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Han Solo in Lego Carbonite

metalion writes "Nathan Sawaya built a life size replica of Han Solo frozen in carbonite. It is composed of approximately 10,000 bricks and was built in approximately three months. Some sample photos are here and here. Sawaya's work also includes a mosaic of a stormtrooper and a small scale replica of the Death Star II."

12 of 259 comments (clear)

  1. Good Post Taco by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Just when Opportunity is on Mars....very good news service here...jackass

    1. Re:Good Post Taco by Tablizer · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Just when Opportunity is on Mars....very good news service here...jackass

      Maybe its related. Maybe Opportunity will find Carbonite on Mars. Is there such a thing? Anyhow, good job, NASA!

    2. Re:Good Post Taco by 110010001000 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Well, now you need to wait an extra 30 minutes for it to appear - unless you are a subscriber.

    3. Re:Good Post Taco by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic
      Except you don't have to wait to know that it hasn't been posted at all yet. Even non-subscribers would see the message indicating that there was a new story visible to subscribers. There is no such message right now, an hour after Opportunity landed.

      Maybe Michael found some anti-MS tidbit and is taking that ball and running with it right now.

  2. Apple related? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    This story is not Apple related! Why is it posted here? Come on moderators, this is SLASHDOT, News for Mac Users, Stuff that Matters to Mac Users. get on with the Apple stories!

  3. Re:Much cooler than the Opportunity landing on Mar by DAldredge · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Well, that is all we do know, that it landed. It will be sometime before we know if it is ok. And a /. discussion about the landing would be rather boring with nothing to talk about.

  4. Um, Mars people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    We just landed on Mars again and Slashdot is discussing Legos?

  5. Re:Much cooler than the Opportunity landing on Mar by Oinos · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Actually, the "no fault" tone was sent shortly after landing indicating that the post landing checkouts were successful and the vehicle was in proper working order.

  6. Article text (that Michael should have posted) by britneys+9th+husband · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Opportunity lands on Mars

    Spirit 'upgraded from critical to serious'
    Sunday, January 25, 2004 Posted: 12:40 AM EST (0540 GMT)

    PASADENA, California (CNN) -- Opportunity, the second of NASA's twin rovers, has made the descent to the surface of Mars, touching down successfully at 0505 GMT Sunday (12:05 a.m. ET).

    NASA now has two rovers on the ground, after Spirit landed on the red planet exactly three weeks ago on January 3. Though Spirit's landing was near perfect, the rover mission has had serious complications in recent days.

    "We're on Mars everybody," mission scientist Wayne Lee declared as fellow members monitoring the landing at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory burst into wild applause .

    Dampened by the problems with Spirit, it had been a nervous few moments at mission control as NASA officials counted down and checked off the various descent maneuvers during what appeared to be a flawless six-minute sequence.

    As planned, the airbag-encased craft bounced on the Martian surface and rolled gently for a few minutes before coming to a complete stop upside down.

    NASA was awaiting further signals and communications from Opportunity, including images of the landing site.

    There were "no fault tones" detected in the radio signals back to Earth, suggesting that the spacecraft arrived in good shape on Mars, a mission control official said.

    Opportunity is an exact replica of Spirit but was programmed to land about 6,600 miles (10,620 km) away on the opposite side of the planet, in an area known as the Meridiani Planum -- a smooth plain near Mars' equator, believed to be full of iron-bearing hematite.

    The semi-precious mineral usually forms on Earth in the presence of liquid water -- leading scientists to think that water once flowed there.

    The area is believed to be quite different from the reddish soil of Gusev Crater, where Spirit landed earlier this month.

    Opportunity's site makes the landing more difficult than Spirit's, mission manager Jim Erickson said.

    It is also the highest altitude landing by NASA on Mars.

    In addition, Mars' increased distance from Earth would lengthen the time needed to communicate with the spacecraft.

    Troubles with Spirit
    Scientists are hoping the rover won't have the same problems that have hit Spirit this week.

    That rover was set to use its tools to examine a nearby boulder when NASA lost contact with the vehicle.

    But NASA engineers found a work-around Saturday for Spirit's problems, re-established communication and regained the ability to control it.

    "This is very good news," project manager Pete Theisinger told reporters.

    Spirit's condition, Theisinger said, "has been upgraded from critical to serious."

    The rover is probably "three weeks away from driving," he said, as engineers study the problems and try to correct them with additional work-arounds in the meantime.

    NASA engineers are working to trace the source of the problem as it could have implications on Opportunity's mission.

    Spirit uses Flash memory to communicate with the flight software to establish a file structure and will shut itself down if the process is interrupted, Theisinger said.

    Engineers guessed that Spirit's troubles were in its Flash memory and set about sending the rover a complex series of instructions to see if they could get it to bypass the corrupted memory.

    Theisinger said engineers sent Spirit a command just before its daily "waking up," telling it to shut down and restart in what is known as "cripple mode," using RAM instead of Flash for its start-up instructions.

    "That is precisely what happened," Theisinger said, and Spirit then sent an hour's worth of data back to Pasadena.

    "Something in the flight software talking to the Flash memory is causing us difficulty," Theisinger said.

    He said engineers did not know caused the problem, but if it is purely a software problem, it is likely fixable. If, however, a problem in the hardware is affecting the software, repair may not be possible.

    But, "we have a vehicle that is stable now," he said.

    --
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  7. frosty piss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    First post!

  8. Re:Much cooler than the Opportunity landing on Mar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    whatever fuckhead,

  9. Didn't anyone ever have an Erector Set? by xagon7 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I was born in 77, so I got the plastic/aluminum Erector set, but I STILL loved that more than any Legos/Roboticx/Capsella set of the time. Does anyone else share this sentiment? Erector was just cool as hell, you were playing with nuts and bolts and metal. I loved it. Built many a robots (well... what I thought were robots ;) )