully we'll have as good luck in a few weeks.

    Beagle 2 still has a chance when it starts ping flooding on the 5th.

    If we get good enough at these, I'd love to have a rover to drive all over just to find all the missing missions.

    1. Re:One down...one to go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd love to have a rover to drive all over just to find all the missing missions

      Give this guy some funny mod points :)

    2. Re:One down...one to go by Tmack · · Score: 4, Funny
      Yeh, great.. its gonna start DOS'ing the earth/mars transmissions. I can see it now, the rover starts to roll out, pics are coming in, then static on screen and accompanied by music cause beagle 2 is flooding all channels with that song it uses as a beacon composed by the British band Blur...

      Tm

      --
      Support TBI Research: http://www.raisinhope.org
    3. Re:One down...one to go by ruprechtjones · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "If we get good enough at these, I'd love to have a rover to drive all over just to find all the missing missions. "

      In 50 years, we'll have the grand "failed missions" tour with a roundabout hovercraft (so's not to disturb the soil) hussling tourists to each site to show the debris of our early attempts at invading this planet. If I were rich, I'd secure this niche and make a pretty penny, maybe even use the proceeds to work on that terraforming plant I've always dreamed of...

      --
      Kip Hawley is an idiot.
    4. Re:One down...one to go by Temporal · · Score: 5, Funny

      that song it uses as a beacon composed by the British band Blur

      Maybe they didn't pick up Beagle's signal because it was indistinguishable from background noise?

    5. Re:One down...one to go by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1

      If you tune your radio antennae in the direction of Mars, maybe you'll hear the following...

      Girls who are boys
      Who like boys to be girls
      Who do boys like they're girls
      Who do girls like they're boys


      Yes, it's a Blur song.

    6. Re:One down...one to go by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      If you tune your radio antennae in the direction of Mars, maybe you'll hear the following...
      Girls who are boys
      Who like boys to be girls
      Who do boys like they're girls
      Who do girls like they're boys
      Yes, it's a Blur song.


      No wonder Beagle stopped transmitting. I was all confused:

      Am I a Mars probe on Venus
      Who lands like a Venus Probe on Mars
      Or like a Mars probe on Venus who lands
      like a Venus probe on Venus....

    7. Re:One down...one to go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, is there an open relay on Beagle? Is it only a matter of time before we start getting spam from .mars??

    8. Re:One down...one to go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL, just wait until the Chinese land on Mars. Then all kinds of spam will be coming from there.

    9. Re:One down...one to go by Guppy06 · · Score: 1
      "In 50 years, we'll have the grand "failed missions" tour with a roundabout hovercraft (so's not to disturb the soil)"
      1. Hovercraft's do disturb soil. If not with their air skirts than with the fans that propel them
      2. The hovercraft will have to be very overpowered compared to earth-based craft because of the thin atmosphere
      3. This isn't the moon. Mars weather is very good at disturbing its own soil
  14. Congratulations Nasa! by Merik · · Score: 1

    This is a great day for space exploration. We have succesfully completed the most complex engineering sequence ever created by man.

    --

    --

    What is the sound of this sentence?

    1. Re:Congratulations Nasa! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      We have succesfully completed the most complex engineering sequence ever created by man.

      And I always thought that was the Win98 Install CD... :)

      Congratulations to the Nasa Engineers!

    2. Re:Congratulations Nasa! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, that would be the moon landings.

    3. Re:Congratulations Nasa! by Surazal · · Score: 1
      > We have succesfully completed the most complex engineering sequence ever created by man.

      And I always thought that was the Win98 Install CD... :)

      I wouldn't exactly use the word "engineering" to describe that process. Besides, Windows has yet to cause my computer to rocket into the atmosphere at hypersonic speeds, resulting in it landing on the ground and bouncing for a few kilometers before resting in the middle of an old lake bed. Hold on, there was that incident in '96... nah, must be a coincidence.

      --
      --- Journals are boring; Go to my web page instead
    4. Re:Congratulations Nasa! by flewp · · Score: 2, Funny

      Besides, Windows has yet to cause my computer to rocket into the atmosphere at hypersonic speeds, resulting in it landing on the ground and bouncing for a few kilometers before resting in the middle of an old lake bed.

      You're obviously not overclocking your machine enough then.

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
  15. cool they finally did it by c0bra1 · · Score: 1

    cool they finally did it they landed on the red planet

    1. Re:cool they finally did it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      cool they finally did it they landed on the red planet

      Ever hear of sojourner?

    2. Re:cool they finally did it by UserGoogol · · Score: 1
      --
      "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity." -- Hanlon's Razor
  16. New device by pen · · Score: 4, Funny

    Windows has detected a new device, "Planet Mars". Please insert the disk marked "Windows CD-ROM" and press OK to continue.

    1. Re:New device by Peaceful_Patriot · · Score: 3, Funny

      I believe it's called 'My Mars' and it creates a permanent icon on your desktop that regularly phones home.

      --
      There is nothing so powerful as an idea whose time has come.
    2. Re:New device by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      Yeah, then press the reset button on the front of the rover...Doh!

    3. Re:New device by francium+de+neobie · · Score: 1

      William Henry Gates III, president of Microsoft Corporation, will be sent to Mars to press the reset button.

  17. Mission Updates by Glendale2x · · Score: 4, Informative

    Check out the live mission updates on Spaceflight Now:

    http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/status.html

    I watched it on NASA TV, too. It was quite an exciting ride through entry and landing. We have the second rover landing to look forward to on January 24.

    --
    this is my sig
    1. Re:Mission Updates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      gaah! Credit card just to see some video clips arrghh!!!

      *clears throat*
      Torrents!!! Torrents!!!!

    2. Re:Mission Updates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Its currently showing:
      0536 GMT (12:36 a.m. EST) O'Keefe and other program officials are having a toast to celebrate the Mars Exploration Rovers.

      Whereas the Beagle 2 team are currently having a Mars to celebrate Beagle 2 being toast ...

  18. Cool Animation by Unregistered · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. Re:Cool Animation by KingReuben · · Score: 1

      Ah that is a nice animation.. I could squeak a little about the soundtrack but I won't! All alone out there on that giant red planet a little rather cute rover is beginning its mission wandering around taking pictures and drilling stuff. America has once again proven we 0wNz0rZ space! :D

      --


      --
      om Shanti
    2. Re:Cool Animation by La+Fortezza · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The part where the rover is out exploring (with the "American Beauty" music in the background) brought a tear to my eye.

      If the world got off its collective ass, just imagine all the great things humanity could achieve.

  19. Successful landing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  20. Yep! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll just confirm what you said: the rover successfully landed on the surface of Mars and came to a stop on its base, according to signals relayed through the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft, which is in orbit around the planet. Pictures are possible tonight (to be relayed through Mars Oddessy), although I'm trying not to keep my hopes up.

  21. What's next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's next? We need to get our asses to Mars?

  22. Thanks to JPL-Jeff (et. al.) for the irc channel! by yo · · Score: 2, Informative

    Check out #maestro on irc.freenode.net!

  23. WooHoo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Monkeys fling poop at nearest plantet... and it lives to tell the tale!!!

  24. Why can't we just get along? by jonr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I want BOTH to work, dammit!

  25. Get all the latest info here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I've been trying to watch Nasa TV but it won't connect. There's a text-only site that has been updating every few minutes with new info here:

    http://www.spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/status.htm l

  26. mm by mallmall · · Score: 1

    I wish Ricardo Montalban could have seen this.

    --
    A modicum of snuff can be quite efficacious.
    1. Re:mm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it goes.

    2. Re:mm by Burdell · · Score: 1
      I wish Ricardo Montalban could have seen this.
      Why do think he didn't? He's not dead, Jim.
  27. Re:WooHOo! by benna · · Score: 1

    When you think about it we are at the very begining stages of space travel. It is much like the parent says.

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  28. Timeline by CaptBubba · · Score: 1, Redundant
    Here's a good timeline of the landing

    Watching on NASATV was a bit trying on the nerves. It went from "Holy shit, we have signal!" to "Oh shit, we don't have signal... try to remain calm" for ten mins, followed by "Woooooo! We found it again!"

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

      ummm... no thanks

    2. Re:Timeline by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      Wow... the tracking station in Canberra (AU) was happy to do it at 10 bits/sec? I feel like such a pigopolist now... that's fuckin impressive.

      --
      C|N>K
    3. Re:Timeline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WE GET SIGNAL!

      Main screen turn on!

  29. WE GET SIGNAL by seanmeister · · Score: 0

    all your mars are belong to us!

  30. Mars Rover Spirit Lands, Goes Radio Silent by securitas · · Score: 3, Informative

    Looks like michael achieved the very difficult simultaneous posted/rejected duo.

    Here's the rejected post which amounts to a mixed report on the success of the mission, courtesy of Reuters, Space.com and the BBC:

    Reuters and the BBC report that the first U.S. Mars Rover - the Spirit - has landed and radioed a confirmation signal, but has since gone silent. NASA/JPL are waiting to learn if it survived. Space.com reports that the Spirit has indeed landed safely.

    1. Re:Mars Rover Spirit Lands, Goes Radio Silent by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      nods me too. actually mine first hit the error 500 page not found reject page then after the 15th try it was already in there.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    2. Re:Mars Rover Spirit Lands, Goes Radio Silent by rufey · · Score: 5, Informative
      In watching the whole thing on NASA TV (realtime), the radio signal did disappear for about 10 minutes right after landing (and everyone at JPL was bitting their nails), but that was expected since the lander would be bounding all over the place until it came to rest.

      Although the roughly 10 minutes was longer than anyone expected the signal to be gone, it wasn't all that unusual. When NASA's DSN locked back onto the signal, it was strong. It is then that NASA learned the lander landed right-side-up and the airbags were still inflated (which is very good news). Airbag deflation, petel opening, and the first survey of the landing site is up next. We might even have our first pictures within the next 12 hours or so.

    3. Re:Mars Rover Spirit Lands, Goes Radio Silent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just coincidentally, my internet stream of nasa tv, that I had been watching for over 2 hours w/o any problems, disappeared just after they lost the signal from Mars. |-P I didn't get the stream back until after NASA got the signal back. Coincidence???

      (The first time my now 15-yo daughter saw "coincidence" in print she said, "What's 'co-inky-denk' mean?")

    4. Re:Mars Rover Spirit Lands, Goes Radio Silent by daveashcroft · · Score: 1, Funny

      I all seriousness, me too! Im convinced it was the surface roaming martian overlords who are to blame. I for one, welcome them.

    5. Re:Mars Rover Spirit Lands, Goes Radio Silent by mpthompson · · Score: 1

      Same exact thing happened to me as well. I lost the NASA TV feed just as they announced indications were that the rover was bouncing and they lost the signal from Mars. I finally got it back after 10 minutes of nail biting to see everyone in the control room patting each other on the back.

      I attributed it to thousands of people trying to see NASA TV over the web at that specific time, but who knows...

    6. Re:Mars Rover Spirit Lands, Goes Radio Silent by diverman · · Score: 1

      And not to shoot myself in the foot by bogging down all feed....

      Here's a bunch of feeds (mostly RealMedia) for live NasaTV on the web. :)

      -Alex

    7. Re:Mars Rover Spirit Lands, Goes Radio Silent by PingXao · · Score: 1

      24 hours?!?!?!

      It only took TWO hours! A good job by NASA and JPL, no doubt, but a bit of luck didn't hurt either.

    8. Re:Mars Rover Spirit Lands, Goes Radio Silent by Pastis · · Score: 1

      Slightly off topic, but we are a geek site, aren't we?

      I was wondering was OS was running in the screenshot that can be seen on:
      http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/040104ima ge1.h tml

      Any idea?

  31. (stolen from Fark) by ArsSineArtificio · · Score: 4, Funny
    First message received from Mars rover: PC LOAD LETTER

    --
    All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
    1. Re:(stolen from Fark) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot: "Press the any key to continue"

    2. Re:(stolen from Fark) by Penguinshit · · Score: 1



      I thought it was

      This rover has committed an illegal operation and will be shut down...

    3. Re:(stolen from Fark) by b1t+r0t · · Score: 1
      Karma whore. :)

      I hope I have soiled many keyboards with that one.

      --

      --
      "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
      "Open source is evil." - Microsoft
    4. Re:(stolen from Fark) by b1t+r0t · · Score: 2, Funny

      "Keyboard missing: press any key to continue"

      --

      --
      "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
      "Open source is evil." - Microsoft
    5. Re:(stolen from Fark) by utahjazz · · Score: 1, Funny

      First message received from Mars rover: PC LOAD LETTER

      What the fuck does that mean?

    6. Re:(stolen from Fark) by ruprechtjones · · Score: 1

      What the fuck does that mean?

      --
      Kip Hawley is an idiot.
    7. Re:(stolen from Fark) by Bombcar · · Score: 1

      That's what a Laserjet Printer says when it wants paper. Many people get confused by the PC, thinking it means Personal Computer, when it obviously means "Paper Cartridge".

      So basically, in means about as much as "All you bass are belong to U.S."

    8. Re:(stolen from Fark) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whooosh or (I believe the 'what the fuck does that mean' posts refer to a scene from the movie Office Space)

    9. Re:(stolen from Fark) by ArsSineArtificio · · Score: 1

      All credit to you - I just thought it was so funny I wanted other people to see it.

      --
      All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
    10. Re:(stolen from Fark) by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      And how does explaining it prove that the poster didn't know it was from the movie? Just like most geeks don't find it funny when people make stupid jokes based on not knowing what "illegal operation" means, or what "general protection" means, someone who actually KNOWS what PC Load Letter means probably wouldn't find that scene as funny.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    11. Re:(stolen from Fark) by Unordained · · Score: 1

      "What the fuck does that mean" was a reference to 'Office Space' (movie,) I'm pretty sure. Printer in question subsequently gets beaten to a messy metallic pulp in an empty field by angry programmers ... but thanks anyway. +1 Insightful to you.

    12. Re:(stolen from Fark) by Thing+1 · · Score: 1
      someone who actually KNOWS what PC Load Letter means probably wouldn't find that scene as funny.

      Sorry, I was ROFL at that scene, and I know what it means. Then again, look at me... ;-)

      I'm so glad we finally got through Marvin's defenses!

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    13. Re:(stolen from Fark) by QuantumFTL · · Score: 1

      PC LOAD LETTER, wtf does that mean? :)

    14. Re:(stolen from Fark) by VikingBrad · · Score: 1

      Mars Rover is US based which and US uses LETTER size paper. Beagle is European based and uses A4 size paper. Anybody who is outside the US regularly has their printers or PCs (particularly Word) default to LETTER size and get strange messages like Load Letter on the printer and users think they should load a written letter, they don't understand it is the default paper size in US. Cheers VikingBrad

    15. Re:(stolen from Fark) by ionpro · · Score: 1

      Honestly, I've never understood why people find this message stupid/pointless. Virtually every time I see it, I reach down, plug in my keyboard, and hit F1; works like a charm. And it's an easy way to make sure the problem is actually fixed.

    16. Re:(stolen from Fark) by tepples · · Score: 0

      So an "illegal operation" doesn't refer to partial-birth abortion?

  32. Still some tense moments ahead. by TheF00 · · Score: 1, Informative

    While the landing is surely good news, there are still a few perilous moments ahead. To be successful they first have to deflate the airbags, and open module up. Then they must deploy the solar panels in order to get power before sunset or the mission is over. Seems like i remember reading somewhere that they must get the batteries partially charged to survive the intense nights there on the martian surface.

    Looks like a picture perfect landing for them so far.. I sure wish them luck.

  33. Re:Congratulations NASA by Lobo_Louie · · Score: 2, Funny

    Shhh... you're going to make the Martians hate us too.

  34. frrrrrpt! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a most satisfying fart on your spectacular failure!

  35. NASA cable channel by eggoeater · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm thrilled they got it there safe....this was the first landing that I watched live on the NASA channel. It had the feel of a local public access program. No one knew how to talk to or look at the camera. I also liked how the "reporter" was pulling people aside for short interviews....like they don't have anything better to do while the Spirit plumits through Mars' atmosphere. It was pretty cool to see all the different reactions in real time though. Good job guys!
    -Steve

    1. Re:NASA cable channel by Angry+Toad · · Score: 1

      I made the mistake of watching on CNN instead of just loading up NASA TV. Miles O'Brien does a good job, but I found myself yelling "Oh just shut the fark up and let me listen to what's happening already!" Of course they have to pander to the understanding impaired, but all the same their coverage obscured more of the event that it enlightened.

    2. Re:NASA cable channel by DuckFoundry · · Score: 1

      They really don't have anything better to do. Spirit was completely under software control -- all they could do was monitor the incoming data, which was nine minutes old. If anything went wrong, there was nothing to do

      It was really exciting to watch on NASA TV, though.

  36. You can email the probe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    With your probing requests at spirit@nasa.gov. Please, no spam.

  37. Search For Beagle by DeadBugs · · Score: 2, Funny

    Now it would be really cool if it could find Beagle 2.

    Even if it only finds an impact crater :-(

    --
    http://www.kubuntu.org/
    1. Re:Search For Beagle by MBCook · · Score: 1

      With all the instruments packed on board, did they remember the bent paperclip to poke in the "Reset" hole when we the rover finds the Begal 2?

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    2. Re:Search For Beagle by MBCook · · Score: 1

      Or how 'bout a little boot on a pendulum thing to kick it on the side? He he he, I've got a million of 'em.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    3. Re:Search For Beagle by mlk · · Score: 2, Informative

      Beagle 2 is ~1/2 a planet away.

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
    4. Re:Search For Beagle by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      That depends a lot on how Mac-centric the team is. There isn't a Mac user in the world (except for the kind of guy who waddles into the Apple Store waving a credit card every time something 'bad' happens to his Mac) who doesn't keep a paperclip on hand to deal with the 'issues' of no eject button for removable media. In some circles it's known as the macintool.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
  38. Great! by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

    This is great news, especially considering the not-so-great things that have happened in space recently.

    I tried to connect to NASA TV's RealPlayer stream; it was down. Is there a better way to connect, or was that just out from load?

    Is the Spirit in range of the Beagle, so it could search for the lost craft?

    1. Re:Great! by rufey · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I always visit this page and go down the sites they have listed where NASA TV is streamed. I usually have the best luck with either one of the KSC links, although a few times the Houston Cronicle stream has been reliable.

      During high profile missions (like tonight), though, they tend to get swamped no matter where you go. I got kicked off a few times but was able to reconnected almost immediatly.

      Beagle-2 and MER-A (Spirit) are not close enough together to do a search. MER-2 (Opportunity) also won't be close enough to Beagle-2.

      You should consider downloading (for free) Mars24, which is a Java application that shows a map of Mars, and you can configure it to show you where all the successful landers (and Beagle-2) are located in relation to each other, plus where the Sun is shining, and other stuff.

  39. Awesome! Somewhat satisfying... by Joey7F · · Score: 1

    With the European (ie France and Germany) smugness having their "lesson" in how to successfully complete interplanetary travel fail, it is nice to see that another American "lawn dart", I believe was the term, landed and will provide us with all kinds of new information necessary for manned flight.

    All that said, I would have liked for the Brits et al to succeed (I am not lumping the British in the axis of arrogance) because science should take precedence over petty squabbles.

    --Joey

    1. Re:Awesome! Somewhat satisfying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "axis of arrogance" :-) That title belongs entierly to the US. As you are ample evidence of. The only mistake they did was to rely on american technology for communication.

    2. Re:Awesome! Somewhat satisfying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hello?

      Do you not have schools in Europe?

      World War I - Europeans vs. Europeans?

      World War II - Europeans vs. Europeans?

      The Lend-Lease Act? - USA saving Europeans?

      The Marshall Plan? - USA saving Europeanss?

      The Berlin Airlift? - USA saving Europeans?

      The monetary value Europe owes the USA exceeds several trillion dollars. We'll never ask for you to pay it though.

    3. Re:Awesome! Somewhat satisfying... by Joey7F · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I can't believe I am responding to an AC, but here goes...

      I am arrogant? How exactly? By paraphrasing what ESA officials gleefully were saying after NASA failures. I am still rooting for Beagle 2.

      As Americans we are used to being called every name in the book, it is part of the burden of being the parents of the world. Like children, no one blames others for criticizing the parents (USA) only when the parent fouls up do we get outbursts from everyone.

      Just out of curiosity, how do you know it was the communication technology that failed? How do you know it didn't smash into the surface?

      We may know something soon on the Beagle 2 front and hopefully it is good news :)

      --Joey

    4. Re:Awesome! Somewhat satisfying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why wouldn't you lump the
      british with the usa?

    5. Re:Awesome! Somewhat satisfying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't want to be considered an asshole then don't start off by calling countries "axis of arrogance". I have never heard of any gleeful comments from ESA regarding US failures. In any event , they are not the ones reading slashdot. BTW wasn't your comment kind of gleeful? I certainly think so. If you people stopped with your damn flag waiving then perhaps the flaming you get would never happen.

    6. Re:Awesome! Somewhat satisfying... by Ed_Moyse · · Score: 1
      I am arrogant? How exactly? By paraphrasing what ESA officials gleefully were saying after NASA failures. I am still rooting for Beagle 2.


      Can you give a link to a SINGLE ESA official being "gleeful" at NASA failures? If you can, then I'm extremely sorry at such unprofessional behaviour.
      As Americans we are used to being called every name in the book, it is part of the burden of being the parents of the world. Like children, no one blames others for criticizing the parents (USA) only when the parent fouls up do we get outbursts from everyone.
      This however is, without a doubt, arrogant. I guess you mean that because america is bigger and more powerful than everyone else, then it is "the parent of the world"?

  40. In other news.... by Pizaz · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Martian Information Minister reports that there was no successful landing and that Martian air defenses have engaged and shot down their second UFO in just 10 days.

    He went on to say that their Defense Minister "Marvin" is working on a uber weapon known as the Illudium Pew-36 Explosive Space Modulator that will vanquish the infadels in a single Earth shattering KABOOM!

    -PizaZ

    1. Re:In other news.... by inode_buddha · · Score: 1
      ..."Illudium Pew-36 Explosive Space Modulator...

      BwahahahHaha... One of my favorites, thanks.

      I always parsed that as "Immodiun 236 space demodulator" meaning a heavy isotope of Immodium AD. (well-known laxative in the US). In other words, your shit will soon occupy a *lot* of space, but will have no form.

      --
      C|N>K
    2. Re:In other news.... by Guppy06 · · Score: 2, Funny

      "The Martian Information Minister"

      There are no robotic infidels on Mars! Never! The probes have started to commit suicide under the walls of our craters!

    3. Re:In other news.... by red+floyd · · Score: 1

      It's the Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modula-tor!

      Where's the Kaboom? There was supposed to be an Earth-shattering kaboom!

      --
      The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
    4. Re:In other news.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, isn't Immodium AD an anti-diarrhea medication and not a laxative? It's kind of important we sort this out--I would think taking a laxative for diarrhea would not produce desired results.

    5. Re:In other news.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They use it as a sort of reverse psycology on your ass.

    6. Re:In other news.... by inode_buddha · · Score: 1

      OK, my mistake. So it reduces your ass to a singularity instead.

      --
      C|N>K
  41. Those are mooninites! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I believe they've actually landed on the Moon! Some would say the Earth is their moon, but that would belittle the name of their moon... which is the moon.

    1. Re:Those are mooninites! by fastidious+edward · · Score: 4, Funny
      --

      karma karma karma karma karma chameleon, you come and go, you come and go.
    2. Re:Those are mooninites! by NoData · · Score: 1

      "I hope your inferior NASA cameras see this, because I'm doing it as hard as I can."

    3. Re:Those are mooninites! by Dirtside · · Score: 1

      No, we no longer like the moon: The moon is our enemy and must be destroyed..

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  42. separate tasking if both make it? by sunrein · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I may be playing the optimist here, but what if Opportunity also lands safely? Are they going to duplicate the tasking data, divide them, or will Opportunity get some additional assignments? I've been looking around on the NASA pages and couldn't find any answers. Thoughts? Conjecture?

    1. Re:separate tasking if both make it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have no clue how much money NASA could make from televising "Robot Wars....in SPACE!"

    2. Re:separate tasking if both make it? by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      They are landing far apart and there are teams assigned to both missions.

      http://marsoweb.nas.nasa.gov/landingsites/

    3. Re:separate tasking if both make it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Conjecture - landing two has always been the plan. They are on opposite sides of the planet. One is working while the other is asleep.

  43. Next on Mars is power by faguirre · · Score: 1
    That is, getting it before the batteries drain. Do you why they don't use nuclear power, like Voyager 2?

    Rover alive on Mars is excellent news, indeed.

    1. Re:Next on Mars is power by rufey · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Using nuclear power on a spacecraft, while it has been done before, faces many challenges. And the challenges really have nothing to do with the technical aspects. Its the enviornment.

      I believe that the Cassini Saturn probe is using nuclear power (Saturn is too far away from the Sun to obtain enough power via solar panels). Enviornmentalists put up a big stink about Cassini having radioactive material on-board. Their argument was what if the stack blew up on launch and spewed the stuff around? I remember some sort of grass-roots effort to block its launch (which, of course, was unsuccessful, because Cassini is currently on its way to Saturn).

    2. Re:Next on Mars is power by shadowcabbit · · Score: 0, Troll

      Do you why they don't use nuclear power, like Voyager 2?

      We can barely land the blasted things, and you want to chuck a nuclear reactor with it? Hell, why not send four or five of them and destroy the planet we're trying to colonize before mankind even gets there? I'm not a nuclear scientist but I am fairly certain nuclear plants do not like to be rolled around, jarred, jostled, or plunged into an impact crater.

      --
      "Why Subscribe?" Good question...
    3. Re:Next on Mars is power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Largely because it's not necessary. Solar power is available--and Mars isn't getting (much) farther away from the sun any time soon, so it will continue to be available.

    4. Re:Next on Mars is power by Detritus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Nuclear power (radioisotope thermoelectric generators) is expensive. The fuel, pu238, makes platinum look cheap. Why spend the money, and give the lunatic fringe of the environmental movement something to protest about, if it isn't really necessary?

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    5. Re:Next on Mars is power by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1

      Nuclear power (standard fission processes) is efficient. The fuel, U-230something, is quite expensive, but will generate insane amounts of power, such that even after much safety-related overhead it is many times cheaper than the cheapest coal power. Furthermore, I do not believe that plutonium in any form is has ever been used to generate electrical power... and I am rather sure that the only use for plutonium is in weapons systems. (Correct me if I'm wrong, please, and give documentation, so I can know better next time).

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    6. Re:Next on Mars is power by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Current Nuclear Powered space probes don't have reactors on them.

      Although there is a plan for a nuclear reactor to go up later in the decade.

      The American and Soviet sats and probes that have been nuclear powered use RTGs.

      http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/imgcat/html/object_pa ge /vl2_21c056.html

      There are RTGs on the Vikings, on the Moon from Apollo, on the major probes like Voyager, Pioneer, Cassini and Galileo

      http://satobs.org/seesat/Jan-1996/0204.html

      http://www.ne.doe.gov/space/spacepwr.html

      As for fission reactors taking thumps, the 8 reactors on Enterprise did alright during the accident as did the 2 on Nimitz during another accident, as have numerous reactors on submarines and ships in various militaries which have had bumps, thumps and sinkings.

    7. Re:Next on Mars is power by Ohreally_factor · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's a good thing we don't put them into submarines or aircraft carriers.

      --
      It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
    8. Re:Next on Mars is power by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      'Nuclear plant' does not have to mean a big honking boiling water reactor plant. I'm not an expert at the nuclear power sources they've used in space thus far, but I doubt if it's the fragile kind of thing we do on a scale of megawatts here on terra. 'Atomic batteries' have been implanted in pacemakers, you know...

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    9. Re:Next on Mars is power by Detritus · · Score: 1
      Fission reactors are considerably more complex than RTGs. A RTG directly converts decay heat from an isotope with a relatively short half-life to electricity. There are no moving parts, heat transfer fluids, or complicated cooling systems.

      A typical fission reactor uses enriched uranium, which is mostly u238 with about 3% u235. Pu239 is both created and "burnt" during the operation of a reactor fueled with enriched uranium. A reactor could be fueled with weapons grade pu239 if there was a good reason to do so, such as disposing of excess stockpiles of pu239 pits from obsolete nuclear weapons.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    10. Re:Next on Mars is power by Dolphinzilla · · Score: 1

      Radioactive Thermal Generators (RTG's) require a large thermal gradient to function efficiently - they make use of large banks of thermocouples to directly convert heat to elctricity - they also require shielding to protect the electronics and spacecraft systems from radiation - usually by putting the thing on a boom out away from the main body of the craft - RTG's are also fairly heavy (nuclear fuel is denser than lead) and not desirable for a craft that must land. All and all if you have bright enough sunlight - solar cells are probably the best alternative.

    11. Re:Next on Mars is power by Tailhook · · Score: 1

      Nuclear power (standard fission processes) is efficient. The fuel, U-230something, is quite expensive, but will generate insane amounts of power, such that even after much safety-related overhead it is many times cheaper than the cheapest coal power.

      U-235 is the something. Quoting from The Skeptical Environmentalist:

      "Nuclear power, however, has barely been efficient in the production of energy and this is probably the major reason why its use has not been more widespread. It is difficult to find unequivocal estimates of the total costs that can affect the calculations, but typically the price hovers around 11-13 cents for one kilowatt-hour (kWh) in 1999 prices. This should be compared with an average energy price for fossil fuels of 6.23 cents."

      The author cites three sources for this information.

      I do not believe that plutonium in any form is has ever been used to generate electrical power... and I am rather sure that the only use for plutonium is in weapons systems.

      Plutonium-239 can be consumed by a fast-breeder reactor. Never actually done, but possible.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    12. Re:Next on Mars is power by ajagci · · Score: 1

      and give the lunatic fringe of the environmental movement something to protest about, if it isn't really necessary?

      That lunatic fringe might point out that the majority of Mars rovers to date have met with some unknown fate--disintegration is quite plausible. Do we really want to risk contaminating portions of Mars with radioactive materials? That might play havoc with future science missions.

    13. Re:Next on Mars is power by mnmn · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      And have the martians think we're sending nukes crashing into their crust?

      If Greenpeace wont let you pollute Earth, pollute Mars!

      --
      "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
    14. Re:Next on Mars is power by lommer · · Score: 1

      By what mechanism exactly does an RTG convert heat to electricity? The first method that came to my mind was a thermocouple, yet AFAIK those are fairly ineffecient. Does anyone know?

    15. Re:Next on Mars is power by Detritus · · Score: 1
      They use thermocouples, and yes, they are inefficient.

      For an example, see SNAP-27.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  44. First Post???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    This would've been first post if it wasn't for the eight minute delay between Mars and Earth.

    Check my site soon for hot, live and free cam shows and exclusive pics.

    Love,

    Spirit

    1. Re:First Post???? by rufey · · Score: 5, Funny
      PING spirit.mars.solarsystem 56(84) bytes of data.
      64 bytes from spirit.mars.solarsystem: icmp_seq=0 ttl=239 time=960000 ms

      --- spirit.mars.solarsystem ping statistics ---
      1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 960000 ms
      rtt min/avg/max/mdev = 960000/960000/960000/960000 ms, pipe 2

    2. Re:First Post???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      The rtt mdev time, however, should've been 0ms :)
      </nitpick>

  45. Re:Congratulations NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I'm considered a troll?

  46. Re:WooHOo! by Subaru · · Score: 1

    How true. And what wonderful poop we have flung!

  47. Re:Congratulations NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You sad pathtic winker

  48. hmm by phoinixuser · · Score: 3, Funny

    Maybe we should call beagle in for reinforcements?

    1. Re:hmm by Shut+the+fuck+up! · · Score: 4, Funny

      Spirit actually received a signal from beagle2. It was only one word: "MEDIC!"

    2. Re:hmm by smed · · Score: 1

      hah!
      "Excuse me - I'm in need of medical attention!" - a-la TFC :)

      Very funny parent....I nearly snorted my coffee this AM!

    3. Re:hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On http://www.beagle2.org/resources/down38-mid.htm
      i t states that 129 kph = 8 mph.

  49. Re:Congratulations NASA by Angry+Toad · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The USA did great - nobody can hold a candle to it in this kind of thing. America should be justifiably proud of the job done by the first-rate people at JPL/NASA.

    All the same there's only one thing worse than a sore loser and that's an ungracious winner. There's really no need to go strutting and preening and engaging in dominance poses about it. It shows quite a bit more class to just win and then be decent about it.

  50. The Martian Information Minister Says: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    "All the Earth infidel's space probes were destroyed! There are no Earth probes on mars! Earth probes will never penetrate our atmosphere! Earth probes should surrender now or face certain failure!" /etc, etc

  51. CNN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've been waiting all day to hear this in real-time. I wish the guys on CNN would have shut the f**k up. They didn't know what the hell they were talking about. It would have been much better just to hear the NASA people.
    What an idiot. "15 watts worth of information" What the hell does that mean?
    He actually then said "they could only transmit tones, because it was only 15 watts."
    15 watts is enough to transmit from outside our solar system and has nothing to do with the data rate.
    Anyway, it worked! Hurray for NASA and the Taxpayers!

    1. Re:CNN by gantrep · · Score: 2, Funny

      It means about .02 horspower of data.

    2. Re:CNN by MyHair · · Score: 1

      I actually jumped on the NASA TV web stream about 40 minutes before landing. I figured I'd get to keep my stream, but my signal got lost just after the "bounces" and they quit receiving tone. Argh how frustrating, but I was able to flip between CNN and FoxNews and listen past the annoying dumb reporters a bit. Of course when the mission crew started jumping, clapping and going wild I figured they got the signal back.

    3. Re:CNN by falsification · · Score: 1
      The reporter, Miles O'Brien, may not be a rocket scientist like you, but as reporters go, he is very science-savvy and space-savvy.

      When he said "15 watts of information" I of course winced. Yet, as his voice trailed off, I became convinced that it was just a misstatement. If you regularly see Miles O'Brien cover space for CNN, you would understand that he basically gets it.

      To mock him for one minor misstatement in the midst of great celebration and emotion would be the ultimate in elitist geek exclusion, and is just the mirror reverse of what happens to geeks in their youth. It is cruel.

      Furthermore, those precious few journalists who take an avid interest in science and space should be encouraged. If they need to be educated, educate them. Don't mock them, though. We need them.

    4. Re:CNN by Zibblsnrt · · Score: 1
      To mock him for one minor misstatement in the midst of great celebration and emotion would be the ultimate in elitist geek exclusion, and is just the mirror reverse of what happens to geeks in their youth. It is cruel.

      Can we mock him for his coverage of China's launch back in October, where he dismissed the whole affair as insignificant and not worth taking note of because, after all, it was just a "cheap knockoff" and not the third nation of the scores on this Earth to launch a manned spacecraft?

      --
      "All that is necessary for evil to succeed is for good men to do nothing." - Edmund Burke
    5. Re:CNN by falsification · · Score: 1

      Yes. That would be a political misjudgment stated in a cool and collected way, not a scientific misstatement made in the heat of celebration.

    6. Re:CNN by Zibblsnrt · · Score: 1
      Okay, I see your point. Just wanted to establish that there is a significant amount of Dumbass around the guy, even if it is somewhat less than a majority of reporters these days. ("Columbia was travelling at nearly 18 times the speed of light!")

      --
      "All that is necessary for evil to succeed is for good men to do nothing." - Edmund Burke
    7. Re:CNN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The reporter, Miles O'Brien, may not be a rocket scientist like you, but as reporters go, he is very science-savvy and space-savvy.

      I should hope so.

  52. MOD PARENT UP +1, PATRIOTIC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  53. Press conference by tinrobot · · Score: 1

    From the Spaceflight now website :

    http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/statustexton ly .html

    0505 GMT (12:05 a.m. EST)
    NASA officials will be holding a post-landing press conference at 12:30 a.m. EST.

    Does anyone know if this will be on any cable networks?

    1. Re:Press conference by shadow0324 · · Score: 1

      Just in - FOX News will be carrying the press conference.

  54. Obligatory Nitpick by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 1
    Martian Interstellar Defense Force

    More like Interplanetary rather than Interstellar.

    At least you didn't use Intergalactic. :-)

    --
    --- Ban humanity.
  55. Wooooohoooooo by goatbar · · Score: 1

    Not MPL!! from the 6th floor party

  56. Where's the pictures?? by flanman · · Score: 1

    I'm dying to see them. All I see at nasaTV is a bunch of blurry people hugging one another.

    Of it's an out of focus microscope pic of amoeba's merging and bouncing off each other.

    1. Re:Where's the pictures?? by tinrobot · · Score: 1

      All I see at nasaTV is a bunch of blurry people hugging one another.

      It's called a Geek-gasm...

    2. Re:Where's the pictures?? by Lobo_Louie · · Score: 1

      Take off your Hubblegoggles. :-)

  57. Congratulations by Kremit · · Score: 1

    Congrats to NASA for a successful landing. I've been in the Maestro IRC channel since 11pm, CNN covered it at 11:30, etc. I'm surprised the NASA TV Realserver didn't catch fire.

  58. When you need to get something done: turn to USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Lots of countries have been having a field day at us the last few years. Europe is up in arms about our desire to enforce the UN resolutions against Iraq. Asia is going apeshit about North Korea. The Arabs are claming that we're on some kind of holy war to eliminate Islam. And, of course, the recent actions by Heir Bush and Ashcroft's SS organization just provides fodder for the fire of discontent. But, when it's all said and done, when you need to get something done and done right, you're better off relying on the USA to do it. Whether it is freeing Afghanistan from the Taliban, protecting the world from Al Queda, liberating Iraq, or getting a spacecraft to Mars, it's the USA leading the way for the rest of humanity. For all of you anti-American zealouts out there, can we at least get a high-five from you over this? You can go back to bashing us tomorrow but how about one day where we get some recognition for advancing humanity?

  59. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  60. Woohoo! NT by xeer0 · · Score: 1

    No Text. Nothing more to say.

    --
    "Hey... don't be mean." --Buckaroo Banzai
  61. Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 others by Quizo69 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    http://spacekids.hq.nasa.gov/2003/details.htm

    I put my name and those of my family on a DVD which was attached by metallic LEGO blocks to one side of the lander module.

    It's nice to know that a tiny part of me just achieved a small measure of immortality on another planet in our solar system.

    I wonder if in my lifetime I'll get to take a trip there and visit it in person?

    Quizo69

  62. Actually... by HarveyBirdman · · Score: 1

    When we figure satellite link budgets at my work, power is a primary factor, and can affect the targeted data capacity. More power gives you lower error rates at higher link capacities.

    --
    --- Ban humanity.
  63. Impossible! by Phaid · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    According to An Earlier Slashdot Article, "Seems that NASA has actually lost the edge in robotic space exploration."

    So how can this be?!? It must be more US Lies!

  64. Hot Damn!!! by kippy · · Score: 1

    I've voiced my displeasure with NASA before here but I'd like to give mad props to the men and women who made this a success.

    Now let's follow up with some humans.

    1. Re:Hot Damn!!! by IM6100 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      About your tagline-

      This isn't really a 'rock.'

      We live in a biosphere.

      And until we're able to transport a reasonably complete mirror of that 'biosphere' your Winnebago-inspired notion that you can hop into a tin can and leave the biosphere you're part of behind is a fallacy.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    2. Re:Hot Damn!!! by kippy · · Score: 1

      You don't need to launch a complete American suburb into space for people to survive. Russians have spent more than a year in orbit which is less than the time it takes to get to Mars. Once on Mars, humans can make a good deal of their provisions with the local resources.

      You would do well to educate yourself on the issue before commenting on it.

    3. Re:Hot Damn!!! by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      A 'complete American suburb' wouldn't suffice either.

      You are acting like people will want to live the rest of their lives in stainless steel containers. The flora and fauna that we coexist with are part of us. The symbiosis of life is much more complicated than packing along a sack of seeds to plant.

      I don't need to go to propellerhead 'websites' to be 'educated' on what a bunch of Buck Rodgers fans dream up. I've been reading and enjoying SF for as long as I've lived. The 'F' stands for fiction.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    4. Re:Hot Damn!!! by kippy · · Score: 1

      I would suggest that you read "The Case for Mars" by Robert Zubrin, the founder of the Mars Society. At worst, it's optimistic. Far from fiction, the Mars direct plan is based on 30 year old tech and established human capabilities.

      Humans have existed in harsh conditions on Earth and a microcosm of Earth's atmosphere will get you a long way. No one ever said that you'd be able to duplicate the full Earth biosphere but that isn't needed either. There are thousands of people who would jump at the chance to be part of a Mars base in hard but livable conditions.

      Humans on Mars isn't held back by technology or biology but rather politics and mismanagement. I would reiterate that you should educate yourself a bit more and not just spout off some defeatist environmentalist rhetoric or pop biology.

  65. Here it comes! by BTWR · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Cue America and European bashings...

    First off, for the record, I'm American, supported the war (and voted for Gore in 2000), support Israel and I'm often pissed off at how much Anti-Americanism (oftern, but not always, different than anti-bushism) that I have seen lately.

    That being said, I find these stupid NASA/ESA bashings to be so awful. Since 1999, everytime there has been a NASA story on slashdot there have been annoying and STUPID "hey, duh, maybe NASA couldn't tell the difference between metric and English units!" comments. Similarly, after Beagle 2's loss there were equally immature "Ha! Take that Europe!" comments from immature Americans.

    The point is, political stuff aside, these missions benefit EVERYONE, not just the country involved. I mean, don't you WISH the russian lander made it to mars in 1996, or that the nasa polar lander landed successfully, or that Beagle 2 didn't die?

    I mean, thanks to those failures, we are now maybe 150 years (arbitrary number) away from our first pictures of the surface of the ice caps, or the landscapes that Mars 96 or Beagle would have landed in. Now I doubt we'll know what the chemical basis of the polar ice is for another half-century (who knows... maybe they coulda found it to be a pretty high concentration of a substance that would help human missions for fuel, water, etc). I mean, Mars Climate Orbiter's failure lost us daily weather patterns for a foreign celestial body, but at least it gave trolls good ammunition for Anti-American comments.

    So in the end, root for (your side) to win the olympics, be the one whose economy does better or for your countryperson to win the nobel peace prize. That will benefit your country and those are things that you should take pride in. But every scientist in the world has basically equally benefitted from Viking, Venera and Voyager (and especially Spirit/Opportunity - a lot of their data comes straight to the world wide web). Those missions might bring temporary clout and prestige to that country's scientists, but a year later and it's EVERYONE who benefits. That's all I gotta say...

    1. Re:Here it comes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up, please.

    2. Re:Here it comes! by BTWR · · Score: 1

      only "The Landings are fake!" get moded up guys, but thanks for the support anyway... :)

  66. The best part of it all by 955301 · · Score: 1

    Is the advertisement on SpaceDaily.com for Starburst Memorials where for a paltry $12,500 US they'll launch your full (their emphasis, not mine) ashes into space and let them fall back to earth onto everyone's lunch tray. I'm thinking that's really the best way to go. Yeah.

    I'm surprised I haven't seen spam about this one yet. Seems like something everyone's gonna be interested in!

    --
    You are checking your backups, aren't you?
  67. Just think if there were humans on board by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

    but that 6 month trip - yaaa.
    mars is getting to seem like neighborhood by now.

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  68. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by benna · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think we need to consider things like this to be seperate from politics and anti americanism. I am certainly against the american government. I hope we can elect someone else this year. But I am happy this mission succeeded. Not really for the US but for the world. These days projects like this are world efforts. Many of the scientists that have work on this and other missions come from all over the world and are of all different nationalities. So as someone against the american government, I ask that we leave this seperate from politics and just be happy not for america, but for the world.

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  69. PARENT IS GOATSE LINK by jlaxson · · Score: 1, Informative

    nothing further needed...

    --
    On Apple Input Peripherals: They're okay, I guess, but I was really hoping for a one-key keyboard and a 109-button mouse
  70. PowerPC-powered rover by Bigbluejerk · · Score: 5, Informative

    Cool. The rover is powered by a PowerPC chip:

    "The computer in each Mars Exploration Rover runs with a 32-bit Rad 6000 microprocessor, a radiation-hardened version of the PowerPC chip used in some models of Macintosh computers, operating at a speed of 20 million instructions per second. Onboard memory includes 128 megabytes of random access memory, augmented by 256 megabytes of flash memory and smaller amounts of other non-volatile memory, which allows the system to retain data even without power."

    1. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, Macintosh computers also have PIC embedded controllers in them, and my Wheel Mouse has a PIC chip. Whooo hoo! My mouse has a processor in it that's in a Mac!

      (shrug)

    2. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by rufey · · Score: 4, Interesting

      .... which is a lot more power than the Hubble Space Telescope has. Hubble has the equivilant of a Intel 486 (it may be a real 486, not sure). And that was installed during the 1999 servicing mission.

    3. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On what grounds do you base this statement?

      "operating at a speed of 20 million instructions per second"

      According to the linux boot sequence, my Intel 486-66Mhz is calibrated to 33 MIPS, while the rover's processor apparently only operates at 20 MIPS.

      Disclaimer: yeah yeah, i know it's BOGOmips :)

    4. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      According to the linux boot sequence, my Intel 486-66Mhz is calibrated to 33 MIPS, while the rover's processor apparently only operates at 20 MIPS.

      The PowerPC averages one instruction per clock cycle. The 486, on the other hand, averages one instruction every other clock cycle. That's why your 486 only gets 33 MIPS.

    5. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These are not off-the-shelf processors clocked at their max rate. Even that 486 in Hubble.

      20MIPS on PPC would probably translate to a 20-24 Mhz clock rate. Not even close to what you'd see in a desktop.

      Reasons for that is simple - reliability. You'd MUCH rather wait twice as long to get an answer than potentially lose a $800 million dollar craft to a latch-up condition.

      A slower clock rate gives more time for a signal to propagate through and stabilize before its latched. There may also be process changes in the manufacturing process to make the processor rad-hard that impact the maximum performance.

    6. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      ...which is a lot more power than the pathfinder rover, which was controlled by an 8086.

    7. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by TandyMasterControl · · Score: 1

      Yeah you keep using that 20 MHz ppc cpu and be cool, cool guy.

      I'll keep my 2GHz Opterons thanks.

      --
      Johnny Quest has two Daddies.
    8. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by GileadGreene · · Score: 1

      Actually, the RAD6000 is derived from an RS/6000 (predecessor to the PowerPC). Its newer cousin, the RAD750 rad-hardened processor, is based on one of the older PowerPC models, but has not actually (AFAIK) been flown in space yet.

    9. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by Syncdata · · Score: 1

      If I recall correctly, [I'm too drunk to look it up (it's my birthday, and WHAT a birthday)] the hubble has a custom 66mhz 486dx2 installed. We all look back on that chip and laugh haughtily, with our shiny p4s and athlons, but it was a fine chip then, and it's a fine chip now. It's too bad the scope it's attached to is doomed to a premature death by politicians.

      --
      "Inattention makes clowns of us all" -Bean
    10. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think running NetBSD on my puny 16 MHz 68030 machine (an SE/30) is cool. So is running Minix on a little 386sx-16 laptop. And my HP Palmtop is just an IBM-XT clone, but it's cool and runs forever on a pair of AA batteries.

      You almost imply you're proud of being uncool and just buying 'the best' for whatever it is you're doing with it. How much of the time is that hot rod just idling in a parking spot?

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    11. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately if you sent your 2 GHz Opteron to Mars, it would start producing random results the moment it got out of the protection of the Earth's magnetic field. Cosmic radiation is dangerous to the tiny components of a processor and it requires radiation hardening ("rad-hard") so that individual particles don't mess up with the signals inside the processor.

    12. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow!!! thats amazing! powerpc has actually managed to AVERAGE one instruction per clock cycle... so considering I know that there are tons of powerpc instructions requiring multiple cycles, they've apparently figured out how to run some other instructions in less than one cycle?? amazing!

      idiot

    13. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by TandyMasterControl · · Score: 1

      We don't have any work that something like a 386 or mk68000 cpu is appropriate for at this time, sorry. You can check back with us next year, though.

      --
      Johnny Quest has two Daddies.
    14. Re:PowerPC-powered rover by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      You think I'd want to work for a dork with Tandy in his username.

      My TRS-80 Model 100, by the way, has an 8085 processor in it. It's cool too.

      There's still LOADS of money in writing code for Motorola's 8-bit 6805 and 6808 parts, incidentally. And Toshiba still sells millions of 4-bit processors a year. Hint: they're not programmed in C++ or in Perl.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
  71. Um you need to check your history by linuxkrn · · Score: 1

    We (US - NASA) have been there twice before sucessfully.

    June 1976 Viking I landed at Chryse Planitia
    Sep 1976 Viking II landed at Utopia Planitia

    Just think, we have 28 YEARS of new technology on what they did back then. It's a greater feat to have done it back in 76'

    1. Re:Um you need to check your history by BillDKat · · Score: 1

      In 1997 the Mars Pathfinder carried the Soujourner rover to the surface of Mars. In the months that this little craft was on Mars it traveled approx 300 feet.

      The Spirit and Opportunity will be able to travel that distance in a day (Mars day??).

      The Soujourner lasted months past its predicted life time on Mars. If Opportunity lands safely, and the twin crafts have the sucess of Soujourner we could have a year of interesting times in robotic space exploration.

    2. Re:Um you need to check your history by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      "We (US - NASA) have been there twice before sucessfully."

      Before you school people on how they need to check the history, you need to remember that the US landed a rover before.

      http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/mesur.html

    3. Re:Um you need to check your history by linuxkrn · · Score: 1

      And maybe you should read my entire post. My point was that this wasn't the BIGGEST feat for NASA. Almost 30 years ago, and yes long before 97' we've landed on Mars.

      We've been there many times, today is wonderful but not the biggest event.

  72. Waiting nervously. by gklinger · · Score: 1
    If it radios back "dark is the suede that mows like a harvest", I'm heading for the hills.

    Okay, that was probably too obscure. For those that own this awesome movie on DVD, fire it up and switch the audio track from English to Martian and this post will make (some) sense.

  73. Mars bandwidth.... by Tmack · · Score: 1
    From the SpaceFlightNow website:

    The Canberra tracking station in Australia is locked on to the spacecraft's signal, which is 10 bits per second.

    wow, 10 whole bits per second. Maybe this one got there because we stopped transmitting the evil bit?

    Tm

    --
    Support TBI Research: http://www.raisinhope.org
    1. Re:Mars bandwidth.... by golgotha007 · · Score: 1

      "About 24 megabits of data is being played back from Odyssey. It will take about 12
      minutes to get all the information, officials report. This will contain engineering data
      on the rover's systems and possibly some pictures."

      That's about 17KBps, which isn't bad for a long distance wireless network!

  74. narcissism by spiritraveller · · Score: 0, Troll

    So, just where did they get this idea to call it "spiritrover" huh?

    I'm going to sue.

    If "Windows" can sue "Lindows", I should be able to sue "spiritrover".

  75. Spirit vs Beagle by Andy+Smith · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Like many non-US citizens I get sick of Americans thinking that their country is the best and that other countries are less important. But look at what has happened yet again: Where another country failed, the US has succeeded.

    When I hear that the US has successfully landed a craft on Mars, I don't feel particularly surprised. I'd have been more surprised if the mission had failed. But when the Beagle mission (apparently) failed, my reaction was neutral, almost as if I had *expected* it to fail, and a large part of that was due to it being a non-US mission.

    I guess my point is this: If you're one of the people, like me, who is sick of Americans thinking that their country is "all that", then this success should be another reminder that as far as the advancement of science and discovery is concerned, their pride may be less patriotic arrogance and more a statement of fact.

    Oh and I'm not ass-kissing Americans, I'm just feeling a little angry that another country has thrown away another opportunity of doing something important, only for the US to step in and show us how it's done.

    If you want to be the best then actually being the best might be a good place to start. This fundamentally competitive attitude is something that Americans seem to inherently understand and embrace, whereas in other countries it is often frowned upon as distasteful.

    1. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by dzym · · Score: 1

      So, apparently, does your anonymous cowardice. :)

    2. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      As an American, I can tell you that the US is far from perfect. Then again, the same is true for any other. The problem takes root at the Human eliment. Address the issues there, and everything else should fall into place. Be it social, political, or physical.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    3. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by ksheff · · Score: 1

      Well, we did have that metric/English units conversion problem to get over. :)

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    4. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by MSantiago · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Please keep in mind that not all of us Americans are the arrogant sort who like flaunt our victories and gloat at the misfortunes of others. In fact, I'm sure you'll often find that the people who are the most arrogant also have the least justification to be proud.

      I doubt you'll ever see a NASA team member proclaiming their superiority over the ESA. In fact, more than anyone, they would understand the pain felt by the entire Beagle project team at having lost something that they worked so hard for.

      You can be fairly certain that the only taunting you'll hear will come from an uninvolved lay person who's looking for yet another excuse to think that the accomplishments of other people somehow makes them more important.

      In short: not all Americans are assholes, though at times we deservedly look so.

    5. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by reallocate · · Score: 2, Interesting

      >> This fundamentally competitive attitude is something that Americans seem to inherently understand and embrace, whereas in other countries it is often frowned upon as distasteful.


      There's much truth in that. Not to be arrogantly American and jingoistic, but this country really is different, for better or worse.

      I've lived in several countries on four continents outside the U.S. In every country, it was common, and frequent, for someone to ask me if I knew anyone who could help them get a visa to the U.S., because they wanted to live there. I know no one who has ever wanted to leave the U.S. and live in any of those same countries.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    6. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by el-spectre · · Score: 1

      Ah, america has lost it's share of missions too. As someone from NASA said about Beagle 2, it's a long damned way to go and you have to expect some failures.

      The US does have a couple of decades more experience than most countries, I'd wager this is more of a factor than some generic scientific, um.... betterness.

      --
      "Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
    7. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " are the arrogant sort who like flaunt our victories and gloat at the misfortunes of others. "

      but only an idiot would refuse to recognize a clear trend ...

    8. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by MyHair · · Score: 1

      I appreciate your attitude. However, don't be too hard on the Beagle mission; America (well, NASA) has more experience. Others will catch up; the space race is on again!

    9. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of people that would like to live in a different country, other than the US. There are great things here (economic opportunity is one), as well as government stability.

      Personally, I'd take my pick of tropical islands. It's all about lifestyle decisions.

    10. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks buddy. When we colonize Mars, you can import us some nice tea.

    11. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As i understand it, units labeling was the real problem. Apparently a value lacked units, and it was assumed to be in metric units (and wasn't).

    12. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by metlin · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, I do not think you've met a French-Canadian :-p

    13. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I'm just feeling a little angry that another country has thrown away another opportunity of doing something important, only for the US to step in and show us how it's done.

      Don't be. Read about the NASA Climate Orbiter. Failure to reach mars is not unknown to America. And if you think this failure was caused by an incredibly stupid error - this isn't unknown to ESA as well: The first flight of Ariane 5 ended in one of the most expensive fireworks ever and showed everyone how not to reuse code.:) To err is human and not just a national problem...

    14. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Andy+Smith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One quick follow-up to my own comment...

      To say that the Beagle team has "thrown away" an opportunity was too dismissive and I wish I'd phrased it more tactfully. Those people have dedicated years of their lives to achieving something and, unfortunately, didn't succeed on this occasion. They will, of course, have learned a lot along the way.

      I, on the other hand, have done precisely nothing to further science, so I shouldn't be so quick to judge.

    15. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Where another country failed, the US has succeeded.
      >
      Don't look upon this as a success for the US or Beagle as a failure for the British. The world doesn't need more of that attitude.

      As well as rational scientific reasoning, NASA had more money and experience than the Beagle team. One should see both mission as another step forward for all of mankind. (Yes, you can learn from failures too).

      Wasn't there a story about Japanese scientists during World War 2 leaving their island lab, after carefully documenting their experiments so that other so-called-enemy scientists could continue. We need more of that attitude.

    16. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Tailhook · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Like many non-US citizens I get sick of Americans thinking that their country is the best and that other countries are less important.

      Andy, man, you have issues. One of a very small number of man-made probes has managed to actually land on another planet, a rare event in history, and you find yourself wrapped up in this "America is best" nonsense. None of this American NASA vs. The Rest of the World BS even occurred to me until I saw your post. The last thing I would have done is lord over the Beagle failure with this landing. If you are actually experiencing such poor behavior you need to consider the quality of the people to which you have exposed yourself. In the meantime, chill out. You may rest assured that the bulk of Americans are a humble, respectful lot that wish you and yours the best.

      --
      Maw! Fire up the karma burner!
    17. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Or, golly, you might decide that setting aside preconceptions about any given activity's probabilities of success based on the participants' national origin might not be a bad idea.

      Nationalism is usually sloppy thinking. Kind of like any other kind of racism or xenophobia.

      There are smart people and dumb people in America, just like everywhere else on the planet. People worldwide have far more in common than most media outlets or politicians want you to believe. Get used to this idea. There will be a quiz.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    18. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee, paranoid anti-American eurotrash much?

    19. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Having travelled quite a bit, i can safely say that many countries are guilty of being very, very nationalistic. And i definitely don't think the US is the worst offender. They just have the position of being very active / noticeable.

      As far as the people, if you travel around different parts of the US, you'll get vastly different temperaments. And disregard Slashdot's population, you have A LOT of teenagers here....

      Europe definitely has its hotbeds, as you probably know. Some surprises (to me anyways), I recall a lot of nationalistic pride in Portugal against Spain - for a reason i was never able to discern. And there's always France. ;)

      I was actually surprised that China's triumph of getting a man in space didn't get more play than it did. Seems like a bigger accomplishment than landing on Mars.

    20. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by I+don't+want+to+spen · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that there is still the Mars Express orbiter, which is shortly to finalise its orbit and begin its mission. So even though the Beagle2 is currently missing in action, Europe still has a science probe in Mars orbit.

      --
      Don't go to a brothel if you want to buy broth
    21. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Rotten168 · · Score: 1

      You don't *get it* do you? The US doesn't succeed because we're "better". What a laughable concept. We succeed because we try over and over and over again, we don't get overcome by negatism and give up and get all distraught after one incident like the beagle thing. Keep trying and you'll make it. Say what you will about the US but I truly believe that on of our better strengths is our positive attitude.

      As Yoda would say "and that is why you fail, young jedi". :)

    22. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by extra+the+woos · · Score: 1

      It seems like a bit of a fad to bash america, and in areas like current politics, this is probably justified.

      But saying america would sabotage an allies' space probe is just a little ridiculous, and one must consider that the beagle team had some help from nasa anyway

      --
      replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
    23. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by RandomCoil · · Score: 1

      I was hoping someone respond to the orignal post as you did. I'm only sorry I have no mod points.

      Cheers!

    24. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by extra+the+woos · · Score: 1

      hehe...thats partially true. I was on a transatlantic flight and on the entire flight back there was this cute drunk french girl sitting on my lap talking to me and hitting on me. She was sick of the people of france and was going to go live in canada or the united states..so true there...BUT

      As an american, I dont mind living here, but if given the chance, I would switch to living in Denmark or Norway in a heartbeat, no questions asked :)

      Also, I know some people who moved to Canada from the U.S., and I don't think thats too uncommon.

      --
      replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
    25. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, the US is way ahead of the Europeans. We've killed 17 astronauts to ESA's 0. Take THAT! In your FACE, froggies!

    26. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by alien_blueprint · · Score: 1

      There's much truth in that. Not to be arrogantly American and jingoistic, but this country really is different, for better or worse

      You think so? I've lived in the USA for one full year, and didn't notice anything particularly different, apart from having real seasons ;) Perhaps that says more about the Americanisation of my home country (Australia) than anything else, but there it is.

      I know no one who has ever wanted to leave the U.S. and live in any of those same countries.

      I guess I'm imagining all of the many US citizens I know that have moved here then? ;)

      Of course, there's traffic in the other direction as well, but on the face of it your statement (that no person living in the USA wishes to relocate) is simply not correct.

    27. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by reallocate · · Score: 1

      >> ...your statement (that no person living in the USA wishes to relocate) is simply not correct.

      Not what I said, is it?

      Typical /. lack of precision.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    28. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2, Interesting


      their pride may be less patriotic arrogance and more a statement of fact.

      Well, from this US citizen, let me say that the problem is that Mars missions have had a very bad success rate (not surprising given what's being attempted), and the US has just had more trials so far than Britain had. Some US missions have vanished without a trace also. Britain has only had one single "roll of the dice" so far, so that's not enough to make a judgement call on as to what kind of success rate they are capable of.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    29. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by alien_blueprint · · Score: 1

      Not what I said, is it?

      So what's your point exactly, then? Were you *not* in fact implying that migration is one way, due to your experience?

      Typical /. lack of precision

      Typical boring canned /. response :)

    30. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2, Insightful


      Perhaps that says more about the Americanisation of my home country (Australia) than anything else, but there it is.

      I think that is very common in places where English is the primary language. See, people are hungry for television and movie shows, both of which are extremely expensive to produce. The USA has a well established media industry infrastructure in California and New York. And, having that helps to reduce some of that cost - if you are making a TV show in Los Angeles and need to find a specialty company that lets you rent the use of bizzare things for your shoot, you are likely to find a few companies that will provide that service, no matter how weird the service is.

      You can find companies that provide the use of trained monkeys and their handlers for a day, or companies that will arrange and perform an automobile stunt to tape for your show, or companies that will provide the use of a helicopter and stunt pilot on an hourly basis, or companies that specialize in providing you with any sort of strange uniforms you can think of, in any quantity. These sort of things make it a lot easier to produce TV and movie shows in and around Hollywood. (In much the same way that it's easier to buy twenty sacks of corn seeds in a rural farming communitity than in New York city.)

      So, anywhere where English is the primary language, American TV and movies get imported a lot because it's cheaper to import an American TV show than to produce one from scratch. So, to fill up all the airtime, a lot of shows get imported. (This is changing as it becomes easier to distribute the media making business to multiple locations when everything is done digitally.)

      (And often when people say "American", the Canadians get a bit annoyed because they don't like the US co-opting the name of the whole continent, but in this case it really is appropriate becuase so much of US television and Canadian television are intertwined. Many American "icon" actors are Canadian, and a lot of American TV shows are actually filmed in Vancouver and Toronto. So, in this case, "American" really is an appropriate term.)

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    31. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Jordy · · Score: 1

      (And often when people say "American", the Canadians get a bit annoyed because they don't like the US co-opting the name of the whole continent, but in this case it really is appropriate becuase so much of US television and Canadian television are intertwined. Many American "icon" actors are Canadian, and a lot of American TV shows are actually filmed in Vancouver and Toronto. So, in this case, "American" really is an appropriate term.)

      You forget that there are two American continents and Mexico, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Panama, Nicaragua, Honduras, and Belize are all in North America right along with the US. :)

      The US really does co-opt the name "America" though. I usually see it more in foreign countries than in the US itself. They always refer to us as "Americans" living in "America."

      --
      The world is neither black nor white nor good nor evil, only many shades of CowboyNeal.
    32. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by jaysones · · Score: 1

      This is true, and as an American, I felt more glad that you posted this than the parent post. However, while watching that cgi video, it did occur to me that my country has accomplished a lot, though I had nothing to with with it. It made the war and religious disagreements seem so secular and completely meaningless. If the planning and money that went into both the 9/11 attacks and the Iraq war (for example) had gone into something that might actually be worthwhile and stand the test of time, we just might make a better world here.

    33. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Kymermosst · · Score: 1

      You forget that there are two American continents and Mexico, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Panama, Nicaragua, Honduras, and Belize are all in North America right along with the US. :)

      The US really does co-opt the name "America" though. I usually see it more in foreign countries than in the US itself. They always refer to us as "Americans" living in "America."


      We were calling ourselves Americans before most of those countries were little more than colonies of other countries, and few people in those places were looking for a national identity.

      Americans identified themselves as such almost from the very begginning of the first British colonials arriving on the shores of the new world.

      There was no co-opting to be done. We've been Americans for much longer than the United States has existed.

      --
      "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
    34. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Americans thinking that their country is the best and that other countries are less important

      It's true. Tough shit.

    35. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given this is ESA, what is the chance of miscalculation and it accidentally going into orbit around Alpha Centuri?

    36. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      0%

    37. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha, are you kidding? Most Americans are probably smugly proud that we landed a rover on Mars, despite the fact that the job was actually done by a bunch of scientists at JPL and their engineering brethern. Sure, we'll claim to be well-meaning and all that, but come on, we're #! We're #1! A little celebration isn't amiss, considering that we might have had another (or 2!) Polar Lander fiascos.

    38. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by elpapacito · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse countries and patriotism with success of space missions or other projects.

      I'm not a citizen of U.S.A yet I'm very very glad that this project is going well and I'm also glad that half of ESA mission is going well (their satellite is working, only the lander part of that project apparently failed).

      Why should I be "proud" of both missions even if both of them were not prepared in my country ?

      Because they're not in competition ; both the missions have ONE goal: collecting information from Mars, developing new technologies and new know-how, investigating failures to learn from errors.

      If there was "patriotic" or "economic" competition between NASA and ESA or other space agencies, they should be shooting rockets at each other instead of launching them in the space; guess what, people working at ESA or NASA don't even consider this as "competition" , they consider such a warmongering behavior as completely utterly insane !

      And you needn't be a rocket scientist to understand why : there's no progress and no evolution in blasting each other into dust , there's no point in competing with others when you can cooperate with them for the purpose of obtaining something you want.

      That's why almost all the "competition" you see on earth is not among people that can do and have resources , rather it's among people that don't have enough resources or think they need more and other people that think like them.

      What they didn't understand is that it is better to cooperate for the purpose of becoming less dependant on rare resources then kill/starve/destroy each other for the purpose of monopolizing the rare resources.

    39. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      The solution is so simple. Just let Spirit find signs of WMD on Mars. Soonly after British intelligence discovers that Beagle 2 has be sabotoged by terrorists who have been using Mars as a terrorist training camp. Then by tomorrow Bush will give a speech indicating that the 'evil doers' are on Mars and Mars must be invaded. Five seconds later the guys at NASA hear a really loud cash register noise.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    40. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by BESTouff · · Score: 1, Insightful
      You may rest assured that the bulk of Americans are a humble, respectful lot that wish you and yours the best.

      Mwaha ! Humble and respectful my ass ! Since when calling French people coward monkeys is "humble and respectful" ?

    41. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by reallocate · · Score: 1

      My "point" is what I said: I've met many people outside the U.S. who wanted to move to the U.S., and I know no one in the U.S. who wants to leave foranother country. I imagine that current, as well as historical, immigration data support that impression.

      There are lots of reasons for that, obviously. It seems to me that the U.S. is one of the few countries where acceptance as a national (not as a citizen, which is merely a legal rite of passage) is not dependent on a person's genetic composition. In my experience, even in the democracies of Europe and certainly in the largely tribal societies of Afica and the MIddle East, immigrants and the assimilated children of immigrants may be accepted as legal citizens, but they are always viewed as "guests" in a country that belongs to the ancient tribes that migrated there first. THis is, of course, just another aspect of racism.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    42. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by alien_blueprint · · Score: 1

      My "point" is what I said: I've met many people outside the U.S. who wanted to move to the U.S., and I know no one in the U.S. who wants to leave foranother country. I imagine that current, as well as historical, immigration data support that impression.

      Fair enough. You're right, I should have said "implication" rather than "statement".

      Anyway, my response was only intended to point out that I know plenty who *have* left. Just as a data point for your interest only ... I really don't want to argue over it. It's just a bare fact. I suppose you'll meet some eventually ;) There are also (Australian) people I know who really, really, don't like spending time in the US for a variety of reasons, mostly related to bad past experiences as far as I can see, but there it is.

      For the record, I had a great time myself and liked the place a lot. I was working too damned hard to see much, but I will do it again.

      There are lots of reasons for that, obviously. It seems to me that the U.S. is one of the few countries where acceptance as a national (not as a citizen, which is merely a legal rite of passage) is not dependent on a person's genetic composition. In my experience, even in the democracies of Europe and certainly in the largely tribal societies of Afica and the MIddle East, immigrants and the assimilated children of immigrants may be accepted as legal citizens, but they are always viewed as "guests" in a country that belongs to the ancient tribes that migrated there first. THis is, of course, just another aspect of racism

      We don't do that either, which also means we have a high immigration rate. Not to say there's no racism, but it's not enshrined in law at least.

    43. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I haven't read this whole thread, but I assume you are Australian? How many American emmigrants do you know? Can you characterize the reasons they left the U.S. (Politics, adventure, restlessness, etc)?

    44. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by alien_blueprint · · Score: 1

      I haven't read this whole thread, but I assume you are Australian?

      If I didn't make that explicit, then yes, I am by birth.

      How many American emmigrants do you know?

      I was just trying to figure that out!

      Five that I know quite well, and their spouses where applicable on top of that.

      The figure would be larger if I included people I don't know as well. It would easily reach a dozen at least, without having to strain my memory to go right back to university.

      Can you characterize the reasons they left the U.S. (Politics, adventure, restlessness, etc)?

      Well, it's not politics. There's a fairly broad spectrum represented, but it's safe to say that none of these people appear interested enough in politics to want to *move* over it. So maybe that's something significant in itself!

      I've never thought about it to be honest ... I think it's that I've been lucky enough to work in some places that were doing interesting stuff even by worldwide standards, and that's just going to attract people from all over. These same places were also working closely with various US organisations, so naturally a few people would come out for work, like it, and end up staying.

      I'll tell you what - I'll ask them next time I see them and report back in my journal.

    45. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, but... they *are* coward monkeys!

    46. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by thales · · Score: 1

      Americans don't refer to the French as "coward monkeys", the Simpsons derived phrase is "Cheese-Eating Surrender Monkeys".

      --
      Quemadmodum gladius neminem occidit, occidentis telum est
    47. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      The main reason for that is that there is no shorthand phrase for "Person from the United States of America". "USian" isn't a word. "USA-ite" isn't a word. When the country was founded, people were "New Yorkers" and "Virginians" and "Georgians" first, and "members of the conglomerate called USA" second - so nobody ever bothered to make a name for it - kind of like there's no shorthand for "Citizen of a Nato Country."

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    48. Re:Spirit vs Beagle by Rupert · · Score: 1

      My wife is American. She feels that NASA is one of the few things that really make her proud of her country.

      I see "Proud to be American" bumper stickers all over the place. Probably because "Proud that my Mom didn't take that vacation in Afghanistan while she was pregnant with me" wouldn't fit the format.

      --

      --
      E_NOSIG
  76. Production Line by WindBourne · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The hard part is the landing. If MER-B also survies, it would be nice if L-Mart can start a production line of this vehicle to be loaded with different instruments for different countries. While the price was 400 Million for each of these rovers, in a production line, I would expect the price to drop to 100 Million or less for the base model. Let UK, EU, India, Brasil, and Japan send up working systems with their instruments and their launchers (or with l-marts).

    Personally, I am interested in seeing a bunch of these crawl all over mars with all sorts of different science packages.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:Production Line by b1t+r0t · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      it would be nice if L-Mart can start a production line of this vehicle to be loaded with different instruments for different countries

      I'm waiting for the sport edition with chrome wheels, tail wing, and Type-R stickers.

      --

      --
      "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
      "Open source is evil." - Microsoft
    2. Re:Production Line by red+floyd · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      t would be nice if L-Mart can start a production line

      Is that one better or one worse than K-Mart?

      --
      The only reason we have the rights we have is that people just like us died to gain those rights. -- Cheerio Boy
    3. Re:Production Line by WindBourne · · Score: 2, Funny

      The running joke inside of l-mart is:
      l-mart; 1 step above k-mart.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    4. Re:Production Line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While the price was 400 Million for each of these rovers, in a production line, I would expect the price to drop to 100 Million or less for the base model.

      Good idea, although each will need a Delta II 7925 or similar launch vehicle, which would cost a pretty penny.

    5. Re:Production Line by Galvatron · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't that be "one step below k-mart?" I mean, L comes after K...

      --
      "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
    6. Re:Production Line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      K-Mart is about as low as you go. Last step prior to a 7-11.

    7. Re:Production Line by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      They do not really need to be the Delta IIs. I would suspect that each nation that is attempting to run one of these, would be interested in making one of their's handle the job. Personally, though, if I were L-Mart, I would try and price the delta to be able to compete against other groups on this. I would also work on several other types of space crafts, such as a ballon/flyer, and perhaps some satellites.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    8. Re:Production Line by GileadGreene · · Score: 1

      MER was mostly designed and manufactured at JPL. IIRC Lockmart only supplied the aeroshell (although they may have also done a few other components).

    9. Re:Production Line by xaaronx · · Score: 1

      OHH!!!

      Lockheed-Martin. I get it now.

      --
      It's amazing how much "mature wisdom" resembles being too tired. - Robert Anson Heinlein
  77. Re:IDIOT by jlaxson · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Woot, my first freak. Thanks, been waiting a while for one.

    --
    On Apple Input Peripherals: They're okay, I guess, but I was really hoping for a one-key keyboard and a 109-button mouse
  78. agreed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    even if the grandparent was being ironic, it's still not funny. American, British, whatever - should not find that funny. It's not a competition. Each team put a lot of work into their projects. Grow up.

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

      that's exactly why it was funny, dude.

    2. Re:agreed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmm yeah! i had a sense of humour failure. oh no wait.. it's still not +4 funny... it's more like +1 (slightly) funny or troll. IMHO of course :)

  79. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course, you're assuming that DVD readers would still be easy to find that many years from now.

  80. Go USA by dougTheRug · · Score: 1

    We even have to bail Europe out of *Mars*.

    Where are the t-shirts?

    1. Re:Go USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *wipes diet coke off keyboard*

  81. HOORAY!!! by KingReuben · · Score: 1

    America once again shows those snobby Europeans how its DONE. Yeah baby!! (But I can't help but wonder why we didn't put a cool beacon composed by an American musician in it.. )

    --


    --
    om Shanti
    1. Re:HOORAY!!! by ksheff · · Score: 2, Funny

      The RIAA would have considered it a performace broadcast and NASA hadn't paid the appropriate ASCAP fees.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    2. Re:HOORAY!!! by mlk · · Score: 1

      Beagle 2 killed itself rather than play a Blur song, you just could not risk it.

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
    3. Re:HOORAY!!! by KingReuben · · Score: 1

      Sadly, you are probably correct with anything currently airing, but as Blur did it would be a custom commissioned piece, exempt from ASCAP.

      Would have been cool to have a human voice recording echoing "Hello? I'm here! ... It's cold!"

      --


      --
      om Shanti
  82. no NASA channel? by ethanms · · Score: 1

    Comcast in massachusetts gives you like 300 channels with their $150/mo package, yet I still don't get the NASA channel... I have to hope that headline news or someone else will cover the NASA 12:30AM press conference... which doesn't seem to be happening...

    1. Re:no NASA channel? by ethanms · · Score: 1

      my bad... it's on CNN, ch42

    2. Re:no NASA channel? by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      Dish Network has the NASA channel even with the meagre 50 channel package that I subscribe to for $39 a month.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
  83. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  84. Re:Congratulations NASA by USAPatriot · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You know what they say: if you got it, flaunt it.

    Considering the huge Anti-US sentiment on this site, I thought this would be a good occasion to tweak that crowd a little.

    Apparently by the moderation, they can dish it, but can't take it.

    --

    Slashdot Moderation: From positive to terrible in 2 "insightful" posts.

  85. loser? winner? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although I agree with your post, let me ask: who says that this is a race? (an uber-modified RC-ship race maybe...) C'mon, you know Cold War is over 14 years ago. I hope the Spirit rover do a good job, and a hope that the Opportunity rover finishes its trip safely. I also *truly* hope that Beagle 2 survived... for science's sake.

    AC

  86. Ground Zero by QuantumFTL · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well, having been in building 264 at JPL (the MER mission operations building) I must say it was an exciting experience... Everyone was waiting really tense, jumping once or twice at some of the annoucements that sounded bad at first... six minutes from landing to signal confirmation, the longest 6 in my life!

    When we got the signal, it was truely spectacular, everyone so excited, clapping, standing and hugging each other with vigorous congradulations. I was fortunate enough to be able to congradulate some of the higher ups (PI Steve Squyres, whom I work for, and Science Manager John Callas).

    On behalf of all of us on MER, I'd like to thank everyone that's supported this mission, especially those slashdotters that have vigorously defended the purpose and existance of mars. What we are doing is hard, but not impossible, and we will continue to try until we prevail.

    Today we had what I hope was the first of many victories on mars. We should be getting the first image back in a few minutes from the next odyssey pass.

    BTW, I'm not sure what the press releases said, but we were very fortunate that the lander landed base petal down, which should speed up deployment significantly as there is no need for the actuators to push against the weight of the rover.

    As I said earlier tonight, tonight went so well that it was as if we won the lottery, and by that I mean not just us at JPL but everyone on earth that will benefit from the knowlege we acquire. Congradulations all!

    Cheers,
    Justin Wick
    Science Activity Planner Support Staff
    Mars Exploration Rovers

    1. Re:Ground Zero by Wesley+Willis,+RIP · · Score: 3, Funny

      On behalf of all of us on MER, I'd like to thank everyone that's supported this mission, especially those slashdotters that have vigorously defended the purpose and existance of mars.



      Thanks. I have always been a staunch defender of the existence of Mars.
    2. Re:Ground Zero by QuantumFTL · · Score: 2, Funny

      Thanks. I have always been a staunch defender of the existence of Mars.

      I'm not supposed to tell you this, but it's a government conspiracy!

      Actually I woke up at 3:00 AM PST so... you get the idea :)

    3. Re:Ground Zero by CrazyWingman · · Score: 1

      Huh. I would have expected the team members to congraTulate each other. Crazy CalTech-ers.

      P.S. Well done. ;)

    4. Re:Ground Zero by 3.1415926535 · · Score: 1

      I hate to say it, but us Techers (and associated JPL personnel) are often not the best of spellers. There were some very creative spellings on assignments I've graded... ;) Of course, the number of non-native speakers in the Caltech population is a major factor, so cut us some slack.

      P.S. Caltech hasn't been spelled CalTech except by the media in many, many years.

    5. Re:Ground Zero by pgilman · · Score: 0, Troll

      " When we got the signal..."

      we get signal?

      " it was truely spectacular"

      truly

      " standing and hugging each other with vigorous congradulations"

      congratulations

      " I was fortunate enough to be able to congradulate some of the higher ups"

      congratulate

      " On behalf of all of us"

      (if you believe that this imbecile speaks for anyone, you're a fool)

      " on MER"

      at MER

      " I'd like to thank everyone that's supported this mission"...

      ...who's supported the mission

      " especially those slashdotters that have"

      who have

      " vigorously defended the purpose and existance"

      existence

      " of mars."

      the purpose of mars? are you stupid?

      the existence of mars? was there any doubt that mars exists?

      " What we are doing is hard, but not impossible, and we will continue to try until we prevail. Today we had what I hope was the first of many victories on mars."

      who the fuck are you, george bush? prevail? victories on mars? it's not a war, at least, not yet

      --
      if i'm a grammar nazi, you're an illiteracy nazi.
    6. Re:Ground Zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God help NASA. First, they can't employ people who can work out the conversions between metric and imperial. Then they employ support lackies who can't spell, "congratulations" properly.

      What's this world coming to?!

    7. Re:Ground Zero by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      On behalf of all of us on MER, I'd like to thank everyone that's supported this mission, especially those slashdotters that have vigorously defended the purpose and existance of mars.

      Well, I am a skeptic still. I looked at Mars in a telescope and it looked like nothing more than an orbiting traffic light stuck on red......well, faded red, probably due to sun exposure.

    8. Re:Ground Zero by Tablizer · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      God help NASA. First, they can't employ people who can work out the conversions between metric and imperial. Then they employ support lackies who can't spell, "congratulations" properly.

      I am sure the author would rather hang out among JPL personell more than sit around and check grammar. He/she was graceful enough to give us a guick update on the experience. Stop complaning or we will get NOTHING next time. I hope they use you for future mission air bags.

    9. Re:Ground Zero by rackman · · Score: 1

      From one american to our great scientist at NASA......We sincerely appreciate the effort to help us get off this rock and reach our true destination. On Mars you have reached and attained greatness and made the entire world move more toward togetherness. Now after all that one thing left to say: GOOD JOB. Oh and tell Rob Manning I really enjoyed his part of the briefing.

    10. Re:Ground Zero by rackman · · Score: 1

      Where you born a damn jerk or did you go to college for your MBA???

    11. Re:Ground Zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I was fortunate enough to be able to congradulate some of the higher ups (PI Steve Squyres, whom I work for, and Science Manager John Callas)."

      Fuck hell, aren't you one great brown nosing fuck? "Fortunate enough to congratulate"? If they top honcho let off a fart, I am sure you would still consider yourself fortunate...lol...

      "On behalf of all of us on MER, I'd like to thank everyone that's supported this mission, especially those slashdotters that have vigorously defended the purpose and existance of mars. What we are doing is hard, but not impossible, and we will continue to try until we prevail."

      First you show that you are a 1st class brown noser, then you show that you are a megalomaniac..."On behalf..." ? Who elected to you to speak on behalf of anyone? Now, move your fucking intern ass and get that cup of coffee for me!!!

    12. Re:Ground Zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      96092, 52 comments, avg score about 1
      Ignore

    13. Re:Ground Zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The author of the parent post was in the control center for this Mars mission for the landing. You were in your parents' basement, most likely jerking off to scrambled cable porn and contributing little -- if anything -- to humanity.

      I think it is YOU, sir, you should shut the fuck up.

    14. Re:Ground Zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We get signal?

      Screen on!

      You have no chance, make your time!

    15. Re:Ground Zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shouldn't you not be on slashdot? Was trolling slashdot the reason for past mission failures?

    16. Re:Ground Zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was in the control center serving coffee at best and mopping the floor at worst...

      Fuck the pretentious twit.

  87. And it found Beagle 2! by i_want_you_to_throw_ · · Score: 1
  88. Drink up(NASA)!!! by BirdTracker · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You deserve it.

  89. Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by Dan+Crash · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First off, congratulations to everyone at NASA and JPL! The landing went off like clockwork. You should be proud. I know I am.

    But NASA TV... you blew it. Again.

    Here you have this tremendous opportunity to involve Americans young and old with the space program, to get them excited and emotionally invested in space exploration, and what do you do? You show us video of the control room.... with the sound off. You let us in on what the Flight Director is saying, but you don't decode it for the average viewer so they know what it means. You make landing on another freaking planet more boring than most cable access shows. Take a bow.

    You didn't even start your coverage until an hour before landing. If you had any vision, you could've made a whole day of it. You could've made it an event. Fuck Survivor, you've got the ultimate reality show! You should've had the whole nation tuned in. Instead they watched a repeat of MAD TV.

    NASA TV, wake up! You should be kicking the Sci-Fi channel's ass. Really. I expect more from you in the future.

    --
    He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
  90. Imagine!!! (Re:PowerPC-powered rover) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine a Beowolf Cluster of THESE!!!

    1. Re:Imagine!!! (Re:PowerPC-powered rover) by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Imagine a Beowolf Cluster of THESE!!!"

      Alright. I'm seeing... scores of bouncing tetrahedrons in slow motion on the Martian horizon with Flight of the Valkyries playing in the background.

    2. Re:Imagine!!! (Re:PowerPC-powered rover) by ctr2sprt · · Score: 1
      Or worse yet...

      Lander lander lander lander lander lander lander lander, airbag airbag! Lander lander lander lander lander lander lander lander lander... Ahh, it's a rock! Rock! Ooooh, it's a rock! It's a... Lander lander lander lander lander lander...

      (I managed to get that damn badger thing stuck in my head now, just from writing that. I suppose it serves me right.)

    3. Re:Imagine!!! (Re:PowerPC-powered rover) by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Actually, that was suppose to happen. One of the missions that W. has postponed indefinatly was the placement of a series of small satellites. These were to work similar to GPS for earth, have different science projects on each, handle communication from mars, to earth, and allow for offloading of cpu processing. Basically, a small cluster of them.

      Hopefully, W. will allow the project to get back on track.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  91. JPL Celebrity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, seeing the team in action was amazing. Did you check out the hottie at Fault Protection?

  92. Oh I can't wait for the pics! by deathcloset · · Score: 1

    I'll be honest, I'm remarkably elated by this whole thing. Mostly because of this huge response on slashdot.

    I watched the final seconds countdown on space.com. After they dissapeared, I just imagined what was happening, right then, right now, so far away (bouncy bouncy bouncy).

    Then I went to google news. Waited, waited (f5, f5). The first news post I got was by rueters; a little 2 paragraph blurb.

    Then I packed up and headed home (I live 20 minutes from work). When I got home I checked news.google.com and was happy to see abc.com and a slew of others getting updates up to thier web servers.

    then I checked slashdot and was so happy that so many people had already posted (130 at present), in those short 20 minutes.

    I know geeks are suckers for space stuff as is, but I must say that it is encouraging that there is such excitement about. That's all it takes, excitement....well, and a couple billion dollars, and hundreds of great thinkers, and a dash or two of luck. But those all come with enough excitement.

    Now for fusion, space planes, space elevators and such (or space teathers).

  93. Spirit-Shmirit by Mulletproof · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised those martians haven't complained about the amount of spam they've been recieveing lately. They need to prop up that firewall and update those virus definitions or something... Before they know it they'll get some probe claiming to be the South African heir to a fortune, asking them for a small deposite to leverage their millions...

    --
    You need a FREE iPod Nano
  94. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not true! It's just not true! The only place in Afghanistan that has any kind of order at all is Kabul, the rest of the country is lawless with more Taliban power every day.

    Liberating Iraq's oil you mean? The villages surrounded with barbed wire don't look very liberated to me.

    Even on your point of getting a spacecraft to Mars, with the resources and technology America has, it could be doing so much more! Still, without Russia being any competition, it's understandable.

    I just hate the lies, repeated again and again until the public believe them.

  95. NASA has lost the edge to the ESA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems that NASA has actually lost the edge in robotic space exploration. Remember this little gem of a story submitted by someone from Switzerland and posted by Michael(who else).

    1. Re:NASA has lost the edge to the ESA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha ha ha. Owned.

  96. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by BTWR · · Score: 1

    My name is in a million pieces on Mars - it was on the Mars Polar Lander (2001).

    :)

  97. Not to mention Stardust! by snooo53 · · Score: 3, Informative
    Did you happen to get your name on the microchip on stardust as well? Stardust Microchip Names

    I believe there was also another microchip on another of the mars probes, where your name got on it if you were a member of the Planetary Society but I can't seem to find the link at the moment. I just vaguely remember printing out a certificate a few years ago.

    --
    The sending of this message pretty much inconveniences everyone involved.
    1. Re:Not to mention Stardust! by OwnedByTheMan · · Score: 1

      Wow, if I had mod points, I would lash one to you right now for reminding me of this item. I checked the page and lo and behold, my name was just dragged through the interplanetary mud, so to speak.

    2. Re:Not to mention Stardust! by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      I checked the page and lo and behold, my name was just dragged through the interplanetary mud, so to speak.

      Good, now when the Martians come looking for revenge for us polluting their planet with our junk, your name will be on "the list."

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    3. Re:Not to mention Stardust! by Texas+Rose+on+Lava+L · · Score: 1
    4. Re:Not to mention Stardust! by Kymermosst · · Score: 1

      Did you happen to get your name on the microchip on stardust as well?

      I have mine there. I remember adding myself to the "me too" list (several family members worked at JPL, I was a member of the Planetary Society, etc).

      Interesting enough, my wife's name (her married name) is there as well, right along with mine, though when Stardust went up, we didn't know each other.

      Was it Chance or was it Fate?

      --
      "Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
  98. Still sore.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    over the crushing british defeat at the hands of Americans in the first Junkyard Mega-Wars I see.

    We know what we like, and that's extreme ATV's. So suck it, you limey fruit!

    PS - Haha friendly fire! The british are good catchers. Then even the Romans new that. Of course that was an entirely different kind of pitching wasn't it.

    PPS - I'm dancing! you can't see me, but I'm dancing!

    1. Re:Still sore.... by anakin876 · · Score: 1

      Of course in the most recent Junk Yard Mega Wars it was the British who bailed the Americans and the french out when they couldn't get their acts together. The brits built a plane that flew quite well on the very first test flight, while the American's never got off the ground and the French nearly crashed sideways. They had to call in the British prop blade master to repair the French blade which had cracked. THen they had to call in the Female British engine master to diagnose and repair why the American's Engine wouldn't start. After all that help the Brit's plane still kicked the french and american offering's butts.

    2. Re:Still sore.... by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      This can't be true. We American males do NOT ask females for directions! j/k of course for you psycho mods out today...sheesh.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    3. Re:Still sore.... by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      It's because they used a Ford engine. Had they used a Chevy, it would've run the first time and they could have focused on kicking England's ass. :)

      Disclaimer: I don't know what the fuck you're talking about, I just like taking stabs at Ford from time to time.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    4. Re:Still sore.... by fredrik70 · · Score: 1

      Ah, saw it as well. The americans *did* get it of the ground in the end. They also built a plane modeled after the Wright brothers' design, not the easiest plane to model after, but they did it as a tribute to the Wright brothers. Yes, I live in the UK and I thought the UK team did a marvelous job, even if I suspected the UK pilot having a death wish pushing his plane so far! ;-)

      --
      if (!signature) { throw std::runtime_error("No sig!"); }
  99. Warning by Cantus · · Score: 1

    Parent's linked file is 62 MB!

    1. Re:Warning by golgotha007 · · Score: 1

      and worth every penny! a very highly recommended download that illustrates every facet of the mission from launch to landing!

  100. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you should tell that to the women of afghanistan who can now go to school and make a future for themselves. or explain your theory to the crowds of iraqis who were dancing in the streets waving american flags when saddam was captured. whether you want to admit it or not the us is making the world a better place.

    and by the way, 'terrorits' are not 'smoke and mirrors'. you might have noticed something profound happened on sept. 11, 2001. a little hard to do that with smoke and mirrors.

  101. Oh Damn... by Gorimek · · Score: 5, Funny

    This will not help dispel the "Macs are more expensive" myth...

    1. Re:Oh Damn... by dimator · · Score: 1

      How is that a myth, exactly?

      --
      python -c "x='python -c %sx=%s; print x%%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))%s'; print x%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))"
    2. Re:Oh Damn... by Oliver+Defacszio · · Score: 1

      At Slashdot, a myth is anything one doesn't agree with.

      --

      -
      Inventor of the term 'pardon my French'.
  102. Awesome! by dsb · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Congrats to the team!

  103. Pick up the live stream on the net ... by JoeGee · · Score: 1

    http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/index.html is the starting point. At 12:50 AM Eastern they're streaming live in RealVideo.

    --

    Get off my virtual lawn, you damned virtual kids!
  104. Re:WooHOo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How true. And what wonderful poop we have flung!

    No, you misunderstand. He is talking about the Europeans.

  105. NASA mission control calling ESA... by HEMI426 · · Score: 1
    NASA mission control should be prank-calling ESA mission control...

    "Hello, we have a collect call from 'Beagle 2', will you accept the charges?"

  106. Re:Congratulations NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  107. My Question by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

    Now that we finally have a working rover on Mars again, will we once again see Cartoon Netowrk bully NASA around in the naming of rocks?

    Man, I wish I had the foresight to record those commercials...

  108. Re:Ground Zero, Confirmed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I too was at JPL in the MER mission operations building, and I can confirm the elated mood upon successful news of the landing! It's really something to see, people jumping and hugging, and one of the ops chicks even got down and started blowing like three of the engineers at once. I don't think we got it on tape, but it was awesome!

  109. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The subtle correction is that all the heroic US deeds that you project upon your little self so modestly aren't for anyone but yourself at the end of the day. Freeing the /world/ from Al Quaeda is funny in particular - their main target is the US - note the peu-a-peu shift in notion over the last two years. Afghanistan, Iraq- well, there may be those who actually believe that those wars were for the enforcement of freedom, to get rid of the evil dictator with his, er, massive WMD arsenals, to [fill in some more], YAWWN, whatever.

    That said, the people who sent the rovers to Mars (and only them) do not just deserve recognition, they deserve the utmost respect and many congratulations.

  110. Oh Please... by Gorimek · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This is like people who claim a really warm day proves global warming, or a real cold one disproves it.

    It's just one probe. It doesn't prove American superiority any more than their last 2 (or is it more?) failed Mars probes proved American inferiority.

    We could also get into how Beagle was done on something like 1/10 of the budget of Spirit. But it's not important.

    1. Re:Oh Please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll? C'mon mods, I don't like this post, but it is 100% troll-free.

    2. Re:Oh Please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, not just one. This is the fourth probe to land on the planet and survive. All four were american made. I'd say that the american's design is pretty freak'n solid.

      now as for the price tag on Beagle 2. maybe it was the lowest cost probe sent to the planet but the sojourner or whatever it was called was the least expensive probe to survive. And i dont believe it's price tag was much higher than Beagle 2 but i could be wrong.

  111. great news! lets not gloat over it by Indy1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I am elated that nasa has landed sucessfully. At the same time, i am still quite sad over the apparent failure of Beagle 2. While I am an American, I dont see this as a "I win, you lose" situation. I dont care who lands a probe on mars, be it us, ESA, China, Russia, etc. Anyone who lands a probe there and gets useful data scores a victory for ALL of us. I also hope the ESA doesnt give up on doing these kinds of missions in the future.

    --
    Lawyers, MBA's, RIAA? A jedi fears not these things!
  112. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Getting your news from the same sources all other democrats do? You do know the economy falling, free trade sending jobs overseas, nasa failures due to spending cuts, etc were done in the Clinton years right? The problem is people are so uneducated they blame who is in office now rather than who made it happen. It takes years to have an effect. Clinton could have stopped the whole 9/11 thing. It was proven. He had the choice and said no.

  113. Re:NASA TV Streams by b1t+r0t · · Score: 1
    Damn, I knew I shouldn't have posted that link on Fark. I didn't think about the possiblity of it getting reposted to Slashdot so quickly!

    They're certainly getting a load test on their Real Media server now.

    --

    --
    "Open source is good." - Steve Jobs
    "Open source is evil." - Microsoft
  114. Failures abound by DigiShaman · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here is the breakdown of failures and sucesses.

    1964 U.S. launches Mariner 3, which fails after liftoff.

    1964 U.S. launches Mariner 4. First successful Mars fly-by in July 1965. The craft returns the first pictures of the Martian surface.

    1964 Soviets launch Zond 2. Mars fly-by. Contact lost in May 1965.

    1969 U.S. launches Mariner 6 and 7. The two spacecraft fly by Mars in July and August 1969 and send back images and data.

    1971 Soviets launch Mars 2. Orbiter and lander reach Mars in November 1971. Lander crashes but orbiter sends back images and data.

    1971 U.S. launches Mariner 8, which fails during liftoff.

    1971 U.S. launches Mariner 9. Orbiter reaches Mars in November 1971, provides global mapping of Martian surface and studies atmosphere.

    1973 Soviets launch Mars 5. Orbiter reaches Mars in February 1974 and collects data.

    1975 U.S. launches Viking 1 and Viking 2. The two orbiter/lander sets reach Mars in 1976. Orbiters image Martian surface. Landers send back images and take surface samples.

    1992 U.S. launches Mars Observer. Contact lost with orbiter in August 1993, three days before scheduled insertion into Martian orbit.

    1996 U.S. launches Mars Global Surveyor. Orbiter reaches Mars in September 1997 and maps the planet. Still in operation.

    1996 Soviets launch Mars 96, which fails after launch and falls back into Earth's atmosphere.

    1996 U.S. launches Mars Pathfinder. Lander and rover arrive on Mars in July 1997, in the most-watched space event ever. Lander sends back thousands of images, and Sojourner rover roams the surface, sending back 550 images.

    1998 Japan launches Nozomi. Orbiter suffers glitch in December 1998, forcing circuitous course correction. Mission fails in 2003.

    1998 U.S. launches Mars Climate Orbiter. Spacecraft destroyed while entering Martian orbit in September 1999.

    1999 U.S. launches Mars Polar Lander. Contact lost with lander during descent in December 1999. Two microprobes "hitchhiking" on lander also fail.

    2001 U.S. launches Mars Odyssey. Orbiter reaches Mars in October 2001 to detect water and shallow buried ice and study the environment. It can also act as a communications relay for future Mars landers.

    2003 European Space Agency launches Mars Express. Orbiter and lander to arrive at Mars in December 2003.

    2003 U.S. launches Mars Expedition Rovers. Spirit and Opportunity rovers due to land on Mars in January 2004.

    Note: I ripped this info from MSNBC.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
    1. Re:Failures abound by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      They left out the first few attempts of the USSR.

      Marsnik 1 (Mars 1960A) - 10 October 1960 - Attempted Mars Flyby (Launch Failure)

      Marsnik 2 (Mars 1960B) - 14 October 1960 - Attempted Mars Flyby (Launch Failure)

      Sputnik 22 - 24 October 1962 - Attempted Mars Flyby

      Mars 1 - 1 November 1962 - Mars Flyby (Contact Lost)

      Sputnik 24 - 4 November 1962 - Attempted Mars Lander

    2. Re:Failures abound by anzha · · Score: 1

      You're missing the Soviet Phobos missions from the 1980s.

      PHOBOS 1 - First attempt to land probes on surface of Mars' largest moon, Phobos. Probe failed enroute in 1988 due to human/computer error.

      PHOBOS 2 - Attempt to land probes on Martian moon Phobos. The probe did enter Mars orbit in early 1989, but signals ceased one week before scheduled Phobos landing.

      HTH.

      --
      Do you know why the road less traveled by is littered with the bones of the unwary?
    3. Re:Failures abound by Porag_Spliffing · · Score: 1

      I guess MSNBC missed this one (so did Mars air defence, the ground troops got it though) the Soviet Mars 3 lander made it down and got off a small transmission before it died, probably due to a large dust storm raging at the time.

      Cheers,
      R.

      --
      Maybe you live in interesting times
  115. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by OneFix · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In defense of NASA TV, they aren't everywhere, they aren't even in MOST places. I can tell you I know you can't get it if you're in Durham, NC (maybe DirectTV or Digital Cable), but most places have Comedy Central and Sci-Fi on basic cable...the internet feeds don't count...

    But, this still doesn't excuse them from making bad tv...

    In further defense of NASA TV, their operating budget for the whole year probably doesn't equal the budget of 1 episode of Survivor...then you've gotta bring in ppl over the weekend...or would you want to work all day Saturday???

    Of course, I'm not sure they would have wanted to play up this specific mission...I mean, the UK had a failed mission in the last month...the previously failed NASA missions, etc...I'm sure that they must have been crossing their fingers up till the last minute...as for no sound in the control room...they were probably afraid that someone would maybe say something vulgar, talk about mission specific frequencies, etc...then again, it just makes your job easier if you don't have to worry about what you're saying in a high pressure situation...

  116. Question about base petal down - all luck? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Congrats, I was watching the whole thing on NasaTV the last few hours.

    I was curious about the base petal down stop - was there any kind of design (like weighting) to "encourage" it to stop that way, or was it basically like rolling a die and seeing where it landed?

    I can't say when I've been so excited about space news as tonight, it was amazing watching the reactions from everyone when they finally got real confirmation is was on the ground OK!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Question about base petal down - all luck? by dimator · · Score: 2, Insightful

      IIRC, Sojourner landed base petal down too. If it is all by chance, then we've had some very good luck so far with landers!

      --
      python -c "x='python -c %sx=%s; print x%%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))%s'; print x%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))"
    2. Re:Question about base petal down - all luck? by KingReuben · · Score: 1

      I have wondered about the same thing. I am sure it is not left to luck!

      I imagine the proper positioning is either done with a gyroscope or perhaps by deflating the airbags in a controlled fashion... I would be curious to know at any rate.

      --


      --
      om Shanti
    3. Re:Question about base petal down - all luck? by wombatius · · Score: 1

      From my knowledge of the system, it really is largely a 1-in-4 chance to land base petal down since everything leading up to its final rest is chaotic bouncing and rolling.

      As far as the airbags go, it was only (thus far) base petal down pre-deflation...the deflation of the airbags could leave it in another configuration entirely.

    4. Re:Question about base petal down - all luck? by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 3, Informative

      I was curious about the base petal down stop - was there any kind of design (like weighting) to "encourage" it to stop that way, or was it basically like rolling a die and seeing where it landed?

      Disclaimer: I work at JPL, but not on the Mars Exploration Rovers.

      From what I understand, it's basically like rolling a die - there may be a slightly higher probability of landing on some of the sides due to weight distribution, but not enough that anyone was counting on it landing base petal down.

      With any of the other three orientations, it wouldn't have been a problem - by deflating the airbags in just the right order and using other devices to reorient it, it's designed to end up right-side-up eventually. All of the possible scenarios were simulated and tested extensively at JPL. Remember that this was the same trick used successfully by the Mars Pathfinder mission in 1997. Some improvements have been made, but it's the same idea.

      The fact that it happened to land right-side-up just means that it will take less time, and probably use less power, to unwrap everything, and also that the overall chance of success is slightly higher just because there's one less thing to worry about going wrong.

    5. Re:Question about base petal down - all luck? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, one in three chance of base petal landing down.

  117. Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by aldheorte · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is an interesting and informative entry on the NASA site regarding how much data can be transmitted back and forth between Earth and the rover:

    http://marsrovers.nasa.gov/mission/comm_data.html

    If we assume best case scenario for the transmission potential stated there and assume the direct-to-Earth rate averages the midpoint between the stated 12000bps and 3500bps, the total daily data for a single Martian day, direct-to-Earth and orbiter relay potential combined, is on the order of 17MB. The total data for the entire mission is on the order of 1,550MB.

    Of course, this has to include protocol overhead, error, and operating instructions, but it provides one quantitative, if not qualitative, answer to how much data can be retrieved by the mission. In this case, a bit more than 2 CDs worth.

    1. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by bkissi01 · · Score: 1

      From the article: 0314 GMT (10:14 p.m. EST) The Canberra tracking station in Australia is locked on to the spacecraft's signal, which is 10 bits per second.

      The Probe is on another planet and the connection is still faster than AOL!!!

    2. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The total daily data for a single Martian day, direct-to-Earth and orbiter relay potential combined, is on the order of 17MB. The total data for the entire mission is on the order of 1,550MB.

      Note that with multiple cameras at 1024x1024 resolution, the Mars Exploration Rovers could easily send quite a bit more information than that if the bandwith was available. I work in the Machine Learning Systems group at JPL, and one of our goals is to eventually put some artificial intelligence software onto a future Mars rover so that it can take far more pictures than could ever be transmitted, analyze them onboard, and send only the most interesting ones back. It's very tricky to pin down exactly what makes one image more interesting than another, of course, so that's the real challenge...

    3. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by oquigley · · Score: 1

      I noticed this comment in the mission blog:
      http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/statustextonly .html

      "About 24 MB of data is being played back from Odyssey.
      It will take about 12 minutes to get all the information, officials report.
      This will contain engineering data on the rover's systems and possibly some pictures."

      Which makes it sound as if the bandwidth is more like 2MB per second... Odd.

      O.

    4. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by oquigley · · Score: 1

      Whoops, I meant 2mb per minute. Doh.

    5. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm... That's megaBITS, not megaBYTES. Check the site again.

    6. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I saw the same thing. I just reloaded the page, and now it says:
      About 24 megabits of data is being played back from Odyssey. It will take about 12 minutes to get all the information, officials report. This will contain engineering data on the rover's systems and possibly some pictures.

      They changed from 24 MB (implying bytes) to 24 megabits. That's 4167 bits per second (slower than most modems).

    7. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by Texas+Rose+on+Lava+L · · Score: 1

      the total daily data for a single Martian day, direct-to-Earth and orbiter relay potential combined, is on the order of 17MB.

      It takes one day to copy a 17 Meg file from Mars to Earth? That's faster than my Mac! Not that I'm trying to start a holy war here or anything.

    8. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The orbiter can transmit data at over 80,000 bits per second for 16 hours per day. That maxes out to 576 MB per day.

      It takes 118 minutes for the orbitor to circle Mars. From the description you linked to, I interpret the orbiter to be in communication range for eight minutes per revolution. At 12 revolutions per day, that's 87 MB per day. Over a 90 day mission, we could get almost 8 GB of data.

    9. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by IM6100 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like they already got 22MB in this first Sol.

      --
      A Good Intro to NetBS
    10. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by ColaMan · · Score: 1

      They're talking about the direct rover->to-earth link, as opposed to the rover->orbiter->earth link.

      15 watts over a mars-earth link from a (presumably) omnidirectional antenna doesn't leave much for data transfer. 15 watts to a craft in orbit a few hundred k's up is plenty. Especially as the one in orbit has a high-gain dish to earth.

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
    11. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Correction: It's 17Mb, that's megabits not megaBytes.

      We have 17Mb connections from Mars to Earth and I'm stuck with 1.5Mb within the planet? PFFT!

    12. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by SmilingBoy · · Score: 1

      24 Mbit, not 22MByte.

    13. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by SmilingBoy · · Score: 1
      Actually 4267 KBytes/second or 34.13 Kbit/second. Stange as I thought they said they had a 128 kbps connection to Odyssey. Maybe the 12 minutes referred to when the data was going to be received. And they actually started transmitting some minutes later. Or it could be the 9 minutes delay from Mars to the Earth, which they included in the 12 minutes as well. In this case, the transmission would have only taken 3 minutes, which would be a speed of 136.5 kbps - this seems about right. So, they said: Odyssey is starting transmitting now and the data will be with us in 12 minutes - 9 minutes travelling through space + 3 minutes of actual transmission.

      (apologies if that gets posted multiple, I get a 500 error)

    14. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by flewp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What about sending back thumbnailed or greyscale images and then having the option of telling it which to send back? Is that currently in use? Sure, you're using bandwidth, but maybe it would still be more efficient?

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
    15. Re:Total Mission Bandwidth & Data Constraints by Motherfucking+Shit · · Score: 1
      It's very tricky to pin down exactly what makes one image more interesting than another, of course, so that's the real challenge...
      Nah, that's easy. Just look for an abundance of green pixels in a particular image, and send those back. It definitely ups our chances of getting a look at some hot martian babes! ;)

      In all seriousness, cool work that you're doing. Thanks for doing it and congrats to you and everyone at NASA, MER or not.
      --
      "BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
  118. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by benna · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Well i guess you missed the point. I said this really should all be sepperate from politics. However, if you want to get into that. I really don't get my information from the people like michael moore or al frankin. Really i think they are funny but not where you find out whats really going on. People like noam chomsky and howard zinn are the people I listen to.

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  119. And I found out from ESPN by sempf · · Score: 1

    Didn't hear from the Martian Defense Minister or anything. Actually heard about it while listening to SportsCenter. How about that.

    S

    --
    /usr/bin/grep -i -E meaning life.txt
  120. Two Questions by l0tu53at3r · · Score: 0

    1. When was it launched?

    2. What is its purpose?

    --
    ---Excuse the bad English, I'm American---
    1. Re:Two Questions by mlk · · Score: 1

      A few mins ago.

      To look at rocks, and work out if Mars could of once supported life (not "is it currently supporting life).

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
  121. Re:Congratulations NASA by QuantumFTL · · Score: 5, Interesting

    All the same there's only one thing worse than a sore loser and that's an ungracious winner. There's really no need to go strutting and preening and engaging in dominance poses about it. It shows quite a bit more class to just win and then be decent about it. To me, this wasn't a victory for the United States, this is a victory for all of mankind! We would be foolish not to aknowlege that much of the technology used on this mission came from other countries (and the ideas for them). We may not always see eye to eye, and we may fight ourselves constantly but we are all in this together folks. I will tell you that no one I"ve met here was anything but sympathetic towards the Beagle guys, and we really hope they re-establish contact (though it seems unlikely). Thanks to everyone around that world that contributed to this tremendous success!

    Cheers,
    Justin Wick
    Science Activity Planner Support Staff
    Mars Exploration Rovers

  122. How much would it cost by towzzer · · Score: 2, Funny

    'NASA calling the ESA' "Hello, we have a collect call from 'Beagle 2', will you accept the charges?" -stolen from irc

  123. Battlebots 2004 on Mars? by dave_oc · · Score: 2, Funny

    Few more rovers up there and we can start having some fights.

    Make it like the X-Prize. Teams need to launch their bot, land it, and attack the competition.

  124. Have to agree about the sound... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I was also watching, and while I agree about the sound (how frustrating seeing everyone sitting around chatting without being able to hear!!) but I thought they did an OK job during the entry period with interviews and video. The animation (linked to in other posts) was at least very cool and really well done.

    I think they have a pretty low budget, so I'm not sure how exciting they can make it... but I agree that NasaTV could be a tremendous tool for getting people interested in space again. I'll bet CNN helps take up the slack though!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  125. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I would post non-anonymous but moderators are going berzerk today with negatives based on opinions of their own. Even tho this IS a news site. "news for nerds" ring a bell? Yellow journalism anyone?

    You have to remember there are 3 major religious factions in Iraq and the flag wavers were of the 2 non oppressed by Saddam. They have more freedom now but the 1/3 radical faction has the same mindset that the 9/11 hijackers had and they'll literally die trying to stop others from keeping them from their 13 virgins in heaven.

    I totally agree with you. Just making some facts straight. We will be in a neverending series of 9/11 attacks just like other countries in the middle east if we don't stop them. It's awesome they have freedoms now they never had before. Unfortunately our world of seperate church & state can't comprehend the world they live in. Church is everything there.

    Personally I view it as this: Imagine a month before 9/11 the president says we're invading Afghanistan because they could do substantial damage to us. Imagine now the laughter & hatred as we bomb them before it happened. It's a PROVEN FACT Iraq was pursuing these weapons. Their own scientists said they were but admitted they were not able to complete them.

    So...democratic viewpoint, let them finish the bombs & kill thousands of innocent Americans before we react?

    THAT is why I switched from democrat to republican. That is also why Bush will win in 2004. Democrats think about it. I was converted by the democratic mudslinging and others are too.

    --
    Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
  126. Re:NASA TV Streams by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah I got it from you.

    I wish I wasnt banned from fark or id just talk there but my life was ruined when i got banned months ago for AN ACCIDENT!

  127. Help out Beagle by jigma · · Score: 1

    This craft can move right...maybe it could find Beagle and turn it over.

    yes...no???

    --
    "linux is only free if your time has no value" - Jamie Zawinski
    1. Re:Help out Beagle by mlk · · Score: 1

      Its landed 1/2 a planet away, so alas no.

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
  128. Why bounce? by mnmn · · Score: 1

    Ive been wondering about it ever since I heard how they plan to land Spirit. Why not use a parachute? Airbags seem like an awefully tough way to let equipment survive smacking straight into a planet.

    Havent you all seen the videos of jeeps and tanks tossed out from the C-130s in Iraq with parachutes? Most of those seem to land just fine.. and it should be easier on Mars..

    --
    "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
    1. Re:Why bounce? by l0tu53at3r · · Score: 0

      I think that its actually more difficult because of the lack of atmospheric pressure. Even with a massive parachute it'd still plummet like a rock without a parachute. It could also have something to do with cargo space or something. Just throwing some ideas out there. :)

      --
      ---Excuse the bad English, I'm American---
    2. Re:Why bounce? by codepunk · · Score: 5, Informative

      The density of the atmosphere of mars is only one percent as dense as our atmosphere on earth. Due to the thin atmosphere a parachute alone is not enough to slow the craft sufficiently for a safe landing. Spirit used a parachute then retro rockets fire just above the surface to practically stop the craft. The airbags inflate and take up the small drop that is left.

      --


      Got Code?
    3. Re:Why bounce? by Stalus · · Score: 1

      They do. Nasa has a nice description of the landing. They deploy parachutes, fire rockets, bring the thing to a halt about 40 feet up, and then cut the chute and drop it to the floor below. I would guess that this is to reduce the risk of the probe getting caught up in the parachute, but I honestly don't know.

  129. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    like the extremist-feminist country the USA has become? same way a few anti-US protestors sitting out on the white house lawn doesn't speak for all US citizens, a bunch of iraqis cheering for american doesn't speak for all iraqis. you've been spoon-fed whatever the US government wants you to see, and i see you've been greedily lapping it up.

    try doing a little research on some of the conspiracy theories regarding 911, and you'll see some of them are more convincing than the bullshit you've been fed by CNN and its ilk.

  130. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Worse than no sound, in the initial moment of excitement, the asian co-anchor guy -and I am sorry, I didn't catch his name- tried to say something (probably really important) but by then, his jumping up and down had unplugged his mic and nobody could hear anything.

    He then spent the next 10 minutes wandering around the control room shaking hands and whatnot, so I have no idea what the heck he was trying to say. Nobody will ever know. Data lost.

    Get a grip, NASA TV people. 1) Don't have two anchors trying to talk at the same time. I feel sorry for the female anchor who basically just gave up since she could hear the guy, but he couldn't hear her, so he kept interuppting when she was talking. She had to shut herself up to keep it from being a total mess. Poor girl. 2) Geez, please don't have your anchors jumping up and down. It looks goofy. Space is not goofy.

    I'm not against celebrations. I'm happy for NASA. I just wish they'd tone it down. On the other hand, if Beagle2 had worked, I can't help but think the Brits would have confined the celebrating to one chap saying "Right, then. Sorted."

  131. ppc powered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    The computer in each Mars Exploration Rover runs with a 32-bit Rad 6000 microprocessor, a radiation-hardened version of the PowerPC chip. Onboard memory includes 128 megabytes of random access memory, augmented by 256 megabytes of flash memory and smaller amounts of other non-volatile memory, which allows the system to retain data even without power.

    Heat inside the warm electronics box comes from a combination of electrical heaters, eight radioisotope heater units and heat given off by electronics components. Each radioisotope heater unit produces about one watt of heat and contains about 2.7 grams (0.1 ounce) of plutonium dioxide as a pellet about the size and shape of the eraser on the end of a standard pencil. Each pellet is encapsulated in a metal cladding of platinum-rhodium alloy and surrounded by multiple layers of carbon-graphite composite material, making the complete unit about the size and shape of a C-cell battery.

    1. Re:ppc powered by torgosan · · Score: 1

      As a follow-on to the parent, see:

      http://www.gcn.com/22_24/news/23246-1.html

      --
      "If you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in 5 years there'd be a shortage of sand". -Milton F.
    2. Re:ppc powered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heat inside the warm electronics box comes from a combination of electrical heaters, eight radioisotope heater units and heat given off by electronics components.

      That's an awful lot of trouble just to generate heat. They could have just used a P4, and that would've kept the PPC chip warm without the need to carry dangerous plutonium during the boost phase.

  132. The if factor by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, what if the probe failed to elude the "Mars Defense System" and crashed like other recent missions? The entire country would have been all pumped up for NASA's version of Al Capone's Vault. I suspect the powers that be aren't confident enough of success to pump these things up anymore.

  133. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

    "In further defense of NASA TV, their operating budget for the whole year probably doesn't equal the budget of 1 episode of Survivor"

    Perhaps they should open themselves up to more underwriting, ala PBS. Or perhaps hand it over to PBS (or even C-SPAN) outright.

  134. Seperation of church and state is ESSENTIAL!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately our world of seperate church & state can't comprehend the world they live in. Church is everything there.

    I think this is important for everyone to understand because it has implications for the entire world. All those bible thumpers here in the US who want copies of the ten commandments displayed in our courts and want laws passed based on the current interpretations of which minority groups God supposedly hates need to understand that our founding fathers knew exactly what they were doing when they erected a wall between church and state. Religous matters are so heated that people just can't think straight. The first Americans realized that they had to build a new country from scratch and didn't have time to waste fucking around with rediculous religious shit that was bound to cause more divisions and do more harm than good. One of the reasons that America continues to lead the world is because of our insistance on keeping religion in its little sandbox and not screw up the bigger picture. So all you people who want to tear down the wall and have religion play a major role in American life: take a look at the middle east. That's what our future would be like.

    1. Re:Seperation of church and state is ESSENTIAL!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or take a look in the history books at how many governments regulated religion and see how many are still standing.

      In Revelations it says in the endtimes the Christians will be persecuted. Persecuted means exactly what happened to the Jews in WW2. Gov't bans their religion and makes them outlaws. Outlaws are punished and/or killed.

    2. Re:Seperation of church and state is ESSENTIAL!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see that you are keen on quotiong the Revelations. Why don't you quote some of the "Sermon on the Mountain"? Revelations has nothing to do with Jesus, your saviour.

    3. Re:Seperation of church and state is ESSENTIAL!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? So what is your interpretation of the second coming and rapture? This is the most uneducated reply I've seen in awhile.

  135. Missions pretty different by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure if they have different scientific packages, but on NasaTV tonight in an interview someone was saying that they really have pretty different scientific missions - Spirit (which landed tonight) is there to look at the bottom of a lake bed, while Opportunity (landing later this month) is there to look at a different kind of geologic evidence and thus will be doing different tests and looking for different kinds of things.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  136. Re:Congratulations NASA by IM6100 · · Score: 1

    The people who 'won' aren't preening about and engaging in dominance poses. They're proud of their accomplishment and busy working at the task of the mission.

    The people 'copping the attitude' are just a group of spectators who have nothing to do with the accomplishment. At most they paid some tax dollars toward the cost of the mission.

    --
    A Good Intro to NetBS
  137. Re:HA HA Europe by ryen · · Score: 0

    with comments like that i like to remember that most of Americans ancestors were indeed from Europe. (I live in the US btw)

  138. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by WayneConrad · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, NASA TV could have done better, but I admit that I enjoyed the campy, amateur-hour flavor.

    I thought the commentators did a great job, but I found myself wanting more of a raw feed with a lot less explanation. When someone on the flight control loop reports that they've aquired a signal, I don't need someone to repeat that they've aquired a signal. I don't think that Joe Armchair needs it either.

    I also found myself wishing they'd be quiet when something was happening. There was incredible drama in the room; some of the commentary got in the way of the story. When someone in the loop says something, the explainer should hush up so we can hear.

    Still, great program. I sent the cats flying for cover with my hooting when I heard that they had a safe landing.

  139. The Jews were NOT responsible for 9/11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    try doing a little research on some of the conspiracy theories regarding 911, and you'll see some of them are more convincing than the bullshit you've been fed by CNN and its ilk.

    As a Jewish-American I really cannot think of anything more offensive than these 'convincing' conspiracy theories that Israel was actually behind the 9/11 attacks in order to draw us into the Palestinian conflict. If you want to bash the US, that's fine. If you want to question Israel's hard-line towards the Palestinians, that's fine. But to suggest that somehow the 'evil jews' were the masterminds behind the Sept 11 tragedies is beneath contempt. It's racist and so are you for referrring to these obscenities as 'convincing'

    1. Re:The Jews were NOT responsible for 9/11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh fucking wow, how convincing a counter-argument! anything you don't agree with, you find "offensive", and i should refrain from pointing out other arguments lest i offend your delicate sensibilities. secondly, it was your perogative that you chose to believe the conspiracy theories i referred to were those of the anti-semitic variety. so fuck you and your anal-retentive presumptions, you dumb jew.

    2. Re:The Jews were NOT responsible for 9/11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The lefties' doom will lie in their new allegience with Militant Islam.

      See, the lefties can't get anything done by themselves. Organizationally, they are hopeless. Talk about herding cats? It's like herding jellyfish. So they realize that they need some strong support, someone who can put some backbone and fire into them. And someone who hates America as much as they do. Who could that be? Militant Islam! It has the "opressed minority" appeal too.

      We can all see how this ends. Militant Islam will eat these people alive. The pacifists and peaceniks will end up with their heads on a stick - the rest will turn into a Berkley version of the hairy jihadist foaming at the mouth with Quaran versus and threatening our destruction.

      A far cry from thier purported values of peace and love, but we all know it isn't really about that.

  140. Re:Congratulations NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes. I realise this is the /. crowd, but have you ever seen Barry Sanders score a touchdown? Act like you've been there before and show some class.

  141. It'd be neat if Spirit could spot the second one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd like to see Spirit take a picture of the other rover as it enters the atmosphere to land. It'd be neat to see one rover captureing an image of the other, sort of like we're populating Mars with robots.

  142. Hi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi

  143. Packages not different by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Well, in the NASA press conference they just said the scientific packages are identical (in fact the only difference is a fuse). So regardless of differing intent, they'll be using the same instruments to gather data.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  144. NASA TV on DirecTV... Anyone? Anyone? by tomzyk · · Score: 1

    Anyone know if this is possible? (It's not listed in their channel guide but I was wondering if anyone might know of another name/channel it might be listed under... or any other channel like it.)

    I used to leave the NASA channel on all of the time when I was living in my dorm in school... mainly just for the cool video-feeds they'd have from the space shuttles catching the Earth and stars beyond it.

    --
    Karma: NaN
    1. Re:NASA TV on DirecTV... Anyone? Anyone? by dejamatt · · Score: 2, Informative
    2. Re:NASA TV on DirecTV... Anyone? Anyone? by Blademan007 · · Score: 1

      Channel 376, but you need to have to be receiving the bird at the 119 orbital slot to get the channel. That bird is used primarily for Spanish language stuff, and NASA :).

    3. Re:NASA TV on DirecTV... Anyone? Anyone? by badfrog · · Score: 1

      If your dish doesn't support the NASA channel, you can call DirecTV, and tell them you want it. They will send someone out with an elliptical dish that will receive the 2nd satellite.
      Then, if they want to charge you for the new dish and installation, ask for the "customer retention department", you might get it free of charge.
      (This technique courtesy of Tivocommunity.com)

    4. Re:NASA TV on DirecTV... Anyone? Anyone? by golgotha007 · · Score: 1

      i'm a little disappointed in the crappy 80kb real audio stream.
      they used to have a beautiful 300kb streaming wmv that was extremely pleasant in full screen.
      budget cuts anyone?

    5. Re:NASA TV on DirecTV... Anyone? Anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have to go as far as calling customer retention, if you're moving. Before you move, just call movers connection (1-800-616-MOVE) and tell them that you want the 3 sat dish at your new home. That's how I got it.

      You can also tell them you want to get HDTV later on, that will work too.

    6. Re:NASA TV on DirecTV... Anyone? Anyone? by terrymr · · Score: 1

      it's on 376 ... although I have the triple LNB set up, it may not be there if you don't.

  145. Thanks - was on NasaTV as well!! by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    They had the same animation on NasaTV, I was really happy to see a good quality version of this as the ones on the official mars lander site are rather small (and disjointed having interviews in the middle).

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  146. Not completely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The name didn't help. If it had been called Garfield2, it would have been guaranteed to land right side.

    Toast or name, either by itself would have been sufficient. But leaving out both, well, you're practically begging to land upside down.

  147. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by ncc74656 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I really don't get my information from the people like michael moore or al frankin. Really i think they are funny but not where you find out whats really going on. People like noam chomsky and howard zinn are the people I listen to.

    I'm not sure which is worse: getting your info from Michael Moore or getting it from Noam Chomsky. I find both of those prospects frightening.

    --
    20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  148. Not airbags at least by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    They were fully inflated when it stopped - the gyro sounds like an interesting idea, but I'm not sure they could spare the weight/space when it can just handle righting itself anyway.

    Hopefully someone will have the answer!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Not airbags at least by KingReuben · · Score: 1

      If they were fully inflated then couldn't they be specifically partially deflated so as to cause the entire assembly to roll?

      --


      --
      om Shanti
  149. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by alehman · · Score: 1

    My local cable doesn't have NASA TV any more. They replaced it with something useful like UPN. So I have to get the internet feed. Well it worked just fine up until they first thought it had landed and then then it died and I couldn't reconnect for about 15 minutes. Probably too much load on the servers? Sometimes the quality seemed as if it was being broadcast from mars.

    There did seem to be a fair number of technical glitches between the anchors. You would think if they could land this thing on mars...

    I did like the style overall except for the lack of audio.

  150. First Post! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oops, I fail it.

    Your Truly,
    Beagle 2

  151. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by scottj · · Score: 1

    about the coverage: You can get Nasa TV anywhere in the US on satellite. That means that in the US, they ARE in most places.

    --
    .-.--
  152. Obligatory Patton Quote ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "... Americans love a winner. Americans will not tolerate a loser. Americans despise cowards. Americans play to win all of the time. I wouldn't give a hoot in hell for a man who lost and laughed. That's why Americans have never lost nor will ever lose a war; for the very idea of losing is hateful to an American." - GSP

    1. Re:Obligatory Patton Quote ... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      "... Americans love a winner. Americans will not tolerate a loser....

      Didn't he lose the court case for slapping a soldier?

    2. Re:Obligatory Patton Quote ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but if I was there, I would have smacked him a lot harder. George Patton understood it simply built his legend.

      And he was the greatest geneneral of the 20th century; Rommel was a piker, and British soldiers are usually underwhelmed by their commanding officers.

  153. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by OneFix · · Score: 1

    C-SPAN is probably the closest to NASA TV and if you look at their coverage, they probably don't have a lot of ppl working for them...they have 1, maybe 2 rooms where they run cameras, and those are stationary...a narrator and pretty basic graphics...sounds like they run the same operations to me...

  154. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by ChrisCampbell47 · · Score: 1
    So I have to get the internet feed. Well it worked just fine up until they first thought it had landed and then then it died and I couldn't reconnect for about 15 minutes.

    I stuck with one of the two alternate feeds (that is, not the "primary" one linked on http://science.ksc.nasa.gov/shuttle/countdown/vide o ) and it never went below 45 kbps, which is OK. It had to rebuffer many times, but I never lost more than 15 seconds.

    If it's going to be a big night, try to stay a step ahead of everyone else and go straight to the alternates.

  155. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by alien_blueprint · · Score: 1

    It's nice to know that a tiny part of me just achieved a small measure of immortality on another planet in our solar system.

    Tangential question - how long can a DVD be expected to last, even in "ideal" conditions? Or is this a special DVD made of materials that will degrade more slowly than ordinary discs?

  156. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hahahahaha. I've read the conspiracy theories. You believe that crap?

    Also I see nowhere in the parent post quoting CNN as the source. Thats exactly what the conspiracy theorist sites spoonfeed you!

  157. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by TaGirl_Keri · · Score: 1

    My name is now on Mars plus my families & my 2 cats name as well. I suppose the usual /. remarks about the 2 cats will follow :P

    --
    My fav units are dead Mavs
  158. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by OneFix · · Score: 1

    not if you don't have a satellite, which most ppl don't have...most ppl still have good old land-based cable...

  159. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

    I admit that I enjoyed the campy, amateur-hour flavor.

    last motel I stayed at had NASA TV, and one morning they had this girl just sitting there smiling at the camera, waiting for showtime. It was so funny, like watching 'behind the scenes tv'. This went of for 5 or ten minutes, and every so often she would make small talk to someone off camera, then resume smiling and waiting.

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  160. Go USA! by George+Walker+Bush · · Score: 0, Troll

    Just goes to show, the US still does it better than you Eurotrash.

    Thank you and God bless America.

    --
    George W. Bush
    President, United States of America
  161. Only on slashdot... by product+byproduct · · Score: 1

    ...can someone get karma by reposting the *unique* link of the slashdot story.

  162. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

    drop light ball

    --
    Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
  163. Even worse, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Those are just the shots in the air, check out what's happening on the ground.

  164. You're converted alright... by djupedal · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    We will be in a neverending series of 9/11 attacks just like other countries in the middle east if we don't stop them.

    There is no proof that the US faced this kind of threat. Terrorism is routine (so are headaches and car crashes), yes, but doomsday? ...no. You weren't around for the Bay of Pigs, were you? The world didn't end in a mushroom cloud at the hands of the Soviets, and it won't end as the result of terrorism. Bush Govt. spending is the goal, and your wallet is the only thing being threatened.

    You've bought into the biggest lie of this century.

    You're simply reflecting the kind of self-rationalizing chicken little mindset that says more about your reading material and ability to secure a personal opinion, than it does about your ability to postulate world peace and security.

    1. Re:You're converted alright... by Cat_Byte · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Watch the news. Any source you wish. The terrorist bombers who don't like another gov't are a neverending supply of suicide bombers killing innocents. It's not buying into something. It's paying attention. Something you really should do. Only Bush bashers are saying this right now so don't buy into what they are saying. These terrorists aren't a hoax or whatever. They are real. Tens of thousands have died in recent history. To call that a chicken little mindset is not only naive but disgusting that you approve of it.

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    2. Re:You're converted alright... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What bush and his administration does not understand is that these attacks are fueling further terrorist acts in the future. Agressiveness fosters agressive behaviour - have that in mind. People always have different opinions about everything - and they are entitled to have so. If some country feels threatened (say a country with a rich oil reserve) it might build an army to protect itself and its lifestyle, maybe even try to "convert" other countries to the same beliefs/system as themselves. That is what iraq wanted to do; build army, protect itself, and spread its way of life. How is this behaviour different from the US when the USA builds an army, invade and bomb other countries and now totally builds up their system from the ground. ??

      The USA did the exact thing the US feared the iraqis to do. The USA is just as bad as iraq and bush is just as bad as saddam. There is no "pure evil" persons out there - they are only humans with other views on life and on how a country should be run. They should not be punished for that. The USA should draw back its armies from the arab countries and let them take care of their own matters in their own way. Then the USA should move israel - wich was wrongly created on others territory to begin with (if you think it was rigtly - then i guess the indians should have USA back to??). No Israel is a big problem, and its a big problem that USA helped put israel there.

      Anyway what I am trying to say is that everyone is just human with different opinions. Terrirst acts are just extreme actions from deseprate people - instead of intemidating them even more - the US should realy help them - by just leaving the arabs alone.

    3. Re:You're converted alright... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm proud that the U.S. has produced such a rich and comfortable culture that people like you can have such ignorant views and still survive. A country made of attitudes like yours would have been roadkill to the likes of Stalin, Emperial Japan, Castro, Pancho Villa, Anthony Robbins, etc.

    4. Re:You're converted alright... by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Watch the news. Any source you wish. The terrorist bombers who don't like another gov't are a neverending supply of suicide bombers killing innocents. It's not buying into something. It's paying attention. Something you really should do.

      And why are those bombers attacking americans? Assuming for the moment that they are, although they usually target Israel. How did Israel get there? Through US involvement. What about the last 70 years or so of western exploitation of the middle east? For most of the 20th century American and European governments put a lot of energy, time, and money into exploiting the fanatics in the middle east and encouraging them to act crazy.

      There was a rash of airplane hijackings in the 70s and 80s. 9/11 doesn't even compare to what was going on back then, because it was more or less an isolated incident that didn't reflect a pattern.

      The question that needs to be answered is: Do we have the right to go into other countries, raise discontent, push out their governments replacing them with satellite dictatorships, and then go back in with war and death and destruction to oust those dictators? What is our moral ground for what we have done in the Middle East?

      The answer: It is the same moral ground for what we did in America during what's now referred to as "the indian wars". Yep. None at all. It's American Imperialism at its worst. You can buy into it all you want, but you're taking the irresponsible way out by disregarding all that we have done in the middle east to breed this situation.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    5. Re:You're converted alright... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm proud that the U.S. has produced such a rich and comfortable culture that people like you can have such ignorant views and still survive.
      Hmm...sounds like you're the ignorant one. You really think terrorists are going to never have an effect on you? Ask the families of 9/11 that. Terrorism is real. To say that is an ignorant view is what I would reference to your above statement.

  165. Re:NASA TV Streams by TrevorB · · Score: 1

    Ahh yes, the main NASA TV Real stream was pretty good... but I managed to grab the links for the two JPL NASA TV servers that mysteriously dissapeared from their website this morning. Thank goodness for RealOne's cache

    Worse yet, I'm going to be a prick and not post the links, I have no NASA TV access in Canada except for this, and the JPL server is pretty near perfect. I don't want to lose my server when the coverage starts again at 11pm.

  166. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Joey7F · · Score: 1

    "try doing a little research on some of the conspiracy theories regarding 911, and you'll see some of them are more convincing than the bullshit you've been fed by CNN and its ilk."

    No offense (or actually, scratch that) bud, but suggesting that we go looking at conspiracy theories (like all the antisemetic french theories floating about?) is not exactly a point in your favor. How do YOU know what you ARE hearing is true? How do YOU know your GOVERNMENT isn't TELLING YOU what you WANT to hear?

    If you are not in Iraq, you have no business making the above statement

    --Joey

  167. Re:Congratulations NASA by repetty · · Score: 1

    "All the same there's only one thing worse than a sore loser and that's an ungracious winner. There's really no need to go strutting and preening and engaging in dominance poses about it. It shows quite a bit more class to just win and then be decent about it."

    Hmmm. American football players and fans come to mind.

    --Richard

  168. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Funny

    I put my name and those of my family on a DVD which was attached to....one side of the lander module.

    That was brilliant. Now you will get spam from Martians, such as: "Increase all of your penises by 300%! And make them greener too!"

  169. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1
    I can't help but think the Brits would have confined the celebrating to one chap saying "Right, then. Sorted."
    You haven't seen a football match there before, have you? :^)
  170. Self-worth by Mulletproof · · Score: 1

    It's not just a fundementally competitive attitude. It's knowing you are the best, which doesn't nessisarily walk hand in hand with thinking other countries are less important. It's something every citizen of every country needs-- Absolute pride in ones country and self. yes, that is patriotism in self and country, as bad of a word that seems to be at times. I actually see a problem with any countryman who doesn't see their coutry as the best, be it the USA or Uganda... That sense of self-worth is priceless and there are plenty of countries out there who give themselves a bad inferiority complex, or their people one.

    --
    You need a FREE iPod Nano
    1. Re:Self-worth by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem with "knowing" you are best is that that attitude often results in "knowing" you are best whether you actually *are* or not. That's the attitude that usually brings empires down to their knees. It leads to decadence and decline. It's far better to BEGIN with an attitude of not knowing you are best, looking at the results, and when you *are*, celebrate it, and when you are NOT, have the humility to recognize it. If we don't have that, we'll never be able to improve because we can't tell what's working and what's not.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    2. Re:Self-worth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But isn't there a problem with using an accident such as place of birth as a matter of pride? And isn't this sort of nationalism quite prone to becoming a debilitating set of blinders?

      In contrast, my sense of self worth springs not from being an American but from being the most punk rock motherfucker imaginable.

      Posting anonymously to avoid the inevitable offtopic mod.

    3. Re:Self-worth by Mulletproof · · Score: 1

      Ah, but I never said it should be entirely based on country of origin, just that it helps in everything you do. I did mention exactly that point about your own self worth, such as being he most punk rock motherfucker imaginable as well.

      --
      You need a FREE iPod Nano
  171. The beagle relied on a superior technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Beagle2 relied on a superior technology, a cat. Everyone knows that a cat always lands on it's feet.

    The key problem is, there was a mixup and Schrodinger's cat was loaded onto the Beagle2. Since no-one is there to look at the cat, the cat is neither dead nor alive so it has neither landed on it's feet nor landed any other way. The Beagle2 is now in limbo.

    Fortunately, the Spirit Rover has made it to Mars. Hopefully it will be able to look at the Beagle2, so we can finally know what happened to the cat and thus get the Beagle2 to land properly.

    1. Re:The beagle relied on a superior technology by benna · · Score: 1

      That is by far the funniest post I have ever read.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  172. Thanks by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I knew it could right itself (also shown in the animation) but still it seems like a lucky break to have it land in the position where it takes the least time to unfold!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  173. About the cat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's dead Jim.

  174. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how fucking awesome. not too different from scribbling your name in wet concrete. does it make you feel better when you masturbate with your kids at night? hmm?

  175. Just in -- rover is healthy by FartingTowels · · Score: 1

    I'm watching the live conference. Odyssey reports the Rover is healthy, we are expecting Mars pictures tonight. Cool!

  176. Re:Congratulations NASA by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

    "...much of the technology used on this mission came from other countries (and the ideas for them). "

    And most of the people at NASA (or their recent ancestors) also came from other countries. There were probably even some Canadians involved and that's very convenient because if something should happen to go wrong we can simply blame them ;-)

  177. DVD Quality version by Cantus · · Score: 3, Interesting
    There is a 311 MB DVD-quality MPEG-2 video version of this animation.

    Available only as BitTorrent:

    Download torrent here.

  178. As immortal... by jeti · · Score: 4, Funny


    As immortal as a DVD in a martian sand storm?

  179. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it was on the Mars Polar Lander (1999).

    Moron.

  180. Data order by shuz · · Score: 1

    Rover information coming down in this order. Engineering, thumbprint images, full frame images. At 1:25AM CST 24Mbits downloaded and 8 minutes before the engineering data is complete and thumbnail pictures starting. Anticipated 12 minutes to transfer 24Mbits total.

    --
    There is or can be built a machine that can simulate any physical object. -Church-Turing principle
  181. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Hamster+Of+Death · · Score: 1

    So you have a 1/3 551 645 chance of get the littering ticket when it arrives?

  182. What will NASA find this time around ...? by CERDIP · · Score: 1
    --
    ---- ---- --- -- --- ------ Keep Cool But Do Not Freeze
  183. I was in Pasadena when Pathfinder landed... by vudufixit · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There were a lot of space-related exhibits and vendor booths set up at the Pasadena Civic Center, with a promise of live telemetry from the Pathfinder craft and Sojourner rover. The images were slow in coming and not very clear. Not too many people I felt interested in talking to (although I missed a chance to chat up Robert Zubrin), so I headed out by myself in a GPS-equipped rented Taurus that always kept me on track out there. I drove past the San Gabriels which glowed eerily red from wildfires, and out to the Mojave, where hot dry winds blew hard all around me. I got out of my car and experienced the numbing silence and total darkness of the desert. I drove back a few hours later, and couldn't fathom returning to the Civic Center, so I simply alternated between visiting the desert and eating lots of Thai and Vietnamese food.

  184. And on behalf of everyone else by xX_sticky_Xx · · Score: 0, Troll

    Shut The Fuck UP!

    --

    ---

    I didn't want to leave this space blank.
  185. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by BTWR · · Score: 1

    my bad... 1999. I mixed MPL '99 with Mars Apex 2001 which was cancelled right after MCO and MPL's failure. Wow... wonder why i made that mistake...

  186. R2D2 says: by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    "Thank God my dear cousin has landed okay. My whole family was really worried. I lost my voice in a similar landing back on Beta Tritonia, having to beep or type to communicate now, so I know what Spirit was going through."
    --R2D2--

  187. On the other hand, it landed... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I heard rumors the Beagle was running WindowsSE (Windows Solar Explorer).

    Just goes to show, if you want a system that works you use a PowerPC! :-)

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  188. JPL running Unix! by shuz · · Score: 1

    Watching Nasa TV is obvious that the JPL runs gnome with sawfish. Images are here!

    --
    There is or can be built a machine that can simulate any physical object. -Church-Turing principle
  189. Bounce? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do they come to a complete stop in the air and drop the rover? This doesn't make any sense to me.

  190. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    actually, i am in iraq, so fuck you and your arrogant presumptions.

  191. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2 cats are cool.

  192. Images coming in !! by robpoe · · Score: 1

    Check out NASA TV streaming..they're excited..

    --
    = Grow a brain...
    1. Re:Images coming in !! by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Here's some gifs/jpegs here:

      http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/040104image1 .h tml

      Looks less rocky than some prior mission landing spots, so far as I can tell. Good news for roving on wheels I guess.

    2. Re:Images coming in !! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  193. Whose got the Pictures? by TheSync · · Score: 1

    Does anyone have the pictures? They aren't really well visible on NASA TV, especially the streaming version.

    1. Re:Whose got the Pictures? by TheSync · · Score: 1

      Aha, the first pictures are here

  194. Who knew... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it's not on tv overhere any more.

    All the badasses are trying for spots on Monster Garage.

    We've got the attention spans of small birds, oh look something shinny.....

    1. Re:Who knew... by CrowScape · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure where your "here" is, but in the State of Illinois I still find new episodes of Junkyard Wars (now called just Mega-Wars) being shown on TLC. If all you watch is Discovery (Monster Garage), no wonder you don't see it.

      --
      common sense: noun
      What those who are ignorant of the subject matter think; usually wrong.
  195. CNN has LIVE PHOTOS @ @2:35am ET by olafva · · Score: 1

    "First" photos have arrived from Mars! Much faster that those I saw from Viking in '76

    --
    What's past is NOT ALWAYS prologue for the future!
  196. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I put mine and my 2 cats names on the DVD too. :)

  197. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Lord+Ender · · Score: 3, Insightful

    NASA exists because the American governmant makes it so. They fund and organize it. You are clearly wrong when you say you are "against the american government." You may oppose some decisions of the american government, or some politicians, but you are not 'against the american government' as you say. That is a rather juvenile view. NASA is part of the american government. So is our unmatched foreign aid program. Grow.

    --
    A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
  198. Link to first images by Spacejock · · Score: 1

    http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/040104image1.h tml

    1. Re:Link to first images by Fo0eY · · Score: 1
  199. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    which party drove the deficit into the trillions?

    Trick question; it was the Republican and Democrat parties together.

    And who was responsible for enormous surplus?

    What enormous surplus?. It was an accounting trick at a time when accounting tricks were popular. It was already being revised down before the 2000 election was held. Plus, both parties were talking about how they would spend the surplus (if you accept that tax cuts = spending), so it's obvious that if it even did exist neither party would have simply allowed a big pile of money to sit around for very long.

    And who took the budget back into deficit again?

    The Republicans, naturally. Of course, they get the credit for getting the budget out of the deficit to begin with, so we can cut them some slack here. Plus if you look up to the answer to your previous question, you'd see that with both parties willing to spend a non-existant surplus you'd go into deficit with either one.

  200. Re:FIRST ROVER IMAGE FROM SURFACE OF MARS!!!!! by deglr6328 · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...just relayed from the Rover through a Mars Odyssey uplink can be found here!

    --
    - "Hear that?! The percolations are imminent! Cease your ingress!"
  201. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hohohoho! oooh! hahahah! heeeheeheee! oh the sarcasm! it burns!! read the fucking post again, i said "CNN and its ilk", not "CNN", you stupid, fat, smelly, ASSHAT. go check the fucking dictionary if you don't know what ilk means. after that, do us all and kill yourself so we won't have to tolerate your witty humour anymore.

    kthxbye~!

  202. Best. Slashdot. Thread. EVAR! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    -nt-

  203. First images!!! by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is ridiculously low-quality, but here's a screenshot of RealPlayer's stream of NASA TV from a few minutes ago. I'll post more pictures if I get anything good, but probably the real, high-quality images will be online within the hour. The first image here is of one of the mission control computer screens showing the images downloaded, including one image of the rover itself.

    1. Re:First images!!! by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 1

      Click here for an official images! I've mirrored it in my directory too...the official one is called firstimage1.jpg, but it's obvious because it's much higher-quality than the screenshot I grabbed earlier...

    2. Re:First images!!! by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Damned turists beat the probe to Mars.

  204. Latest Images HERE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Latest images here

  205. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actualy, I AM IRAQ!

  206. First REAL pictures sent back! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    In black/white:

    http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/040104image1 .h tml

    http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/images/first im age1.jpg

  207. MARS IMAGES by salmonz · · Score: 1

    NASA now has the latest pictures of Mars. Tune into NASA TV to see them. They are not published on the web as of yet.

  208. Please! Just Shut Up! by injustice_sucks · · Score: 1

    Is it me, or are these announcers just really annoying? I mean, why do we need anouncers asking inane questions and talking over all the really interesting information? This isn't a football game!

  209. Desktop... by Fazer · · Score: 0

    Just out of curiousity, what's the OS on the desktop? http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/040104image1.h tml looks like it's shown from a desktop...is it Linux?

    1. Re:Desktop... by Redundant+offtopic+t · · Score: 1

      considering the mission control room is filled with sun stations, i'd say solaris with cde or openwindows.

  210. ANOTHER GREAT IMAGE by benna · · Score: 2, Interesting
    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  211. 360 Degree View of Lander by benna · · Score: 1
    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  212. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV - Crummy pics! by wardco · · Score: 1

    And then, the pictures come in, and they can't even get a direct image onto screen. You;d think with months to plan they'd come up with a direct hook-up for the first pics.

    And I wish that gal would shut up so we can hear what is going on.

    Heck, the comentators were yakking away when cheers went up from the first engineering data -- and they had no idea what had just happened in the control room.

    Humph.

  213. In that case... by OwnedByTheMan · · Score: 1

    I for one welcome blah blah blah.

  214. Re:It'd be neat if Spirit could spot the second on by PhuCknuT · · Score: 1

    That would be awesome, but unfortunatly the other rover is landing on the opposite side of the planet, so it's not gonna happen. :(

  215. Image mirrors by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 1

    I've been mirroring all of the official images from SpaceFlightNow.com and www.jpl.nasa.gov plus some screenshots from the NASA TV stream and the Planetary Society stream:

    http://spaghetticode.org/spirit/

    1. Re:Image mirrors by falsification · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm. That's weird. I can't see any aliens. Where are the fricking aliens?

  216. Well, some redemption for NasaTV now by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They were the first place I could see images from Mars - and even now, after the final conference of the evening ended they are just showing a computer screen where someone is kindly cycling between the various panoramas they have so far. At least it's not a static screen any longer!

    Looks like they ended up against a nice juicy rock.

    And, for the geeky out there I saw a very brief "Gimp" splashscreen.

    I am very, very glad to have NasaTV tonight no matter how rough around the edges.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  217. Re:Congratulations NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even more amazing I would assume that Slashdot is hosted in the US too. So the vehicle used to slam the US at every turn wouldn't exist. Ironic isn't it? Kinda like the Internet...

  218. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by mpthompson · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I tend to agree with you regarding NASA TV coverage of the Mars landing. I recall watching on some cable channel (CSPAN?) the Viking landings and Voyager encounters when I was a kid in the late '70s. If I'm not mistaking these were broadcast as well directly from JPL and hosted by Carl Sagan who was explaining the meaning of the images and made it sound really exciting? Does anyone else have memories of these broadcasts? They seem much better than we saw from NASA TV today, but perhaps my memory is foggy.

    I'm disappointed that I had to tune in over the Internet. I wish NASA TV could have cut a deal with CSPAN to broadcast the landing live so I could have watched the coverage a television. CSPAN covered the Columbia disaster press conferences in pretty good detail. You think they could have covered the good news from NASA as well.

  219. yet another two cents, not so pessimistic by rebelcool · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Beagle2 was a very underfunded craft. Built on the cheap, but the Brits managed to do a great job of it with the money they had.

    Also, Britain has historically placed a very low priority (almost non-existant) on space missions of any sorts. I'm sure securing the funding they did get for Beagle was a fight and a half.

    Though Beagle's landing operation may have failed, landing is the most difficult and expensive part of the craft construction. But the rest of the construction is important as well and surely they learned alot from it. From what I saw the Beagle2 was a clever, innovative and useful craft.

    I don't know about the rest of the world, but in the USA there is a saying... it's not whether you win or lose, its how you play the game. We all - USA included - have alot more to learn about building reliable spacecraft that doesn't break the bank. There is alot of room for individual innovations in engineering there.

    For a first try, Beagle2 was a great craft. I hope a setback as it was doesn't kill future opportunities for space operations there.

    --

    -

  220. Looks like Motif to me... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    It's been a while, but I'd swear that's a Sun desktop running Motif as a WM. Not sure about that though.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  221. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US government is a huge organization, large beyond understanding. Being "against" it is like being opposed to the weather. Certainly there are currently some things that need to change -- the Attorney General for instance -- but you'll lose your sanity if you're against the whole thing.

  222. About Your Tagline by IM6100 · · Score: 1

    'Open Source is good' - Steve Jobs
    'Pass the ketchup' - IBM

    --
    A Good Intro to NetBS
  223. My name's on Mars, too. by Dan+Crash · · Score: 1
    It's no ordinary DVD:

    The DVD is made of silica glass rather than plastic so that it can withstand the high temperatures necessary to sterilize it of Earth microbes before it is sent to the Martian surface. Also, the silica glass has a much longer lifetime than typical commercial DVDs--in fact, the silica glass DVD could last more than 500 years. The DVD will remain on the lander as a time capsule for a future generation.

    The DVD assembly's base, the simulated LEGO bricks, and the central oval are made of machined and anodized aluminum. The aluminum parts are separated from the silica glass DVD with Delrin pads. Delrin is an inflexible polymer that is very tough and heat resistant.

    The entire assembly, which weighs 69 grams, has been subjected to a battery of tests designed to simulate the extreme environmental conditions of the journey to Mars: temperature cycling from 125 to 60 degrees Celsius, exposure to vacuum, high-speed random vibration, and shocks of 4,000 times the acceleration of Earth's gravity.
    --
    He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
  224. Another dream come true by MrJones · · Score: 1

    Incredible, after 7 years of waiting after Pathfinder on 1997, we got a new lander in Mars!
    Congrats to MER team and to all Mars geek out there!

    --
    Get my e-mail after a captcha test in: http://tinymailt
  225. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  226. RTG's by rebelcool · · Score: 1

    Pu238 is used in radiothermal generators. Pu238 (an isotope which is completely useless for weapons...) generates large amounts of heat through decay which is converted to electricity. This heat through decay process is one reason why fission weapons can't be made with it, its too unstable.

    Also, it readily binds into an oxide which can be turned into a ceramic material which is whats found in the titanium shelled RTG canisters. This is a very safe way to handle it. One reason is that in the event of explosion or re-entry disaster, titanium is very strong and unlikely to break open. Second, even if it does, the ceramic-oxide will tend to form dense clumps as opposed to dust particles, which is how plutonium is harmful.

    Did you know you could eat a piece of plutonium and would suffer no ill effects? It would pass through you before doing any real damage. Breathing microscopic dust particles is another matter, however.

    Virtually all long distance probes use it, as solar power generating ability drops off quickly from distance from the sun. ie, Solar cells on mars will only generate half the wattage they do on earth. Go out far beyond mars and you'll get virtually nothing.

    --

    -

  227. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dont you know you should never,ever do that? You'll now be bombarded for the rest of your life to (1) reduce 100 martian-pounds (2) look 20 martian years younger (3) get the latest martian porn free

  228. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe you were supposed to have said "you insensitive clod"

  229. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by benna · · Score: 1

    When I say the US government I mean the current elected federal government. I mean the Bush administration but I hesitate to use that phrase because it isn't just the Bush admin, its most of the administrations the US has ever had.

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  230. MARS by benna · · Score: 1
    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    1. Re:MARS by benna · · Score: 2, Informative

      A bigger version of the parent image.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    2. Re:MARS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you look very very carefully, you can make out Osama Bin Laden waving in the background.

  231. Re:NASA TV Streams by xaaronx · · Score: 1

    You my friend are evil. Pure evil.

    Though I'd do the same in your position.

    --
    It's amazing how much "mature wisdom" resembles being too tired. - Robert Anson Heinlein
  232. Mine was on the failed polar lander. :( by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://spacekids.hq.nasa.gov/mars98/

  233. Video by BoldAC · · Score: 3, Informative

    Since I can't find it on TV anywhere, here's the video streams I've been watching.

    NASA TV 1

    NASA TV 2 - (looks better quality to me)

    AC

    1. Re:Video by Snover · · Score: 1

      OK, maybe someone can figure this out for me. Why whenever I go to a RealMedia stream does RealOne Player say that it can't find a decoder for type "cook."?

      --

      [insert witty comment here]
  234. Rockets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From what i understood, the rockets were merely there to counter any horizontal movement - not slow descent.

    In the post-landing briefing, it was implied that using the rockets was not a requirement. The rockets were used, but that decision was one that the onboard computers determined was necessary in order to land within spec.

    1. Re:Rockets by Morky · · Score: 1

      Nope, the rockets slowed the descent to zero vertical velocity and let the rover drop from about four stories.

  235. press conference on NASA TV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    teh science chix0r is hot!

  236. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anenga · · Score: 1

    Noam Chomsky? Good God. He's the most anti-American guy out there. Learn. Learn some more.

  237. First images are in! by Cantus · · Score: 1
    Yahoo! News is carrying the first images taken by the Mars Exploration Rover:

    - Image 1
    - Image 2
    - Image 3
    - Image 4

    And a slideshow with even more images here.

  238. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by benna · · Score: 1

    well clearly he is anti american policy. But he backs up what he says. Surely you aren't saying anyone that is critical of america is evil?

    --
    "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
  239. like a dvd will last longer than you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope it's a pressed metal dvd.

  240. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anenga · · Score: 1

    French antisemetic "theories"?! Oh, boy, where do I start? How about recently, when a French "comedian" Dieudonne M'Bala M'Bala was reprimanded by the producers of "You Can't Please Everyone" on state-owned France 3 television, for appearing on their show dressed as an Orthodox Jew and shouting "Heil Israel" while making the Nazi salute--although the producers were too cowardly to label this as the outright Jew-hatred that it was. Now this antisemitic bastard is demanding an apology and threatening to sue France 3: Fury at French comic 'Heil Israel' jibe.

  241. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by RichardX · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    What a shame that a thread on a great scientific achievement of interest and benefit to the whole world has to turn into Yet Another Nationalistic Thread. That's Slashdot for you these days though.

    Anyways..

    will be in a neverending series of 9/11 attacks just like other countries in the middle east if we don't stop them

    That's quite a dramatic claim you're making there, especially considering there hasn't been a "9/11" since.. well.. 9/11, as it happens. Now would that be due to extreme dilligence on the part of the security forces (remember to watch out for those almanac toting terrorists), or for some other reason..?

    Unfortunately our world of seperate church & state can't comprehend the world they live in. Church is everything there.

    Okay, this is not a troll.. honestly.. I promise. I'll try to be as gentle as possible here. America is not the greatest country to hold up as being an example of church and state seperation. Sure. On the books it's all seperate, but you just ask Roy "Roy's Rock" Moore, or any of the similarly fanatical, or indeed George "Atheists are not American citizens" Bush. Or indeed anyone who has to take the pledge of allegiance to the United States flag.

    It's a PROVEN FACT Iraq was pursuing these weapons.

    I can go one better than that. It's a SCIENTIFICALLY PROVEN FACT that writing things in caps doesn't necessarily make them true.
    Perhaps you could cite some sources for these facts? Because all I seem to see is a big absence of any WMD's, very little in the way of potential development platforms for WMD programs, and what was found was insubstantial to the point of being inconsequential. As for scientists - which scientists have you been listening to? because everything I've heard from them has been stating that there were no WMD programs.

    --
    Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
  242. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US only get things done through their massive budgets, and it will do anything to keep it that way. This has nothing to do with anti-Americanism, but plain observation.

  243. "News Flash" Nasa lands in baren Martian wasteland by jstefanov · · Score: 1

    Whoopty F*ckin' Doo! Sorry to rain on NASA's parade, but I think this whole thing just goes to show how far the US space program has fallen. Being ahead of everyone else in a particular endeavor doesn't mean you're where your potential dictates you should be. I watched the whole press conference on CNN and I was totally unimpressed. NASA is still unable to recapture the wonderment and fascination that it did during the Apollo missions and the early years of the shuttle program. Inspiring the tax payer is what makes NASA tick but there's just not much going on there that the average citizen could give a damn about. Maybe if they'd come out of their shell and take a REAL risk on something inspiring then they wouldn't be in the budget straitjacket they are now. Instead they send RC cars to Mars and exploding gliders into low orbit. I'm more excited about the X prize contest than I am about another damn Mars rover. Sheesh, you'd think they could try and land something near some interesting topography. "Hey, look! There's a rock! And look...a hole with dust in it!"...Yeah, bet that inspires the school kids and makes people want to reach into their pocket for a wad of cash. Now, if I get any replies from this they will undoubtedly be of the "You don't understand" or "Your a troll" type but the truth remains the same. NASA is dead; they just don't know it yet. If you want to support the space program, give money to Burt Rutan or John Caramack.

  244. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by xaaronx · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but that's only so exciting because it seems to be the only place the English allow themselves to show emotion.

    --
    It's amazing how much "mature wisdom" resembles being too tired. - Robert Anson Heinlein
  245. lets not be so hasty by gad_zuki! · · Score: 1

    A few additions:

    NASA can only really do so much, why isn't the President or anyone else in government there too cheer them on? This is almost a BILLION dollars worth of science here. It seems to be that "Boring science" is a self-fulfilling prophesy.

    Don't laugh too hard now. The 1997 sojourner was a media success beyond measure and news stations could have had a Mars countdown with experts, commentary, and animations, etc.

    Instead, there's light coverage, next to nothing on live coverage, and thus the importance of these Mars missions are lost on Joe Sixpack.

    If these missions are "egghead science" and of no interest to the everyman, its because government and media have failed us.

    This is not flamebait, but if Al Gore was president (or another person clued in on technology) something tells me this event would be presented to the world in whole different light.

    It may very well be that the last 20th century and the early 21st century will be known to later generations as a time of space pioneering both in the public and private spheres. Its a shame its not very accessible to the layman living in these times.

    1. Re:lets not be so hasty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the president has promised to send men back to the moon. Unfortunately for us, the contractor has outsourced it to China and India.

      Poor dumbfuck US astronauts. If they really want to go to the moon, they'll really need to provide a value add. May job retraining is in order.

    2. Re:lets not be so hasty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      why isn't the President or anyone else in government there too cheer them on

      "Oil! You say there is oil over there? Quick call the Presidient, no, wait. Call Dick Chenney! Oil!"

    3. Re:lets not be so hasty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, if Al Gore were president, we would've sent all of our nuclear secrets up there for the Martians to have.

  246. Latest Images from Spirit (as of 5AM EST) by aardwolf204 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Image 1 Screencap

    Image 2 NASA Folks looking at image

    Image 3 360' shot

    Image 4 NASA Folks looking at 360'

    Image 5 panorama

    Image 5 Large larger panorama

    Image 6 first image before contact

    and if you havent noticed already just change # on the URL for the latest:

    http://spaceflightnow.com/mars/mera/040104image # .html

    Oh yeah, and I second the fact that NASA-TV should have made this a big event but:

    a. What cable provider has NASA TV anymore, I think the general american public lost their space spirit (no pun intended) after the first few apollo missions.

    b. Ok, so hypathetically, if it were a big event like, say, the first moon mission, and it failed horribly, that really wouldnt help the american general public moral, now would it.

    I'm sure the CNN bit tomorrow will suffice for most people and as for those interested, check out this site for tons of images and some beautiful animations and video clips.

    --
    Im dreaming ofa big bndwdth, That can resist the /.crowd.May ur days b merry & bright & may al
    1. Re:Latest Images from Spirit (as of 5AM EST) by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      What cable provider has NASA TV anymore, I think the general american public lost their space spirit (no pun intended) after the first few apollo missions.

      It's channel 213 on Dish Network, I'm watching it now.

      Of course, a satellite company probably has more affinity for NASA than your average cable plant.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  247. Re:Congratulations NASA by DeltaSigma · · Score: 1

    Oy. They're not Anti-US. They're Anti-Mainstream-US-Society.

    Foreigners love me, but then I don't exactly act like the rest of you.

  248. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by dietz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    But NASA TV... you blew it. Again.

    I got to watch it with about 600 other people at my local science museum (via satellite feed). They had 300 chairs in an auditorium, playing it on a huge screen. When that filled up, they quickly scampered to get it playing on the ceiling of the planetarium. When that filled up, they played the audio in the hallway for everyone left.

    I admit it was pretty damn dry, but watching it with a few hundred other people helped fill in the dull moments. A hush over the entire room as we wait for word from the relay. Cheers when the word was recieved. Fun stuff.

    And I only saw one guy in a cloak.

  249. Re:Congratulations NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Considering the huge Anti-US sentiment on this site

    It's just a couple whiney snot-nosed lefties. Fuck 'em.

  250. First Hi-Res Images on Web by ahecht · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hi-res images (that aren't just screencaps from NASATV stitched together) are starting to appear on the NASA press site. The first is here.

    1. Re:First Hi-Res Images on Web by ahecht · · Score: 1

      More medium-res images are available at the JPL press site.

  251. Re:"News Flash" Nasa lands in baren Martian wastel by cy_a253 · · Score: 1

    Our government-funded space exploration program is sort of caught in a loop-hole: The missions are boring to the public, so NASA gets less funding, and since NASA has less funding it can only afford to make "cheap" robotic missions. Exploration with humans being is just prohibitively expensive.

    Space exploration will really pick-up only when private enterprises find a way to make money from space exploration, and space tourism is certainly NOT the only possibility. There are trillions and trillions of dollars worth of various rare materials and metals on the Moon, Mars, and the asteroids.

    Oh, and Spirit landed in the middle of such a "barren" dried lakebed on purpose: the sedimentary nature of the rocks make them ideal for checking what climate conditions they experienced in the past, and thus to see if life could have survived there. And a sandstorm recently scrubbed the surfaces of the rocks and soil clean, an even better situation.

    And don't forget that a second, identical rover will land in a completely different part of the planet in a few weeks.

  252. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by node+3 · · Score: 1

    If it's not boring (in the way you mean--I was enthralled), then it's not science, it's just another empty (and disappointing) pop event. Perhaps you'd have had Bono and Britney Spears host the event, commenting on the impact Mars has had in their lives and the clothes the mission control people were wearing. Arnold could have arrived in person to give a surprise congratulatory speech to the crew on behalf of the state of California.

    I'll take NASA TV as-is, thanks.

  253. Re:Congratulations NASA by Space+cowboy · · Score: 1

    Given that the majority of /. readership is actually American, perhaps it was your fellow compatriot moderators, not wishing to be associated with your view ....

    I say "way to go, Spirit", as a UK citizen, by the way; and I'm hoping that Beagle is still sending the 'where the **** are you' message to the orbiter, but realistically, there's not much hope now :-(

    Simon.

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
  254. Despite that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Despite the rover being powered by PPC, and hardened for space use and being gold plated by government contractors, it still is cheaper than a comparable Macintosh.

    Still, Apple fanatics defended Apple's pricing, claiming that PC users *just don't get it*.

  255. another one.. by hitchhacker · · Score: 1


    wait.. what's this image?

    that's a polar projector!

    Wow! It's a polar projector!


    -metric

  256. Beagle vs. Spirit by rchoetzlein · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In the Beagle-Spirit comparison, I think it is important to point out several things:
    - Spirit (~$400 mil) has over six times the budget of the Beagle (~$60 mil)
    - Spirit is built on the success of Pathfinder.
    - This is the European Space Agency's *first* time out to mars, and they attempted a *landing*
    - Our first two times out failed (Mariner 3 & 4), and our third was just a flyby for 71 photos. Of course, that was 1969.
    - Pathfinder is more recent, cost ~$200 mil... but of course Beagle is not a rover.
    - ESA never had a strong national space program similar to the US or USSR for budget reasons, as well as many other factors (natural resources, age and background of the nations it comprises, WW I & II)

    Bottom line, a simple comparison is impossible. Even so, here is an attempt: US space program performs better due to being the greatest world power (at the cost of being one of the worlds most hated nations). Money and power are very good for making Martian rovers (and microchips, and wireless networks, and stealth bombers), but they are also good at building inflated self images.

    My point? If you succeed, don't gloat, help others.. If you fail, try again.

  257. Y'know why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I doubt you'll ever see a NASA team member proclaiming their superiority over the ESA."

    Do you know why this is? My son is 9, and I finally had a heart to heart with him about winning and losing. It goes like this:

    When a team wins the super bowl, they don't have to tell everybody "Hey, we won the super bowl". Do you know why? Because everybody knows they won. You're a winner. And real winners don't boast. They don't tell everybody they're the best; they simply know they won, they have the attitude of a winner, and they get back at practice the next day to make sure they win again.

    Perfect example is Lance Armstrong. He doesn't have to go around saying "I'm the greatest bicyclist ever". You just know he is. And you know it because he goes out and wins year after year.

    And sometimes even winners will lose. But they get back on the field, and win again. Perfect example is Tiger Wood.

    These guys are the best. They win, but they don't tell people they're the best. They're just the best. No use arguing, they're the best.

    Be the best. Win.

    Now lets stand and sing "My Country Tis of Thee", sung to the tune of "God Save the Queen"...

    "My Country's Tis of thee, sweet land of liberty, of thee I sing..."

  258. Ireland vs. England by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember visiting Cambridge about 15 years ago (tourist), and while in a bank, a middle aged woman approached me and asked quietly "You're an American, aren't you?" I smiled and answered affirmatively. It used to be sneakers (tennis shoes) that gave us away, I don't think that's true anymore, since the Germans tend to copy whatever we do, just 10 years later. Anyway, she said "If you want to see a country that's actually beautiful with pleasant people, please visit Ireland".

    Still makes me chuckle to this day.

    For the record, in my visits to Ireland, England, Wales, and Scotland, I've met some of the nicest people in the world.

    They're probably just as nice in France and Germany, but hell if I can understand them.

  259. looks like 2004 by ShadowRage · · Score: 1

    is the year of NASA so far..
    on friday, stardust succeeded in the main objective of its mission..
    Saturday, mars lander lands successfully.

    2 days in a row of good luck, that's good signs for them, in more ways than one.. many politicians are probably impressed right now, and that usually means more cash for the space agency, and with the space race being re-kindled, we're going to se a lot of cash flowing into NASA soon enough.

    oh, and I bet the spririt will find the beagle...

    it'll more than likely be wandering around in martian traffic, or get run over by the spirit.

  260. if only... by demonhold · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...the USA stopped spending big money on military and founding dictatorships in South America and elsewhere and started to devote herself to rightful goals, for example:

    * space exploration
    * providing health care to all her citizens
    * getting something done about that 20% of American children who live under the poverty line
    * paying the UNO debt...

    --
    ... y Dios vio que Linux era bueno... Genesis 99.666
    1. Re:if only... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      and founding dictatorships in South America

      Name one country in South America that currently has a dictatorship.

  261. Re:"News Flash" Nasa lands in baren Martian wastel by Qrlx · · Score: 1

    I don't think it's because NASA missions are boring that they're not funded. It's because everything that isn't military has a hard time getting funding in America.

  262. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by JamesP · · Score: 0

    I put my name and those of my family on a DVD

    How smart... I hope this DVD does not use CSS, or at least is correctly set to play on Mars...

    --
    how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
  263. first post! by Cave+Dweller · · Score: 0, Redundant

    pist frost

  264. Divert defence budget to space exploration by Sinbit · · Score: 2

    Well done NASA: space probes usually have only a 50% chance of success. Now just imagine what could be accomplished if the US government diverted even one-tenth of its $400bn annual defence budget onto space exploration.

  265. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Faluzeer · · Score: 1

    "you should tell that to the women of afghanistan who can now go to school and make a future for themselves"

    Yes it is indeed excellent that women in Afghanistan once again have access to education for themselves and their (female) children, I say "once again" because the Soviet Union also encouraged female education and careers during its occupation during the 1980's. This sadly came to an end (the education not the occupation) when the fundamentals seized control of the country after the Soviet Union was forced to withdraw its troops.

  266. Pink Floyd, 2004 style? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Operator: "Oh, He hung up! That's your probe, right? I wonder why he hung up? Is there supposed to be someone else there besides your probe there to answer?"

    [Phone rings again... sound of receiver being picked up]

    Spirit: "Hello?"

    Operator: "This is the UK calling, are we reaching..."

    [Phone is hung up]

    Operator: "See he keeps hanging up, and it's a man answering."

  267. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    anyone know what DVD-region mars is?

  268. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember in 1999 and 2000 - i believe it was in those two years USA lost 2 marsbound research sattelites. It is very hard to land on mars - even for the mighty USA. This landing (wich I am very happy about) does definitly not prove that the US is the best thing for humanity or whatever you are trying to claim.

    Then regarding the afghanistan and/or iraq, wich is a separate issue and neither of them (mars or war) justifies the other, it is always wrong to kill - even if you pretend you are fighting for freedom and democracy or whatever. The war on iraq was totally unnecessary, unprofessional, horrible and wrong - it brougt chaos to a fragile and damaged people. And I wonder why it has not been more investigated why the people of USA and the rest of the planet was lied to, right in our faces, by the biggest pro-war politicans in the US. (for example, what was those proves that the iraq had lots of massdestruction weapons? where are those weapons now?). Also let me remind you what country is the only one who has used the atomic bomb; the superior USA...

    This way of thinking that you presents, wich makes lots of americans believe they are the super-country (as do citizens in other countries believe about their own country) is pretty much the same as whats make lots of humans believe we are alone in the universe, that there is a omnipotent "god" that created us or that (in the middleages) the earth was the center of the universe - people tend to think THEY are special - be it the humanity, themselves or their country - but people do it all the time, and I believe it is dangerous...

    We must keep ourselves openminded! Please.

  269. Black & White Only?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Couldn't Nasa afford to equip this spaceprobe with color film??

    This is just the sort of cost cutting which led to the Beagle fiasco.

  270. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So is our unmatched foreign aid program."

    I know, no industrialized nation sends so little money to those who actually needs it. Almost all of your foreign aid money goes to the middle east. Of that money, almost everything goes to Israel. Nice one.

  271. Can someone explain why no color photos? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forgive my ignorance but I don't understand why they don't use color images? Is it a bandwidth issue?

    Are they using a filter technique with the black and white camera and sending back R/G/B and reassembling it?

  272. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Yes it is indeed excellent that women in Afghanistan once again have access to education for themselves and their (female) children, I say "once again" because the Soviet Union also encouraged female education and careers during its occupation during the 1980's. This sadly came to an end (the education not the occupation) when the fundamentals seized control of the country after the Soviet Union was forced to withdraw its troops."

    Because of joint effort involving, for example, Osama bin Laden and US Government?

  273. Astronomy Picture of Day by rodney+dill · · Score: 1

    APOD as usual as something, though at this time just an artist rendering. APOD should have some good actual pictures posted in coming days.

    (Extral NFL Play-off SIG ... God Bless Nate Poole)

    --

    Use your head, can't you, use your head,
    You're on earth, there's no cure for that
    - S. Beckett
  274. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Agreed! Why anyone listens to these guys is a mystery to me. Only weird intellectual-heads!

    We need real information. Thank goodness that SOME media outlets are now telling us the REAL story of how it is. So many of the media outlets are in bed with the wealthy pansie-patsy types that it's incredible.

    For instnace, the other day I heard a news story where they were talking about mad cow disease like it was a problem of the government! Don't people understand that the ranchers KNOW that its an issue, and thanks to our open, capitalistic, and dare I say republican ways will properly address it because its the best for their business? Just because Preseindet Bush wears a cowboy hat and is from texas doesn't mean that he should solve the cattle ranchers problems.

    Theres no need to cause panic by the liberal media - CAPITALIZM and REPUBLICANIZM and the two KEYS that we have to AUTOMATICALLY address many of our problems, without the need for big government and bigger taxes.

  275. Parent is off-topic by squarooticus · · Score: 1

    So, please, mod this down too: I've got karma to burn.

    I'd rather the US government devote itself to really rightful goals, like:

    * Letting me keep more of the money I earn
    * Reducing spending on unnecessary stuff like space exploration, health care, poverty
    * Increasing funding to the military and courts to the proper levels
    * Getting out of the UN, since it obviously is not in our best interests to be a member

    --
    [ home ]
    1. Re:Parent is off-topic by BeatlesForum.com · · Score: 1

      Yup. I agree 100%. Wow. A true conservative on Slashdot. An anomoly. Welcome to my friends list!

      --
      When millions disappear from earth, it's not aliens, it's the rapture.
    2. Re:Parent is off-topic by squarooticus · · Score: 1

      LOL... So, I'm actually libertarian, the primary differences between conservatives and libertarians being (a) libs have more faith in the free market and (b) libs want government to have no power over personal behavior that doesn't harm anyone else (e.g., marriage in general, not just gay marriage). FWIW, not all libertarians are pacifists, although the Libertarian Party would have you believe that.

      But, I agree: you and I are still anomalies on slashdot. The number of leftist statist commie pinko whack-jobs on this site is incredible. Did everyone involved in the 60's peace movements go into IT?

      --
      [ home ]
    3. Re:Parent is off-topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, I'm actually libertarian, the primary differences between conservatives and libertarians being ...

      And you had to be born with a larger silver spoon in your mouth, of course. And be even more backwards and simple minded. Never having had a real job is factor, as well. And no friends, a paranoid outlook due to beating in high-school and an aversion to showering.

      Did everyone involved in the 60's peace movements go into IT?

      No, you just generally have to have a degree, therefore the average IQ is going to be higher than someone who uses phrases such as "leftist statist commie pinko whack-jobs".

  276. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Er, maybe just a little off topic, wouldn't you say?

  277. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong, one can be against it all if you believe in an completely different system - for example the state-less communism.

  278. Mars Attacks by Naomi_the_butterfly · · Score: 1
    Well, we're there now. I was watching the raw feed from mission control when the first pics came in, so I've seen all those pics that haven't been, and lemme tell you, this is incredible stuff. The rover is looking for signs of transsexual life on mars, and will egress from the lander in days, not hours. The regular estimate is 9 days. Beautiful. It should live for overe 90 days, although it was designed to last 3 months. Most NASA probes that start their missions (ones with no definite end, like Voyager) last far beyond the expected lifespan. The pathfinder LANDER died on day 37, while the rover could still be alive, as the lander was its relay. It was all meant to last 30 days.

    The rover is the size of a desk, unlike the tiny sojourner rover. Remember all those 'boulders' you saw in 1997? they were often the size of a golfball or a bit larger, and looked huge due to the camera being very near the ground. Not this time. This rover includes a 'mast', which carries a pair of stereoscopic cameras at a hight of just over four feet (!), which is GREAT for geologists. Remember, these rovers are geologists, not biologists. Sometime in the future, followup missions will carry out biological experiments where the scientists get indications there's a good chance of finding life.

    A future (don't hold your breath) rover will be nuclear powered, and thus will be able to last ALOT longer (maybe even years) performing experiments at dozens or even hundreds of sites.

    This rover can move at a rate of about 100 meters a day. The last rover, Sojourner, traveled about 100 meters in its entire lifetime.

    Live NASA feed:
    http://realserver1.jpl.nasa.gov:8080/ramgen/encode r/live.rm - higher quality transmission
    http://www.nasa.gov/ram/35037main_portal.ram - busier mirror, so usually lower bandwidth
    I've seen speeds up to 350kbit, though since the landing the best I can get is 220kbit off the first link and 85-128kbit off the second link.

    1. Re:Mars Attacks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The rover is looking for signs of transsexual life on mars"

      Wha?

    2. Re:Mars Attacks by Naomi_the_butterfly · · Score: 1

      joke for my lesbian and TS friends, forgot to edit it out for /.
      ah well, I'm outed. I'm gay. I'm here, I'm queer, get used to it.

  279. Re:Congratulations NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, yes. The fifth column.

  280. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by isorox · · Score: 1

    I put mine on the Mars Polar Lander, after what happened there I figured I'd better not risk putting my name on anything else

  281. martian ransom by louzerr · · Score: 1

    I swear I heard that we got a ransom message from Mars -

    "We got Spirit! Yes we do! ..."

    or wait, was that from the Titans' game yesterday?

    --
    "The large print giveth, and the small print taketh away" -- "Step Right Up", Tom Waits
  282. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by e.colli · · Score: 0

    It's just the power of money: Who have more money, do more things! Like Microsoft.
    But airplane was not invented by Wrigth Brothers, was Santos Dumont who do it! ;)

  283. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If saddam would return and re-conquer iraq people would surley wander the streets and wave flags..

    Furtheron the massive pro-US demonstrations is not that massive according to ex. indymedia - they are blown up by US media and aggressively reported about - "look they are happy, we are the good guys after all". What is overlooked is the fact that there has been MASSIVE pro-saddam demonstrations - some has even resultning in the US opening fire on them.

    I think in the next election in iraq, saddam should be entiteled to be a candidate. If the people chooses saddam in a democratic way - the US should let him return and go away, right? Or is USA now supposed to be some dictator - dictating what kind of policits the iraqis may or may not do. Please remember that, just like iraq, the US has massive armies and threatens to invade several countries.. The invasion of iraq was utterly wrong - and it entitles any country that feels threatened by the americans (for example iraq or north korea) to invade USA.

  284. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...with the aid of the americans. So in a way, the US has given the womans in afghanistan BACK their freedom they take 10 years ago.

  285. Re:Congratulations NASA by Jugalator · · Score: 1

    I'm happy for NASA's and USA's part and their achievement in yet again landing a probe on Mars, but also annoyed by people who go "take that, Beagle 2", "USA 1 - ESA 0". Like it was a competition... These are no better than anti-US zealots to me.

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  286. Bringing an atmosphere to Mars... by labradort · · Score: 1


    These missions always succeed in bringing more atmosphere to Mars, one air bag at a time.

    Whether they burst or deflate normally, the missions have the side effect of bringing a little more gas to the little planet.

  287. That 'attitude' is essential in competition... by FatSean · · Score: 0

    Sport, politics, even space missions. Go into anything thinking you aren't the best and performance suffers.

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:That 'attitude' is essential in competition... by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      Go into everything with the attitude that you are the best and you'll never notice the difference between when you are right about that and when you are not - and your arrogance will piss off everyone else.

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  288. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice FUD. Try looking up the actual data, and then the definition of "most", and you'll see what a dupe you are.

  289. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most Iraqis are enthusiastic about their future. It sure is neat that your infinite leftist wisdom knows so much more about conditions and prospects over there than they do.

    And the lefty track record is so great too! Their pets in previous decades: U.S.S.R., North Korea, Cuba, China, all workers paradises struggling against the corruption of the West! Right?

  290. Re:FIRST ROVER IMAGE FROM SURFACE OF MARS!!!!! by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
    There's a whole bunch of them from the horse's mouth here.

    Congratulations NASA!

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  291. Please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...shut the fuck up.

    I've read this thread. Did you know that other fuckwits like you have managed to get into flamewars about Israel and Palestine under the heading of this article?

    It's ignorant broad generalizations like yours that lead to off-topic displays of gratuitous stupidity.

    Enough.

  292. martians? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    So how exactly do we know this isn't just martians sending back fake images?

    Some of these pictures sure look like special effects to me.

  293. ARE we all in this together?... by ControlFreal · · Score: 1

    First off, thanks for that comment! As a engineering scientist (ok, I'll admit it, a European one ;), I'm thrilled to see that we've gotten a step further in exploring Mars. The flag on the probe doesn't matter the slightest. So yes, from a common interest viewpoint, we're all in this together.

    However, are we also in this together in terms of the exchange of data? That is to say: can European research institutions (and, for that matter, research institutions around the globe) get access to the data obtained by the MER? One does need data if one wishes to perform research after all... Given that that are lander->orbiter->Earth relay agreements between Europe and the US, are there also such agreements for the data that is obtained? And, the other way around, in the unlikely case that Beagle 2 starts to whine at Januari 7th, is there any agreement such that US folks can use that data?

    Can anyone reassure me here? ;)

    On a side note: I do realize that a good deal of money has been spent on these missions, and that from an economical viewpoint, it seems only fair that the people in the country of which the tax-payers paid the mission could use the data. Personally, I strongly disagree with that, for two reasons.

    First, science is a collaborative effort. IAAS (I Am A Scientist), and I know that sharing some data and ideas with other groups (even if those groups are competitors in your field), usually benifits both. In that way, I would be bad to allow only US researchers to get access to the data.

    Second, exactly how much money was spent here? Let's take the two rovers together, and take a pessimistic view and assume that the total cost will be around 1 G$. Now compare this to, say, the production costs of the LOTR trilogy, which is about 400 M$. Then these missions cost only twice that, or about $4,- per citizen. (Or, since we are all in this together, about 15 cents per world citizen). Sure, the economical benefits of making a movie occur on a short timescale (a few months, or years at most), but the benefits of of Mars research will benefit us on the long run (hundreds of years)!

    --
    Support a Europe-related section on Slashdot!
  294. Spirit lands! by Lost+Penguin · · Score: 1

    Spirit to NASA "Hello World" ...
    SCO to NASA "Pay us for our trade secret C code"

    --
    I am the unwilling control for my Origin.
  295. NASA and DSL by theolein · · Score: 1

    Well, that clearly makes NASA the mosts expensive ISP not only on planet earth, but also in the Solar system, and their bandwidth cap is something horrible. I'm sure the Martians will appreciate it when competition finally gets to Mars, that is until they discover the pleasures of junk mail and spam.

  296. Excuses Suck by thelizman · · Score: 2, Insightful
    - Spirit (~$400 mil) has over six times the budget of the Beagle (~$60 mil)
    Yeah, but it worked. Proof positive that you get what you pay for.
    - Spirit is built on the success of Pathfinder.
    Well you certainly don't build as much on failure, but....
    - This is the European Space Agency's *first* time out to mars, and they attempted a *landing* - Our first two times out failed (Mariner 3 & 4), and our third was just a flyby for 71 photos. Of course, that was 1969.
    Things were alot different in 1969. Technology was far less advance, and there was very little hard data on what Mars was like. The ESA has the benefit of knowing what to expect in terms of atmosphere, entry, the journey itself thanks in part to US efforts.
    - ESA never had a strong national space program similar to the US or USSR for budget reasons, as well as many other factors (natural resources, age and background of the nations it comprises, WW I & II)
    Burt Rutan and Scaled composites never had a strong space program, but they're pushing ahead with success after success.

    Nobody knows why Beagle failed. Plenty of Mars probes fail for completely unpredicatable random reasons that aren't clear until years later.The factors named above are all perfectly irrelevent. This thing could have been intercepted by random space trash for all we know, and that wouldn't have been the fault of the ESA. I suspect it's quite the opposite - inexperience combined with arrogance and politics sabotaged Beagle before it ever left Earths orbit.
  297. So what it all boils down to... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is simply that the US has been chucking things at Mars for longer now...

    It's no wonder that it survived then! Pro/Anti-US stances aside, maybe they got it to successfully land on the surface because of one thing - experience!

  298. Re:Congratulations NASA by Mac+Degger · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but from where I sit I see any loss of any scientific experiment as a loss to all the people of the planet. Who cares about nationality? It's the data that's important.

    --
    -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
  299. How /. can help future landers by theolein · · Score: 1

    Considering that the atmosphere of mars is just 1% of Earths and that parachutes are not enough to slow the Landers down-retro rockets and airbags are needed as well-I think I just realised a potential source of aid right here on this board for both the Martian atmosphere and the airbags: One hell of a lot of hot air!

  300. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Levvie · · Score: 1

    It would be rather pathetic if this mission failed, considering that the US has proven to be quite good in shooting things at other things with very high precision. Let's just call this a nice one for the world, humanity.

  301. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Chomsky is not just critical of America, He is critical of everything it represents: Self determination, liberty, choice. He spouts a good rhetoric of choice, but it is only being "free to choose" his way. He is as bad as the worst Far right-wing religious zealot stereotype. Maybe worse, since he gets the pudding-headed liberals to listen to him. Conservatives just laugh at the far right and the far left!

  302. Re:HA HA Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, but they moved for a reason.

  303. Did anyone else notice... by psyconaut · · Score: 1

    There's a crumpled Coca Cola can visible in one of the pictures? Could it be that this is actually the Mojave Desert?! ;-)

    -psy

  304. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Joey7F · · Score: 1

    I meant to say the French theories were largely anti-semetic, not that there was a theory that the French are anti-semetic, that has already been well established. Plus the fact that 10% of their population is arab doesn't help in that regard.

    --Joey

  305. Duhhhh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mia Culpa. Yes, it is JPL's baby. But I do not think that JPL is to do manufacturing, though I certianly could be wrong. It would still be nice if we could set up a line for it and go with semi-custom.

  306. Being a bit picky? by arevos · · Score: 1

    You're being a little picky. When the parent poster says he's "against the American government", I rather think he meant he doesn't like the policies of the current administration. When someone says, "I hate the government", they don't usually mean, "I hate every government agency, including the police, NASA, the military, and any governmental scientific research programs." So stop being so picky with your words :)

    Secondly, an unmatched foreign aid program? Well... I suppose you could put it that way. Whilst the US did put away 12.9 billion for Official Development Assistance (foreign aid), as a percentage of GDP that's only 0.12% of the US's wealth. That's not much in comparison to how much the US makes.

    In fact, the following countries donate more of their GDP to foreign aid: Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Sweden, Belgium, Ireland, France, Finland, Switzerland, the UK, Canada, Germany, Spain, Australia, Portugal, New Zealand, Japan, Austria, Greece and Italy.

    1. Re:Being a bit picky? by ccmay · · Score: 1
      In fact, the following countries donate more of their GDP to foreign aid:

      1. When you count private contributions, the governmental foreign-aid figures are dwarfed, and the U.S. comes off looking much better in relation to other countries.
      2. Much foreign aid is channeled through the military and other agencies. When the Army rebuilds a hospital in Afghanistan, or the Navy captures pirates or drug smugglers in the Straits of Molucca, or NASA builds a modern airport in Africa to provide a place for the shuttles to land in an emergency, they do a great service to humanity that does not show up in these figures. Most of the countries in your list do nothing of the sort. They make an ODA budget, write a check, and that's it. And their irreligious, self-centered, overtaxed citizens assume that is sufficient, and do not come close to matching the American charitable contributions.
      3. These figures do not reflect the trillions of dollars and thousands of lives that this country has contributed to the destruction of collectivist totalitarianism. Whether in the form of National Socialism (Nazi Germany) or Communism, nothing in history has caused more human misery than collectivist ideologies. We destroyed them for the benefit of all mankind and will continue to do so.

      -ccm

      --
      Too much Law; not enough Order.
    2. Re:Being a bit picky? by arevos · · Score: 1

      When you count private contributions, the governmental foreign-aid figures are dwarfed, and the U.S. comes off looking much better in relation to other countries.

      Without knowing how much money is donated through private contributions in other countries, you can't automatically assume the US "comes off looking much better".

      In any case, I wasn't debating that. Lord Ender said: "NASA is part of the american government. So is our unmatched foreign aid program." So I was just pointing out that the US government doesn't really have a very good aid program at all. The US people probably give as much aid as everyone else in the world who can afford it :)

      Much foreign aid is channeled through the military and other agencies. When the Army rebuilds a hospital in Afghanistan, or the Navy captures pirates or drug smugglers in the Straits of Molucca, or NASA builds a modern airport in Africa to provide a place for the shuttles to land in an emergency, they do a great service to humanity that does not show up in these figures.

      I'd imagine that the US Military, for good or for bad, has done a lot more to blow things up then it has to fix them. That's what any military is primarily designed for.

      Most of the countries in your list do nothing of the sort. They make an ODA budget, write a check, and that's it. And their irreligious, self-centered, overtaxed citizens assume that is sufficient, and do not come close to matching the American charitable contributions.

      And the basis of your claim is? Besides that ad hominem attack, I mean.

      These figures do not reflect the trillions of dollars and thousands of lives that this country has contributed to the destruction of collectivist totalitarianism. Whether in the form of National Socialism (Nazi Germany) or Communism, nothing in history has caused more human misery than collectivist ideologies. We destroyed them for the benefit of all mankind and will continue to do so.

      Thousands of lives? Well, yes, the US can claim that it has sacrificed a lot in its pursuit of democracy, but remember that many more lives, millions, in fact, have been lost by other countries that have similar aims. Also remember that the vast majority of those US fallen were soldiers. Other countries weren't so lucky.

      On another note, whilst US involvement in World War II was substancial, it certainly wasn't the only factor. Also, remember that the US entered World War II because it was attacked in 1941. France and Britain entered World War II to come to the aid of other countries in 1939. Whatever the motivations of the US later in the war, Germany and Japan declared war on the US, not the other way around.

      By the time the US entered the war, Germany had lost the Battle of Britain, and Hitler's biggest blunder, Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of the Soviet Union, had already taken place.

      Whilst US involvement in many matters in history have been important, it's somewhat naive to assume the US entered into every conflict purely due to ideological reasons, and it's quite incorrect to paint a picture of the US as the only combatant.

    3. Re:Being a bit picky? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      I don't think France surrendering counts as "entering the war".

      To compare the United States war effort to the French war effort is absurd. If you really think that Europe's borders would look anything like they do today, had the US not entered the war, you're a loony.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    4. Re:Being a bit picky? by arevos · · Score: 1

      I don't think France surrendering counts as "entering the war".

      It declared war on Germany, therefore it entered the war.

      To compare the United States war effort to the French war effort is absurd.

      Granted, the two sides were quite different. The US entered a war after it was attacked, when there was little chance of its own terrority or citizens being threatened. France entered a war to come to the aid of another country, when there was quite a large chance of French citizens being hurt as a consequence.

      As it was, France miscalculated, but you can hardly say it lacked bravery. Tactical sense, perhaps :) - But then I doubt anyone at that time considered how fearsome the German war machine really was, or how fast Poland would fall. Considering its size, and what it managed to do, the German army was the best on the planet at that time. Indeed, at the start of the war, Germany had quite a technological edge in tanks and planes.

      If you really think that Europe's borders would look anything like they do today, had the US not entered the war, you're a loony.

      Did I say that? Of course not. I said that US involvement was certainly important. However, its a mistake to think that the victory of the Allies in WW2 was entirely down to the US. If Britain and France had neglected to fight, then who knows what might have happened. More realistically, if Operation Barbarossa had never taken place, Germany might not have lost.

    5. Re:Being a bit picky? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Look, I'm no flag-waving jingoist, but I do know rather a lot about the history of World War II.

      Your web site says .uk. If you are British, and you don't think the Lend-Lease Act kept the Germans in France and not in London, you're delusional.

      Without the P-40 Warhawks supplied by the US, the Battle of Britain would have been lost. Period.

      I'm not saying that the US won the war, singlehanded...that would be foolish. But if you think the war could have been won without US industrialism and American blood, I think you're a poor student of history. Would the war have been ended? Sure. There might even be a Great Britain, right off the shore of Greater Germany stretching from the Atlantic to a few dozen miles from St. Petersburg. The partisans (including the French Maquis, who were genuine heroes in a lot of cases) would have made Germany very, very uncomfortable, but I do not believe they would have been able to roll back the Wehrmacht.

      For the record, Roosevelt used the attack on Pearl Harbor (a classic example of "drawing a foul") in order to galvanize America into acting. I personally think it was inappropriate of him to do this. I think he should have gone to the American public, explained why fighting the war in Europe was critical to their interest, and gotten them behind the effort without baiting Japan.

      But I'm an idealist, and Roosevelt was Machiavelli incarnate. So he took a different route.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    6. Re:Being a bit picky? by arevos · · Score: 1

      Your web site says .uk. If you are British, and you don't think the Lend-Lease Act kept the Germans in France and not in London, you're delusional.

      The Lend-Lease Act (or the Lease-Lend Act): March 11, 1941.
      The Battle of Britain: 10 July - 31 October, 1940.

      Whatever the importance of the act, and I'm certainly not debating it was important, it had nothing to do with the defeat of German forces over Britain.

      Without the P-40 Warhawks supplied by the US, the Battle of Britain would have been lost. Period.

      Um... Pardon? You mean out of the 8'300 Spitfires and 14'000 Hurricanes it was the 1000 P-40s spread throughout the Commonwealth that turned the tide of the Battle of Britain.

      An aircraft Wikipedia describes as having "lack-lustre performance". And the first production version of the plane was "Deemed unsuitable for use as a fighter in Europe, where it was thought inferior to the Spitfire, Hurricane and Bf-109, the Tomahawk was used for training and some low-level tactical reconnaissance."

      I'm not saying that the US won the war, singlehanded...that would be foolish. But if you think the war could have been won without US industrialism and American blood, I think you're a poor student of history.

      I never claimed any such thing. But as you say, the US could not have won the war singlehandedly, either.

    7. Re:Being a bit picky? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      How many of those Spitfires and Hurricanes were in the skies in 1940? Nowhere near the numbers you suppose. The P-40's were in place early in the war, and were subsequently replaced by superior designs (the later Spitfires, and the P-51's). They were also incredibly rugged, and well-loved by their pilots. I take their word over Wikipedia's. You damn the aircraft with faint praise.

      You're right, the Lend-Lease Act was signed in 1941, but that law codified a practice that Roosevelt had basically implemented by executive fiat for years.

      Again, if you think that practice was not critical to Britain's war effort, I believe Mr. Churchill would disagree with you. Vehemently.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    8. Re:Being a bit picky? by arevos · · Score: 1

      How many of those Spitfires and Hurricanes were in the skies in 1940?

      True, I was taking the total number ever made, though there is a reason for that. The reason being, is that I cannot find any source whatsoever that indicates that P40s were used as fighters against German planes in the Battle of Britain. There were the 140 P40s from France, but I have no idea how many were ordered from the US, or, indeed, if any were. So instead, I compared the total number of P40s used by Britain in comparison to the total Hurricanes and Spitfires, as that was the only statistic availiable.

      There were approximately 600 Hurricanes and 300 spitfires at the start of the Battle of Britain according to these statistics. And Wikipedia and other sources reference the Hawker Hurricane as accounting for 70% of kills.

      So all I can say for certain is that the P40 accounted for less that 30% of the downed German planes. Also, unless you can find something, there seems to be no reference at all to the P40s ever being used in combat, and no statistics to how many were used. Surely, if the P40 was so important, at least some mention of it could be found.

      In short, it was the Hawker Hurricane that was responsible for the majority of German losses, and not the P40 (I have no idea where you got the idea the P40s turned the course of the battle).

      However, it was not really the superiority of the planes that won the day. The Messerschmitt Bf109 was probably superior to the Spitfire, the best plane the British had at that time, and German pilots generally had greater experience in the air. What swung the tide was the short range of the Messerschmitts (they could only stay over Britain a scant hour, whilst the Spitfires and Hurricanes could stay up all day), and, of course, radar. Britain had the best radar capabilities of the war, which meant it could concentrate it's outnumbered pilots to give local superiority. Interestingly, Germany didn't believe Britain had radar at all, at first. Apparently, a large blimp was sent near Britain at the start of the war, to listen out for radar signals. British radar operated at a wavelength of 10m, whilst German radar operated at 50cm, and so the German blimp, looking for radio waves on the 50cm scale, completely missed the signals.

      I'd also imagine that Bletchley Park had quite a bit to do with it. The Battle of Britain is particularly interesting, from a technological point of view, in that it was won almost entirely through intelligence, from radar, and, presumably, by listening in on German reports. The forces commited to Luftwaffe to Operation Sealion outnumbered British aircraft 4 to 1. In addition, their pilots were generally better trained and had more experience. And yet the Luftwaffe were defeated, primarily because British forces knew exactly where they were going. German troops were almost flying blind, whilst the RAF knew where each and every German squadren was.

      You're right, the Lend-Lease Act was signed in 1941, but that law codified a practice that Roosevelt had basically implemented by executive fiat for years.

      That said, the majority of planes in the Battle of Britain were British, at least on the side of the allies. Also, do you have any source for that? I can't find reference to the US allowing deferred payment on governmental suppies before the Lease Lend act.

      There was one isolated incident where 50 old US destroyers were exchanged for the use of several British naval bases, but apart from, that, I can't find much.

      Again, if you think that practice was not critical to Britain's war effort, I believe Mr. Churchill would disagree with you.

      Well, later on, almost certainly. Churchill tried many times to convince Roosevelt to aid Britain, and, of course, to enter the war. In the end it took Pearl Harbor to get the USA into World War II.

      However, I doubt that US involvement was a prime factor in the defense of Britain in 1940.

    9. Re:Being a bit picky? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Isolationism seems like a better idea, day by day.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    10. Re:Being a bit picky? by arevos · · Score: 1

      Isolationism seems like a better idea, day by day.

      Because people dare to suggest some battles against "evil" didn't much involve the USA?

      The US has done a lot to aid democracy, almost certainly more than any other nation on Earth, but you have to be realistic. By being blind to your faults, you will only repeat your mistakes.

      Some people think that the US has acted only in its own interests throughout history, and view it as corrupt, and evil. Others, usually US citizens, think that the US has always acted in the values of justice and democracy, fighting the evil Nazis, communists, and, recently, terrorists. Both views, are, of course, wrong. Or, rather, they present a black and white picture of a world that is very grey indeed. Without US involvement, much of Europe would have been controlled by the USSR. Without US involvement, quite a few military/fascist coups around the world would not have succeeded. The US has had a hand in bringing several corrupt and fascist regimes to power, in order to prevent the spread of Communism.

      To claim that the USA hasn't ever been in the moral wrong is foolish. To claim the US has contributed nothing to the world, or that it is wholely corrupt and evil, is equally, if not more foolish.

    11. Re:Being a bit picky? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Because whenever the US gets involved in a conflict, they seem to get blamed for everything that goes wrong and get no credit for what goes right.

      ALL COUNTRIES act in their own interest. Sometimes those interests yield good results for the world at large, sometimes they do not. The US's record has blemishes. Serious ones. But it's raw revisionism to (as you are trying to do) minimize the impact of America's entrance into World War II.

      We haven't even talked about what would have happened in the Pacific if Japan hadn't been checked. Would YOU like to have lived in a Japanese-controlled Phillippines?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    12. Re:Being a bit picky? by arevos · · Score: 1

      Because whenever the US gets involved in a conflict, they seem to get blamed for everything that goes wrong and get no credit for what goes right.

      Unfortunately, that's largely the way of the world at the moment. You can see the same social effect in the media's attitude to celebrities. Which do you think would sell more newspapers? A well known celebrity saving a someone's life, or a well-known celebrity murdering someone?

      ALL COUNTRIES act in their own interest.

      Did I say any different? I believe that's my point. There's a theory that it was Britain that first bombed German cities, not wayward German bombers who happened to get the wrong target. Certainly, it was more advantageous from a military perspective for Britian, if Germany went and bombed civilians rather then precious airfields. Whether that's theory is true or not, I don't know, but it's certainly plausible.

      But it's raw revisionism to (as you are trying to do) minimize the impact of America's entrance into World War II.

      Revisionism? I believe the only two points I've made in this thread is that the US government's current foreign aid policy isn't very good (which I backed up with numbers), and that the US involvement in the Battle of Britain was quite minimal (which I also backed up).

      If you want to argue against this, then you're very welcome to, but back your arguments up. Otherwise, by claiming that P40s were critical to winning the Battle of Britain when as far I can tell they certainly were not, seems more revisionist then anything I've put forward.

      We haven't even talked about what would have happened in the Pacific if Japan hadn't been checked. Would YOU like to have lived in a Japanese-controlled Phillippines?

      Where did this come from? I almost feel as if by previous replies have been creatively revised! You keep trying to put words in my mouth, and twice now in this thread I've had to point out that I claimed no such thing. Frankly, it's getting tiring, so let me repeat myself one more time. I am not belittling US involvement in World War II. It is doubtful whether Germany could have been defeated without US aid. It is almost certain that Japan would not have been defeated.

      That is not to say that I don't also believe that it is doubtful whether Germany could have been defeated, if Hitler had not initiated Operation Barbarossa, either. A number of factors contributed to the complete Allied victory. There are any number of ways Nazi Germany could have survived the war, of which lack of US involvement is but one. Generally, Hitler's flaw was fighting too many battles all at once. Taking on the US was a mistake. Taking on the USSR at the same time, was a mistake. Taking on Britain was, I suppose, a mistake as well, in as much that Germany wasn't able to invade.

      But, before you get any ideas, I direct you to my previous comments; US involvement in WW2 was extremely important to the eventual Allied victory in Europe, and was almost entirely responsible for victory in the Pacific theater as well.

  307. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by deathofcats · · Score: 1

    benna is not wrong when they say that they are against the American government. There are many Americans who are against the American government. I'm an anarchist and have worked for the demise of the U.S. government for most of my life (I'm 30-something). I'm also against all governments, including this pesky Martian one that keeps shooting down these probes.

    Cheers to NASA for getting this one right. A Bronx Cheer to all the peeps who wave their stupid American flags about this news. Let's support a truly international space program and not these backward notions of nationalism.

  308. Re:Congratulations NASA by SamSim · · Score: 1

    I don't look on this as an American success or a NASA success, or, indeed, a European failure. This is a success for human space exploration, and hella cool at that. It's all just baby steps into outer space, but we're getting there, we're getting there.

    So, where next? Europa?

  309. Re:Congratulations NASA by deathofcats · · Score: 1

    I'm an American who is tired of the jingoistic nonsense spouted on this website. "America" did not land a probe on Mars. This successful landing was the product of hard work by a large number of talented individuals and organizations. Give these folks credit, not some inane bumper sticker patriotism.

  310. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by arevos · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The AC is correct in that the US does not send almost all of it's aid to Israel. More goes to Russia than Israel, and US foriegn aid is pretty well spread out. Of course, if you measure US aid as a percentage of its GDP, the US doesn't send very much at all, less than many other nations, including much of the EU. Denmark tops the scales with nearly 1% of it's GDP going to foreign aid. The US manages ten times less.

    Whilst it isn't a bad aid program, it's certainly not "unmatched". The EU member states together send out twice as much aid as the US. 27 billion dollars of aid compared to the US's 12.9 billion.

    But it certainly doesn't go all to Israel :)

  311. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Excuse me, but what on earth has "the lefty" track record got to do with anything I said? I believe in the truth, not some left or right wing agenda. Is that such a foreign idea to you, that somebody can be a right-wing Republican and still hate lies? This is the kind of person you are talking to.

    It makes me feel so sad when I see Bush criticized, only for people to come rushing out shouting, "Leftist! Democrat! Liberal!"

    The truth is more important than party politics ever will be.

  312. nitpick... by vt0asta · · Score: 1

    ...and ttl=239 8 minutes (oops).

    --
    No.
  313. (OT) Mac price myth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Macs are more expensive" only to those in the market for a bargain-basement ($500 or so) desktop computer.

  314. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Saint+Aardvark · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'm happy to report thatThe Floating Head of Ayn Rand made it too. Congratulations to everyone at NASA and A=A!

  315. 3D View ... by polyp2000 · · Score: 1

    I have constructed a 3D stereoscopic image from a couple of the images I found. You'll have to wrangle with your eyes to get the effect but here it is in case you want to see. Interstingly enough the effect does sort-of increase the resolution, and gives you a better view of the rock in the background.

    http://www.blackapology.com/downloads/3d_rear.gi f

    have fun

    (if anyone else makes another 3d pic please post it under parent)

    nick ...

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
    1. Re:3D View ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd suggest you remove the Half Life 2 source code

      Just my two cents ;)

  316. Radiation on Mars?! by utd-blaze · · Score: 1

    You know every Mars mission has to traverse millions of mile of space which have high levels of radiation. Plus mars is a huge planet so if something did go wrong and radioactive material did disintigrate in the atmosphere nobody would even be able to notice it, and it certainly wouldn't impact other missions. That said, it's always good to hear from the lunatic fringe ;-)

    --
    Do me a favor and double it!
  317. No, he's right, its the 4th by reality-bytes · · Score: 1

    You can check it here

    --
    Ripping an new rectum in the fabric of spacetime.
    1. Re:No, he's right, its the 4th by spectras · · Score: 1
      Well, your link points to the expected planning. However, due to a modification of the orbit of Mars Express, they had to change it, as they explain here.

      Anyway, IMHO it is likely that beagle landed upside down (thus having its antenna on the wrong side and not visible until Mars Express flies high enough above the horizon), or that something got broken. After all, beagle was not the most important part of the mission, so it did not have any redundant circuitry.

  318. Re:Congratulations NASA by Dirtside · · Score: 1
    Considering the huge Anti-US sentiment on this site, I thought this would be a good occasion to tweak that crowd a little.
    Yes, because nothing advances the state of humanity more than acting like a whiny six-year old.
    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  319. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Phragmen-Lindelof · · Score: 1

    If we get rid of all "national" governments and yet have an international space program (perhaps interesting goals), will we not need an "international government" to fund (and supervise) it?

  320. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thats all very nice but none of its true.

  321. Maya Buttreeks is on the DVD by GnomeAttic · · Score: 1

    Apparently the immortal Maya Buttreeks made it on the DVD.

  322. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Morky · · Score: 1

    It is not always wrong to kill. Death and killing is always the worst thing possible, but killing is not always wrong. For instance, The World and especially Europe should have intervened in Yugoslavia as soon as it was clear civilians were being executed en masse and starvations was occuring in camps. They did nothing until the US took the lead, and even the US was far too late. I don't think the approach of the current American administration is correct in many areas (especially the military tribunals for trying suspected terrorists) and I will probably vote against Bush. However, I do think that overall the US has been a force for good in the world. By the way, look up what the estimated cost in lives an American invasion of mainland Japan would have been, plus the unavoidable Soviet invasion? Don't even try to make the US out to be an evil force in WWII. Sorry for the rant, but as an American I'm tired of listening to this bullshit directed against Americans personally.

  323. Re:Congratulations NASA by Morky · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and they really don't know shit about mainstream U.S. society, either. They think bad Hollywood movies are a clear representation of everday American life. Mainstream American society is a lot like life in most other contries, abeit with somewhat worse taste.

  324. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Score:3, Insightful"? Exactly what insight was provided by this guy's **opinion** that he finds Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn frightening?

    Sounds like the post was rated because its politics agreed with whoever rated it. Sad.

  325. Who's more pathetic? by doc_traig · · Score: 1


    The troll or the pathetic simpleton who bites?

    Oh wai

    --
    So long, michael. Don't let the door hit you...
  326. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by the+gnat · · Score: 1

    Noam Chomsky? Good God. He's the most anti-American guy out there.

    More important, he's known to distort or selectively cite facts to advance his own political views. I don't know if I'd go so far as to call it "lying", but he's not a dependable source of information if you really want to learn about a topic in depth. He's an unrepentant apologist for totalitarianism and genocide (Cambodia being the worst example), as long as he can make America look bad in the process.

    I'm a lifelong moderate/liberal, and I'm ashamed of what Reagan, Nixon, Kissinger, or any of their ilk did to the Third World, but Chomsky is the worst kind of charlatan, and totally blind to the disastrous effects of Communism in the last century. The right side won the Cold War, and he still can't come to terms with that.

  327. See? Your computer is powerful enough! by MrPerky · · Score: 0

    What do you mean you need a new computer, junior? If a 486 is powerful enough for the Hubble Space Telescope, then your Pentium 75 has way more power than you need. Now shut up and go bug your mother.

    --
    The preceding comment has been documented as containing no EPHI and is certifiable as HIPPA Phase II Compliant.
  328. Re:Now my name is on Mars along with 3,551,645 oth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So when the martians pick up the probe and start their invasion of earth, they'll round you up first and fine you for littering.

    Works for me; meanwhile I welcome our new martian overlords and would point out that as a seasoned slashdot reader/poster I have the bitterness it takes to help enslave my fellow men and should be given preferential treatment and breeding rights.

  329. oops Blue Screen of Death by orlyonok · · Score: 1

    stop bashing the poor beagle 2 it has given us an excelent reason to send a man to mars, is necesary to send someone up there and press CTRL + ALT + SUPR on its console to get beagle again online

    --
    And I have prayed unto You, O Lord U**X in the time of the Will of Linux.
  330. What's the big deal? by pensivepuppy · · Score: 1

    Unless you're interested in geology, this is just dull. This mission is mainly to study rocks. The pictures sent back could be a barren scene from earth - nothing we haven't seen before. I honestly don't get it. There's no big news here. I think JPL overhypes these missions as "big scientific breakthroughs" to justify their funding. Like that mission that landed on Mars on July 4th a few years back - obviously timed to to inspire nationalism, etc. More JPL hype.

  331. search and rescue by BiggyP · · Score: 1

    well, maybe once they're done with testing rock samples they can send it off to locate Beagle2.

  332. Re:Congrats, NASA/JPL! Boo, NASA TV. by scottj · · Score: 1

    Whether or not you have a satellite dish and receiver, the coverage is still available.

    --
    .-.--
  333. Search and you'll find. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I declined an oportunity to live in the US because I find life in Europe of a far superior quality all things considered.

    It may be that I am not USian, but for some reason I have found many US people tired of the way of life in the US and living elsewhere (including places like Mexico, Namibia, Malaysia and South Africa). So that is your anecdotal evidence against mine.

    What my instincts felt a few years ago has sadly been confirmed in the last couple of years, since then the worst of the US psique has been paraded bare in front of everybody to the great shame of the many civilized USians that still hope to make the US a more civilized country.

    Oy yeah, and perhaps nobody cares, but as long as the reception to the US soil is to be photographed and registered as a suspected criminal I politely will decline to visit the land of the "free".

    1. Re:Search and you'll find. by reallocate · · Score: 1

      Good, I'm happy for you. Europe is okay; I've lived there. Lots of old building and high taxes. And it's finally trying to eliminate its stupidity about borders, after producing most of the ills of the century and bearing the responsibility for the deaths of hundreds of millions. And then you can count other European creations like Prussian militarism, fascism, naziism, socialism, communism, totalitarianism, and, generally, all the inane notions about statism that sucker people into trading their individual liberty for the glorification of the state, all in the name of nationalism and racism. And, of course, there's that matter of recurring genocide.(Don't forget the Armenians, although a lot of Europeans still can't convince themselves that Turkey is part of Europe...wrong genes and all that.)

      So, enjoy the "superior quality" of your life in Europe, the land of czars and Bismarks; of mustard gas and trench war; of Napoleon and the guillotine; of Franco and Mussolini and Hitler; of Auschwitz, Buchenwald, Srebrenica and all the rest.

      And, no, I don't care if you are photographed and thumbprinted when you enter the U.S. Entering the U.S. is a privilege, not a right. So long as people from outside the country want to come here nad kill Americans, whatever we can do to find them and arrest them is just fine with me. It's the terrorists who are restricting my freedoms, not my government.

      It's only guilt-ridden Euro-whining lefties who wallow in guilt about crimes commmited by terrorists. They'd blame the victim for getting in the way of a murderer's bullet.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  334. No it is not. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    America consists of many other countries as well, so TV or movies produced by the US and Canada can't be accurately being called American in any sense.

    Mexico and Brazil produce soap operas that are imported to Russia and the far east, thes countries, Cuba, and Argentina have a movie industry with a long tradition that has been badly damaged by cheap imports from the US.

    So no, the US is not America, and the clearest indication comes from the name of the country itself...

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  335. Are you talking about the same country... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    - That considers creationsim worthy of teaching in science classes?

    - That regularly has major publications analyzing the power of praying to combat ailments?

    - That bans basic research (stemm cells) due to religious zealotry?

    - That regularly has people complaining to magazines for giving Evolution to much credence?

    Honestly, relative success in one very narrow area does not mean great successes in others.

    You should also consider that the USSR was beating the US on space exploration until the landing on the Moon after that both countries remained pretty much on the same level, each branching on niches (the USSR created a fantastic body of knowledge regarding long stay in space, the US perfected low orbit flying to the point of making it commercially viable).

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  336. i thought the beagle said by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

    "Curses, foiled again! I'll get you, Red Planet!"

  337. OT MOD ME DOWN I deserve it by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    There, no karma bonus so I won't waste too much mod points...

    Hi, I was just reading your last posted comment wich was about movies, but that discussion is closed and I can't reply there (I had missed it, saw it was there when I meta moderated a comment from it).

    Well, I mostly agree with you, except that you liked T3, and I can't fanthom why.

    Of course, I'm asking you to reply off-topic too, wich is icky, but if you have a better idea, I'm all ears (maybe a journal entry or something, where we won't be OT?)

    Aaaanyways:

    I was severely disappointed by the Matrix sequels more than anything else. Those who respond that I "just don't get it" are missing the fact that while the IDEAS were sound, the EXECUTION left everything to be desired. A movie needs STORY, PLOT and AUDIENCE EMPATHY to be successful, not just eye candy, which while great doesn't keep you coming back over and over again.


    But...T3 was all eye candy!

    I felt actually insulted by that movie, I wanted to ask a refund, it was the worst movie I had seen in years, but you liked it, and then you didn't like M3 for very legitimate reasons that should make you not like T3 too...

    So I'm confused and genuinly interrested in your thoughts on T3 (I also want to give you a few examples of mind-boggin awfullness from T3) : )

    Sorry about the OT reply folks...

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  338. OT: About T3 by Quizo69 · · Score: 1

    email me at quizo69@NO_SPAMhotmail.com if you want really in depth discussion, but basically, T3 for me, whilst undeniably eye candy, still managed to make you care for the characters and best of all, had a great ending that didn't sugar coat anything. The way in which they realised they weren't going to be able to stop the nuclear war was very poignantly done IMHO.

    Anyway, to keep this short, email me if you want more discussion!

  339. Here's some better Mars VRs than seen elsewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    Cleaned up, less disortion, brighter...

    http://www.waterspan.com/

  340. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The EU member states are not one country, are they? I suppose we can make any arbitrary distinction we want, though...

  341. 90 day mission? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why do the missions last only 90 days? doesnt the solar cell power source make the rovers function indefinitely, until physical breakdown. or is the limitation here on earth because of funds available to pay for scientist, equiptment, ect.

  342. Re:PowerPC-powered rover (OT) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    powerpc has actually managed to AVERAGE one instruction per clock cycle... so considering I know that there are tons of powerpc instructions requiring multiple cycles

    I know no one is likely to read this, but just so you know, the grandparent is correct. Being a RISC setup, as you alluded to, instructions generally take a constant amount of time to execute. However, on average a RISC chip with a pipeline will take a little more than one clock cycle per instruction because sometimes the pipeline needs to be dumped when there's a branch misprediction. That basically throws away as many clock cycles as there are instructions up to that point in the pipeline. Please don't poo poo people without an explanation or a reference to back yourself up.

  343. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Moofie · · Score: 1

    So anybody with the audacity to criticize or lampoon anybody who happens to be Jewish or Israeli is an anti-semite?

    Kind of like here in America, where everyone who opposes affirmative action is a KKK loving hatemongering racist.

    Just so's I understand.

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  344. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by yourmom16 · · Score: 1
    Theres no need to cause panic by the liberal media - CAPITALIZM and REPUBLICANIZM and the two KEYS that we have to AUTOMATICALLY address many of our problems, without the need for big government and bigger taxes.

    Republicans don't seem to be for small government; Bush increased spending. I agree with much of what republicans say they are for, but very little of what they truly are for.

    --
    "We have got to make Stan understand the importance of voting, because he'll definitely vote for our guy." - South Park
  345. Re:When you need to get something done: turn to US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I would post non-anonymous but moderators are going berzerk today with negatives based on opinions of their own.

    you did