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Space Tourism is Off and Running

ackthpt writes "The ink wasn't even dry on the Ansari X Prize check, after Brian Binnie piloted SpaceShipOne into space, when deals were already being made. Announced last week, Richard Branson of Virgin Group would be licensing the technology, and according to p2pnet is already embarking on plans to build a fleet of 5 passenger carrying craft. Space tourism? Preposterous! It'll take years, decades. Isn't that the consensus? According to The Australian Cadbury/Schweppes may be giving away a the prize of a space flight under the cap of your next bottle of 7 Up: 'Within hours, one of SpaceShipOne's sponsors and the "official beverage" of the AnsariX Prize, the soft drink 7Up, announced it would be offering the first free ticket into space.' Further, 'another company, Space Adventures, has already collected $US10,000 deposits from about 100 customers for its planned flights, which will cost less than $US100,000.' Last one into space is a rotten egg!"

13 of 494 comments (clear)

  1. My Penny Jar... by Kid+Zero · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is off and running. Perhaps in a few years.

    My wife even said I could. :D

    1. Re:My Penny Jar... by savagedome · · Score: 5, Funny

      You have a penny jar, 4 digit id and a wife?

      I don't what to make of this.

    2. Re:My Penny Jar... by Eccles · · Score: 5, Funny

      My wife even said I could.

      So did mine, until she realized I would be coming back.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
  2. Time to cut out that second cup of coffee. by scooby111 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I figure I can save up $100,000 by only eating out once a week or so..... for the next 400 years.

    It sounds neat and all, but I think I'll wait until it costs around $10,000 total. Hopefully I won't be too old by then.

  3. What Kind of Trip? by ewhac · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We're not talking extended orbital flight, are we? Just a quick peek above the atmosphere, then straight back down, right?

    While that might be fun, I don't consider it especially compelling -- certainly not to the tune of $100K.

    Schwab

    1. Re:What Kind of Trip? by eln · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe not for you, but if you were a multi-millionaire, $100K may seem a pretty small price tag for the opportunity to do something truly unique like this. This is not targetting the average man on the street, it's an exotic vacation for the very rich.

      This was pretty much the aim of SpaceShip One from the beginning. The X-Prize just helped to give it that extra edge of excitement and competition that makes the media drool and gets you lots of free press. Winning it is a springboard to the tourism industry, but it wasn't the primary goal. This thing would have been eventually used for space tourism whether it won the X-Prize or not.

    2. Re:What Kind of Trip? by LetterJ · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Please note that most real leaps in technology are only available to the fabulously wealthy at first.

      Just look at airplanes. The first commercial flights were really expensive and only an exotic diversion for the rich. Now, I can fly across this country and back again for a couple of hundred bucks.

      Cars were quite expensive until the Model T revolutionized the manufacture and made them cheap enough for everyone.

      Entry level computers were multi-thousand dollar machines as recent as 5-10 years ago and now you can have a new machine every year for under $1 a day.

      The only way that "affordable for the average person" arrives is to go through a phase of "if you have to ask, you can't afford it" first.

  4. i can see it now..... by to_kallon · · Score: 5, Funny

    congratulations, dave, you won a trip into space. but i have been hacked by pepsi and you must now die. i'm sorry dave.

    --


    The only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it.
    -Oscar Wilde
  5. In Related News... by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 5, Funny

    Mello Yellow will be offering a school bus ride across the US as its prize.

    --
    If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
  6. This is a good thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For those of you rolling your eyes at the $100,000 cost, the thing is about technology is that it is a rolling snowball; the effect gets bigger and bigger.

    Just last week, spaceflight was only for NASA, Russian Astronauts, and Dennis Tito. Today, it is for rich multimillionaires with $100,000 to blow. A few years from now, it will be for rich millionaires with $10,000 to blow. Soon enough, we might have the 'M' prize for first privately owned craft to go to the moon. And this will probably be way after the Space Shuttle program got replaced by Southwest Spacelines.

    Sound familiar? Samething happened with computers. First, the CEO of IBM said that only about eight would be necessary for all of humanity. Then came the mainframes, then came the minicomputers, and then came the personal computers. Now my PDA has more processing power than my computer had only eight years ago.

    Its an inevitable process, and I look forward to observing it.

  7. So which tourists will be the first.... by tktk · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...to join the 65 Mile High Club?

  8. Re:Damn... by Bastian · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now there won't be any place where I can go to avoid the tourists

    What about Euro Disney?

  9. 7-Up In Space: NASA's Research by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well, what do you know. NASA has already done this research! The bubbles all stay distributed throughout the drink, BUT an even bigger problem is that the bubbles go all the way through the astronaut's entire digestive system, because they don't "float" to the top of their stomach like they do when there is gravity!