Slashdot Mirror


Volunteers Needed for Space Launch

BradNeuberg writes "The Ansari X Prize needs volunteers to help at the Scaled Composites and da Vinci Project's launch attempts in the next few months! I've digitized and created BitTorrent's of an Ansari X Prize video that is pretty cool and can tell you more about what we are doing. Want to be a volunteer? Sign up here. I've also set up a carpool and rideshare list for those who can offer or want a ride down to Mojave, CA to see history made."

9 of 122 comments (clear)

  1. What's the problem with volunteering? by SunSaw · · Score: 3, Insightful


    If you can't play in the Super Bowl then why not get a great view of the action!

    --
    --When it's my time, I want to die in my sleep like my grandfather -- not screaming like all the passengers in his car
  2. Wasn't history already made? by ravenspear · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I mean, the winning of the X Prize will certainly be a significant event in the privatization of access to space, but the first private flight already took place, which is very significant in itself.

  3. Re:How do I sign up for a ride? by Biff+Stu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let's face it. If they were so desperate that they needed to recruit flight crew from /., anybody who signs up is a sure bet for a Darwin award.

  4. Shouldn't this be left for the pros? by LostCluster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    These things are being done in the unpopulated desert areas of the USA for a very specific reason... if these things misfire they want as few people and things in the area. Afterall, we just saw NASA drop a space probe they were hoping to catch, and nobody was in any danger because they intentionally did the operation over an unpopulated desert because landing into a creator in the sand was a very tolerable worst-case situation.

    Crowd control shouldn't be an issue. There should be no crowds to begin with... let's watch these things from a safe distance here on /. instead.

  5. For those who've never volunteered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Volunteering for this kind of stuff makes the experience several magnitude more enjoyable. I know it's not the most logical thing, but by participating even just a little bit, you get a much bigger sense of being "part of it".

    I speak from experience. For years I'd attend events and snicker at the poor volunteers who had to stand around in the sun and who missed half the show. But then I started doing it myself and I'm hooked. It's ten times better to be part of the show than to watch the show.

  6. Re:How do I sign up for a ride? by kfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    . . .anybody who signs up is a sure bet for a Darwin award.

    My children are already old enough to breed themselves.

    One of the advantages to growing old is the discharge of your social and genetic responsibilities, leaving you in a state where you can do any damned fool thing you want. My early expiration could, in fact, be viewed as a social boon, as I'm not quite old enough yet to begin drawing on age based entitlements.

    Your joke is valid though. Once upon a time, Brian Redman got a call from Porsche asking him if he'd like to do some testing on their new car, the 917. Brian says the very first thing that ran through his mind was (my paraphrase), "Wait a minute. Porsche has a stable of the best test drivers in the business. If they're soliciting outside volunteers there's something seriously amiss with the car and they know it."

    And the car did, in fact, develop a reputation as a man killer before it was tamed. It went 40 mph faster than any other car, but was aerodynamically unstable. Not a good combo.

    Oh yeah, Brian took the ride, of course, and the rest is racing history. He helped tame it and didn't die much.

    Not everyone considers the maximum extension of their life as the greatest achievment they can make. We're all going to die someday, like it or not, and I think there is validity in choosing a good day to die.

    God rest Christa. You died "prematurely," but you died doing something that gave you a reason to live, which is more than can ever be said about most people.

    KFG

  7. Re:Da Vinci Project Rocket by gevmage · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Actually, fiberglass is quite strong. If you lay fiberglass over styrafoam, you get "composite" material, which is the construction method for pretty much everything Burt Rutan builds. (Voyager, White Knight, SpaceShip One, and the Beech Starships).

    To say nothing of the various kit plan designs that are composites.

    --
    Craig Steffen
    http://www.craigsteffen.net
  8. Re:not like any other gathering. by ptbarnett · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Which brings me to the second observation: no litter. There was, seriously, no litter. Even in my extraordinarily beleaguered state I was taken aback at how spotless everything was as the crowd dispersed following the landings.

    I've never been to the annual Experimental Aircraft Association fly-in to Oshkosh, WI (in August), but this is one of its distinctive features: the grounds are spotless.

    Articles written by attendees almost always include this observation, and I've read several that reported seeing litter discarded by a thoughtless visitor scooped up and deposited in the trash by another visitor only a few steps behind the offender.

    I've noticed the same phenomena at the Albuquerque Balloon Festival, once you get away from the concession stands.

    Maybe it's has something to do with the kind of people that are aviation fanatics.

  9. 10 seconds of flight? Bah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    If those silly bicycle makers had managed to fly their heavier than air machine 10 minutes, that would have at least been interesting!

    Heavier than air flying machines will never take off.