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New NASA Admin Griffin Cleans House

Doug Dante writes "Michael D. Griffin, the new NASA Administrator, has given 20 senior NASA officials their walking papers, in a first purge that can see as many as 50 loose their positions, reports the Washington Post. Included are Associate Administrator for Space Operations William F. Readdy, and his deputy Air Force Maj. Gen. Michael C. Kostelnik (retired)."

299 comments

  1. Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by CyricZ · · Score: 0

    Will the be bringing in real engineers? Real engineers, rather than bureaucrats, are the only way that NASA can be revitalized.

    --
    Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
    1. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Shafe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd go a step further. Bring in REAL engineers as well as entrepreneurs. Get guys with some ambition and a sense for getting a goal completed. Triage your remaining senior staff and fill it up with young MIT grads.

    2. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by AnusesCheeses · · Score: 0, Troll

      I would rather Cal Tech grads, personally.

    3. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by CyricZ · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It really doesn't matter what school they graduated from. As long as their background is in engineering, rather than political pandering, then things will improve at NASA. Real engineers practicing real engineering will prevent probes from being lost on a routine basis, and space shuttles from blowing up every so often.

      --
      Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
    4. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by nomadic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Will the be bringing in real engineers? Real engineers, rather than bureaucrats, are the only way that NASA can be revitalized.

      William Readdy, the first person named in the story, is an aerospace engineer. Michael Kostelnik, the only other person specifically mentioned, is a mechanical engineer. Why do you (and a lot of people) assume that NASA is run by bureaucrats, or that engineers can't BE bureaucrats, or that engineers are somehow wiser, nobler, and better able to run the agency than non-engineers?

    5. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by HateBreeder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I assure you, politicians don't build probes nor space shuttles.

      Real engineers worked on these amazing technological feats, and ... accidents happen. People make mistakes. it's all part of being human.
      ranting about it, or making ridiculous claims like, no real engineers working for nasa, just discredits any of your other, possibly correct, claims.

      --
      Sigs are for the weak.
    6. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by spac3manspiff · · Score: 1

      Too bad google is probably hiring the ex-nasa/real engineers.

    7. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Real engineers practicing real engineering will prevent probes from being lost on a routine basis, and space shuttles from blowing up every so often.

      Why do you have this much faith in "engineers"?

    8. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by CmdrTaco+Is+Retarded · · Score: 1

      According to engineers themselves, they have to go through an accredited education program then they have to go through a special certification program.

      The certification means that engineers are qualified and infallable.

    9. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Bluetick · · Score: 1

      No they'll outsource it to the lowest bidder.

    10. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by indy_Muad'Dib · · Score: 1

      I assure you, politicians don't build probes nor space shuttles.

      politicians may not make the space exploration vessels but they do have a huge hand in making sure they are made with the lowest quality materials while lining their pockets with the excess funds.

    11. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well John Kerry managed to slip through the cracks.

    12. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by CmdrTaco+Is+Retarded · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the bulk of Google's hiring is with computer scientists, not engineers.

    13. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by s.fontinalis · · Score: 1

      May I reccomend you read the book "To Engineer is Human: The Role of Failure in Succesful Design" by Henry Petroski? Engineers most certainly make mistakes. Whether the NASA problems are the result of engineering errors is a different kettle of fish...

    14. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by meatspray · · Score: 1

      More of a problem in project management.

      Not all accidents just "happen". These are by in large very preventable engineering and managerial failures.

      Launching a shuttle well below the temperature at which the component manufacturers warn against is no accident. Not running an impromptu check to see if damage occurred during the takeoff after they noticed something wrong isn't much better. Even if they didn't have anything they could really do about it, they could have tried, contemplated a rescue (soviet or otherwise) or had time to make peace. Only the worst of what goes on makes it to the press. These types of problems don't just appear at the top level. You'll find these kind of decisions going on all the time just without the coin landing tails.

      You can't leave people in power that put their careers ahead of safety and the lives of their heroes. They need to get more people in there that don't just ignore problems/dangers because they're high risk or could have a negative impact on their job. Yes there is inherent risk in the what they do, but to simply push off serious problems and say FEH, just a little more risk is unconscionable.

      Some young blood might be good, headstrong people whose morals still outweigh their lust for their careers. The workforce would still have to be tempered by experience and some neighsayers though.

      I'm not saying everyone getting canned is a bad person or just doesn't care, but it would appear there's some bad blood in NASA and I'm very happy to see the administration trying earnestly it getting ousted. (even if they're just trying to keep their jobs)

    15. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by nospam007 · · Score: 0, Troll

      >>I assure you, politicians don't build probes nor space shuttles.
      ---
      No, but they keep for example middle-age measure systems still valid here after 95% of the planet switched to modern times a century ago.

      As we saw, that downs probes too.

    16. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Using the english system downs probes? Wow. Racist space probes don't like ancient measures?

    17. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by rijrunner · · Score: 1

      It is a bit more problematic than that. If you look closer at the specifics of what he wants to do, he's assuming certain technical decisions. He is expecting CEV to weigh in over 50k pounds. He is putting shuttle derived tech into the mix.

      When someone hires engineering staff based upon preconcieved technical solutions, that is just politics wearing a different mask for the day.

    18. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by HateBreeder · · Score: 1

      Your arguments are indeed true, so you would probably agree to that getting "better" engineers into NASA, as the grand-parent propsed, won't solve the problem.
      Assigning these engineers to managerial positions might, though.

      --
      Sigs are for the weak.
    19. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by meatspray · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Really, I'm not completely sure better is even a problem per se. I'm not working on the shuttle project or anything, but I don't really thing that the things aren't getting brought to the attention of people in charge.

      Really, I say, swap out for better decision makers and let loose anyone that can't be deprogrammed from the don't tell the king bad news, it pisses him off mentality.

      If you could take an objective non-engineer and graft them physically to a stone cold righteous logic wielding geek in the know, I think it would all work out in the end. Any engineer in a management position for a succifient period of time will eventually slip down the dark side of bureaucracy .

    20. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      But politicians are the one who still said "go" after the engineers complained that it wasn't safe.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    21. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your sentence no verb.

    22. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love the idea "neighsayers" at NASA! Really, since I doubt many horses work at NASA, you probably meant "naysayers".

    23. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by dgatwood · · Score: 1
      Good engineers rarely make good managers. In fact, one could argue that putting an engineer in a manager position could be part of the problem.

      I could easily see a situation where someone with significant experience at management would know how to shout in ways that the upper management would listen/understand, while an engineer might not. I'm not saying that's what happened in any of these situations at NASA, but I wouldn't rule it out.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    24. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and you don't think this has been tried in various industries? the clue that you are missing is that people suck. that means engineers suck. this means that while engineers will have strenghts in areas that might seem key to success, they will also have weaknesses that completely fuck them.

    25. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The sentence was fine. It is called a expressive nomiatve.

    26. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by richdun · · Score: 1

      Let's settle this whole MIT-Cal Tech thing once and for all. Hire Illinois Tech grads. Problem solved.

    27. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Shafe · · Score: 1

      So we go to Cornell...
      It's in the middle of nowhere but we really don't care.

      MIT, Cal Tech, Cornell, Stanford -- whatever. Just get some young blood designing the hardware and some young entrepreneurs coming up with ways to make space exploration affordable, efficient, and exciting!

    28. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by dnoyeb · · Score: 1

      Lol, naieve. Ford/GM are full of _real_ engineers. It matters not. Management will always bring in their own 'cabinet' one way or another.

      What you want is GOOD engineers, not XYZ's brother, cousin, golf buddy, etc...

      How you get integrity I just don't know.

    29. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      Real engineers, rather than bureaucrats, are the only way that NASA can be revitalized.

      NASA already has plenty of real engineers. This is just a reorg of the top brass to make sure the current administration's manned Mars missions fantasies have a loyal following. Then the next administration will have to clean house again, and everyone will be complaining about all the money NASA wasted on pie-in-the-sky projects. Why don't people ever learn to blame the policy makers instead of those who have to follow orders?

    30. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by axlr8or · · Score: 1

      With a name like yours, how can you say anything constructive? Real engineers? ANYONE can practice bad politics. Even engineers. Real engineers don't care squat about politics. They put it on the last burner and concentrate on what really matters. Thats because they are 'Hackers', 'the ultimate geek', a term that has lost its definition thanks to the media and morons.

    31. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by axlr8or · · Score: 1

      Although I'm not sure of the quality of the engineers at Nasa, I can tell you this. I agree with your assertion about blaming policy makers. I will blame them right now. BLAME BLAME BLAME:D Doesn't seem like there is anyplace that can't reach with their slimey tenticles.

    32. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We have been observing Mr Griffin for some weeks now and he is either very smart or VERY stupid. Based on his actions he appears to be endorsing- without a lot of real understanding- an exploration architecture that is "Shuttle derived". Based on analysis of these hardware configurations the only thing that will be in the least like today's shuttle hardware is that the ET will still be orange. Tens of billions will be required to modify the existing flight and ground hardware and software and that will only get you to LEO. The really key element of exploration - lunar landers, habitats and the rest are ignored. And the shuttle hardware will prove to be so expensive to maintain and has so many entrenched entities that ensure the continuation of obsolete systems that we will never return to the moon much less Mars. We simply won't have the resources.

      Numerous options are available to him that have all the capability to not only go to the moon soon but are directly extensible to Mars exploration. And these are MUCH cheaper than shuttle based architectures. But the assessment of these EELV -derived vehicles was effectively halted when he took his job. The Shuttle huggers seem to have surrounded him and reinforced his rudimentary and distorted understanding of launch operations and exploration architectures such that only the Shuttle can meet their trumped-up demands.

      Based on rumor in the industry it now appears that a CEV weighing at least 20-30 Metric tons is viewed as mandatory and a moon mission requires 200- 300 initial tons to LEO. Both of these are patently absurd and only serve to justify continued use of overpriced and outmoded shuttle hardware. Without optimization a very advanced lunar mission can be accomplished with only two 65 metric ton lifts to LEO. But you have to THINK differently than Apollo and Space Station to make these missions happen. Right now mission planners at NASA appear to be imposing demands that would effectively prevent transoceanic flights on twin-engined aircraft if they were imposed on the airline industry.

      If he is in fact very stupid he will follow these shuttle-derived paths and get nowhere after spending billions. And after this final fiasco NASA will be done as an entity- it will never be seen as a center for excellence again and will be ripe for termination. Hell _I_ would vote to end it then. Perhaps that is the ultimate intent. If so it is a sad reflection on the depths to which our culture has sunk.

      If he is very smart he will use the outlandish assumptions and costs of these shuttle based systems and archtectures to show that the NASA paradigm is bankrupt and that a new path which engages industry partners as equals is required if any real exploration is to be done in our lifetimes. This will require some non-blunt thinking but is MANDATORY for success.

      NASA engineers are very smart as individuals but their energies are not harnessed in any particular direction. Often they are solving problems that are academically interesting but have no prime bearing on doing real exploration. A lot of interesting but dead-end hardware has been designed at incredible expense. Often the baby if thrown out with the bathwater when a failure is encountered. That is often the result of intervention from milquetoast mediocre-minded managers who can't stomach such stumbles even when they are essential to the advancement of key technologies. The best engineers there CRAVE a mission that will mean their efforts will mean something to posterity- not just another AIAA paper on esoteric crap.

      Industry has the detail design and manufacturing know-how that must be put to use to build the machines for exploration. They too want a mission that makes sense- at least the ones who are not just trying to preserve some shuttle hardware as a jobs program- those are a pitiful bunch- and fortunately in the minority. These two entities have all the pieces of exploration puzzle before them. We only need the will to finish the picture. And t

    33. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Why is it that non-technical types argue that they can manage technical jobs as good as, or better, than any person of a technical background?

      Would you hire an engineer to be the CFO of an advertising agency? Probably not. So why hire a sales & marketing person to run a technical organization, who has no technical background?

      I'll throw out Carly F, the rube who was running Yahoo for awhile, and all the other people who have originated in Sales and Marketing to become CEOs who have failed brilliantly in their jobs.

      At some point, even the person who has the "best" technical people under him or her to provide advice has to make a decisions based purely on technical data. "I don't know, what do you think" at that point is not an option.

    34. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Would you hire an engineer to be the CFO of an advertising agency?

      Sure I would, if they could do the job. I've met plenty of people who have jobs wildly different from their background. I've met JDs in marketing, MDs in sales, and engineers everywhere.

      Probably not. So why hire a sales & marketing person to run a technical organization, who has no technical background?

      You're assuming that if you're not in tech, you're in sales and marketing. There are other fields that exist, and running NASA means you have to a lot more than make technical decisions.

      At some point, even the person who has the "best" technical people under him or her to provide advice has to make a decisions based purely on technical data. "I don't know, what do you think" at that point is not an option.

      But you're never going to find someone with a sufficient background to be able to make all the different decisions. NASA just does too much stuff.

      Plus you're missing the main question of my post, which was "why do you think the engineers aren't in charge now?"

    35. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by sakshale · · Score: 1
      Good engineers rarely make good managers.
      Amen! One of the worst managers I worked for at NASA was a top project engineer -- with zero people skills. The problem with NASA is management by committee -- with Congress being that committee. micromanagement by Congress, via budgetary controls, smothering regulations and incompitant political appointees, guarantees NASA's failure.

      Here's hoping that the private sector initiatives boldly go where no govie has gone before.
      --
      For every problem there is a solution that is simple, obvious and wrong.
    36. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by salesgeek · · Score: 1

      Why is it that non-technical types argue that they can manage technical jobs as good as, or better, than any person of a technical background?

      Would you hire an engineer to be the CFO of an advertising agency? Probably not. So why hire a sales & marketing person to run a technical organization, who has no technical background?


      Because a business is not a technical organization. It is a business. CEOs are decision makers and they get paid to make correct decisions more than incorrect ones. Unfortunately, many CEOs make poor, irresponsible, decisions because of lack of information - or bad information.

      At some point, even the person who has the "best" technical people under him or her to provide advice has to make a decisions based purely on technical data. "I don't know, what do you think" at that point is not an option.

      Actually this is flat out wrong. Differing to an expert is a decision. Problem is that many a CEO doesn't have the foresight to hire people capable of making decisions - and when they do hire right, many still don't have the humility and dignity to differ to someone under them.

      --
      -- $G
    37. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't count on it. If you can learn, and muck around with numbers, Google want you.

      And don't forget the moonbase!

      --
      How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
    38. Re: Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by Riot+Nrrrrd · · Score: 1

      I would rather it be someone that knows the correct spelling of "Caltech", personally. Like-a moi :)

      (Signed, someone who went to Caltech and works at NASA)

      --
      .signature? Why, I haven't heard that word since before the Clone Wars ...
    39. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by rijrunner · · Score: 1

      I am leaning towards very stupid. No vehicle in the stated CEV performance range has ever weighed more than 10k. The Apollo CM was only 5k. A Service module for LEO would be only another 5k, or so - even with a cargo hold.

      When you see an engineering statement "this vehicle in this range will weigh X amount" and then research the issue and find the no other vehicle in history operating in that performance range has been in that weight range, then there is something else driving the engineering.

      I was leery of CEV when they specified EELV in the specs as there are other launch vehicles available in the correct launch mass range that could have been used. It should have been an open spec with the design teams making proposals based upon a) cost b) safety and c) performance. Design to a spec. I am even more leery now that they have gone to the trouble of putting "shuttle-derived" back on the board with the SRB's as their choice of derivation. Those were designed for lateral loads, not vertical loads. They are not throttable. They are not startable/stopable and nearly every single failure mode is "loss of crew".

      I do have more hope in things like SpaceX. If they can deliver their vehicle at the cost/performance they seem to be leaning towards, then there are a number of companies who can build an additional manned component. It is a much lower barrier to entry. Multi-billion projects? You're right. No one out there to do it. But, a series of $10-$100 million projects aimed at leveraging off existing hardware is doable.

    40. Re:Will they bring in _real_ engineers now? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      fill it up with young MIT grads

      But MIT Kids drive people crazy.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  2. people or system? by moz25 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This makes me wonder to which extent the bureaucracy is to blame (or attribute) to "entrenched" managers or the whole system. In this case, it is apparently believed that the top layer of people keep an inefficient system intact. The question is: can one change the nature of a system by replacing the managing people in that system?

    1. Re:people or system? by Detritus · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I wouldn't say that it is a matter of efficiency. When you get to the level of NASA Headquarters, politics becomes extremely important. You aren't a practicing scientist or engineer, you are an upper-level manager, concerned about funding and budgets in an environment where everyone is fighting over a limited and shrinking pot of money. Not only that, but you have to defend and sell your programs to the executive branch and Congress. It's not like someone hands you a check and says "Design, launch and operate a spacecraft that does X".

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    2. Re:people or system? by vertinox · · Score: 1

      Yes.

      If you hire no one that is familiar with the system or it's workings or policies, then by default the system will have changed since no one knows what to do. Especially if the new hires have none of the old guard to ask about "how things are done"....

      Or at the least will have caused a great deal of confusion and wated time, but that's still change isn't it?

      --
      "I am the king of the Romans, and am superior to rules of grammar!"
      -Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor (1368-1437)
    3. Re:people or system? by HardCase · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Shame on me for not RTFA, but in any government agency, it's customary for a new director to request the resignations of senior managers. It doesn't mean that he accepts them (or accepts all of them), but it's customary to submit them. The fact that it's NASA makes it newsworthy to /., I guess, but it happens in virtually every government agency, from the feds right down to your city's offices.

      Changing the management probably won't have an immediate effect on the programs, but every agency director wants people in senior offices who match up to his standards of performance and trust. It does make it easier to introduce change when the people on your team are, well, on your team.

      -h-

    4. Re:people or system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Seems pretty typical to me. Every med-large business I've ever worked for has this happen every so often. A side benefit to the new manager is time to "rebuild", during which they don't have to get any real work done.

      Sometimes it actually works out well, sometimes its a disaster. Its one reason why good management can actually be important. :)

    5. Re:people or system? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The question is: can one change the nature of a system by replacing the managing people in that system?

      Yes, one can. In fact, it's probably a necessary step; the nature of an organisation is effectively defined by how it is managed.

      (Before anyone chimes in with the obvious counter: if the grunts are poor but the management is good, then it is already in the nature of the system that the grunts will be improved or replaced, it just hasn't had time to happen yet. In fact, this is quite likely to be the situation you're in immediately after replacing poor management with better.)

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    6. Re:people or system? by HiThere · · Score: 1

      OTOH, a lot of the problems at NASA appear to be systemic. Removing the top managers may be a necessary step towards fixing the problems, but it won't do so without a massive restructuring.

      However, one may well be skeptical that fixing the problems at NASA is the real intent of the new management. The entire system appears to be highly political, and as such patronage is more likely to be the reason that problem solving. Just because this would be a necessary step towards restructuring the system doesn't mean that it's intended to accomplish that end, or that the succeeding steps will also be the ones that are necessary. (E.g. the organizational structure needs to be readjusted so that warning of problems aren't swept under the rug if it's inconvenient to address the problem. Will it be? What structure would allow a low level engineer's warning to be heard when his supervisor didn't want to think about it?)

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    7. Re:people or system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After working as a contractor at one NASA center, I can tell you that a lot of the civil servants there have it very easy, and what would get you fired from jobs in the public sector have little effect. This is not true of everyone -- there were some very good people that I worked with. But I remember being dismayed by the behavior of a few. It's all because of how difficult it is to discipline and/or terminate a civil servant. That, and almost all the real work is done by contractors now (or so it seems to me), and not the civil servants. If anything goes wrong, the civil servants point at contractors, and it is usually the contractor that pays. [I know contractors face that problem at a lot of places, but it really was a lot worse at the center I worked at than anywhere else I worked as a contractor or with contractors.

      NASA has needed changes like this for a very long time. I'm glad they are finally getting it. I just hope that the public spin on all of this is accurate, and that this house cleaning will really result in engineers and scientists filling those vacancies, and is not just an excuse to clear away a bunch of people to make room for more "friends" of politicians.

    8. Re:people or system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many public employees hate contrators. Hireing contrators are is often interpreted as a management that does not have confidence in its employees. Technical employees are often resentfull as they get moved off of interesting technical work to manage contrators. This leads to low morale, and poor relations.

      I don't agree with their opinion, but there it is.

    9. Re:people or system? by BDew · · Score: 1

      True to some extent, but this something more. Griffin is getting rid of the entire "political" level of the agency (the Associate Administrators) and is also reassiging between 30 and 50 SES positions, which are the top level civil service people - people who do not normally get touched by changes of leadership, or even administration. 50 would be pretty close to the entire group of SESers in the agency.

      Griffin has been thinking about this for 15 years, since he left during the beginning of the Goldin tenure.

      --
      "Fifty million Americans can't be wrong," said Rep. Billy Tauzin. Gore - 50,999,897 Bush - 50,456,002
    10. Re:people or system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People tend to value their own position. Ask any programmer around here who the most valuable people at a software company are. They will say programmers. The managers at those same companies are dumping programmers and outsourcing, but probably not dumping their managers. Programmers despise marketing, but the marketing guys will point out that writing software doesn't pay the bills unless you sell it. Everyone thinks that their job in important.

      So, come time for layoffs and the management doesn't usually think about laying off management. After all, they are important, right? Plus, they get together the managers to plan the cutbacks and nobody at the table is going to say, "Hey, I am really superfluous to my department, I should be the first to go", or even, "John over there is useless, we should get rid of him. Sorry, John." So over time you accumulate useless managers because they never get let go. The company I work for was once down to 8 managers and 7 non-managers (3 actual production staff, 1 engineer.)

      Then, once in a while, the top guy realizes what is going on and sets out to fix things, and suddenly management gets ripped apart. It can be ugly, because you are making up for 5 layoffs all at once.

      There's also the option of just making room for new blood. Technical professions, and management thereof, aren't as physically demanding as a lot of fields. A 70 year old can sit at a computer as well as a 30 year old. You can end up with a lot of guys who just won't retire to make room for the younger people who deserve a chance. Eventually you have to throw them out, very politely, and get on with things, or your next generation is going to find somewhere else to grow.

    11. Re:people or system? by GermanShorthair · · Score: 0

      YES. Even a non-top level manager can effect a large change given the right conditions. I've seen things change in private businesses with even the worker-bees' ideas and approaches to issues that have influenced CEO-level mandates and company SOPs. Its ALL about mgmt and its entire unique mentality. THe disclaimer is, I've never worked intimately with a large gummint organization (besides the military for a brief tenure), so my comments could quite possibly be irrelevant in the context of a NASA-type org.

      --
      Karma: Bad
    12. Re:people or system? by macdaddy357 · · Score: 1

      Well, whoever put the dad from Family Guy in charge of NASA is the one who should be fired! Oh wait, that's Peter Griffin.

      --
      How ya like dat?
    13. Re:people or system? by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      Sounds like they need an Easy button.

    14. Re:people or system? by Feztaa · · Score: 2, Interesting

      it's customary for a new director to request the resignations of senior managers. It doesn't mean that he accepts them (or accepts all of them), but it's customary to submit them.

      What the hell, is that like some kind of neo-feudal way of pledging allegiance to the new King? Like acknowledging that he does in fact have the power to fire you at any time?

    15. Re:people or system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      What the hell, is that like some kind of neo-feudal way of pledging allegiance to the new King? Like acknowledging that he does in fact have the power to fire you at any time?


      Nope, it's just one of those things that comes with a high appointed office. Get over it. You're showing your social ignorance.

    16. Re:people or system? by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      It's customarily done as a way to let the new administrator make changes without having to go out and actually fire those people. Avoids a lot of drama, and is a good thing.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  3. Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by saskboy · · Score: 5, Funny

    "in a first purge that can see as many as 50 loose their positions"

    I hear they are looking for replacements, that know the difference between the word "loose" and "lose".

    The new, "tighter" jobs are said to pay much less, however.

    --
    Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    1. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by SilentChris · · Score: 2

      What I want to know is why people keep misspelling "lose". It seems like I see this every day. And it's not even phonetically correct (it's easy to see "loose" would be pronounced "looce").

    2. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're also looking for replacements who passed middle school English and know when to use " who" in place of ", that."

    3. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by A.T.+Hun · · Score: 1

      Know thyme too loose!

    4. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by saskboy · · Score: 1

      "know when to use " who" in place of ", that.""

      You're asuming that the replacements will be human. "That" implies that they will not be. Why replace humans, with other humans? They're NASA, they can build robot replacements.

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    5. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Darth+Maul · · Score: 1


      Why do I keep seeing this awful spelling mistake all over the IntarWeb? It's quite annoying, as it doesn't even sound correct if you just read the stupid sentence. Lose and losing... Why don't they also just go for the past-tense of something being "loost".

      --
      --- witty signature
    6. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by HateBreeder · · Score: 1

      As a non-english speaker, I can tell you that it's "hard" to see that although "lose" is spelled with just one 'o' it's pronounced as "looz" and not "loz".

      --
      Sigs are for the weak.
    7. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Colonel+Blimp · · Score: 1

      I swear, no one can spell lose on the internet. What a looser! (sic)

    8. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by jeffy124 · · Score: 1

      there used to be a poster crusading around these parts doing nothing but point out the loose/lose thing to posters who used loose instead of lose. Sadly, he went on hiatus for a few months, came back, then left again, and will reach two years of being MIA next month.

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
    9. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The problem is in the current school system. The way school is structured now, they DON'T correct spelling mistakes for the first few years of schooling. This is supposedly to build up "self-esteem" (cough) by not telling them they're wrong.

      Consequently, the kids are taught to "spell" everything by phonetics. "loo" is the long-o sound, "lo" (like "low") is the short-o sound. Hence a lot of these children (neo-idiots) stick "loo" instead of "lo" on "se" to make "loose".

      Couple that with the current set of rap morons whose careers thrive on purposeful mis-spellings of standard words, and presto... an entire generation who can't spell and look like complete morons.

    10. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1
      Well, you know, the 50 engineering positions were loosed upon unsuspecting villagers to quell a peasant revolt.

      "Help! Help! The knights are loosing mechanical engineers on us! Run for your lives!"

      *fwap* (catapult launching mechanical engineer) "Young's modulus!" *splat* (more villagers flee the carnage)

      *fwap* (catapult launching electrical engineer) "If you apply a bandpass filter with a cut-off frequency of 25 MHz here..." *splat* (more villagers crushed from the tremendous force of a rapidly falling EE)

    11. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you've gone comma mad!

    12. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's worse is that I can't read either word correctly anymore. Every time I see either "lose" or "loose" in a sentance, I have to come to a full stop and figure out which word they actually want, even when they use it correctly.

      Loose spelling is a lose-lose situation.

    13. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Coach+Mike · · Score: 1

      "I hear they are looking for replacements, that know the difference between the word 'loose' and 'lose'."

      I hear they are looking for replacements that can identify comma splices as well.

    14. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by dbIII · · Score: 3, Interesting
      as many as 50 loose their positions
      Cry havoc! And let loose the jobs of war!

      To those who correct spelling an grammar on the net, you are the unorthodox ones. The language of the net is broken english and your dictionary does not apply beyond your border.

    15. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a H4xx0r, I agree with the parent. We need to use our 1337 5k1llz to stop the threat of rappers with bad 5p311ing.

    16. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ones that can spot irony, will be paid bonuses. Yes there are, extra commas. But try reading it with a pause at that point, and it will still make sense.

    17. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought I was the only one having that problem. If I'm reading something in print then I am less likely to slow down when reaching "lose"/"loose". It is only when reading something on the web that I slow down.

    18. Re:Begins the glut of spelling nazis at NASA by spuzzzzzzz · · Score: 1

      No.

      No time to lose.
      time to lose....to lose. Like Toulouse in France...

      --

      Don't you hate meta-sigs?
  4. Walking papers? by Timesprout · · Score: 3, Funny

    Surely NASA should bind and gag you before strapping to you the back of a just about to be launched rocket if they were firing you.

    --
    Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
    What truth?
    There is no dupe
    1. Re:Walking papers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This would have been even more funny had you previewed it. Read it out loud to yourself.

  5. Baby & bathwater... by jpellino · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How about you get thru the current Mars & Cassini missions and GET THE SHUTTLE BACK UP before you sack the leaders of those three programs - two of which are very big loud & public successes (in NASA-land anyway) and the third had better be or else you'll be looking at barely enough authorization funds to make with two large-ish slingshots.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
    1. Re:Baby & bathwater... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because they don't care about going to space? Seriously. They don't. Do you think Bush will actually carry through on his promise? The only promises he keeps are to those with money and oil. I'm a Republican and it disgusts me.

    2. Re:Baby & bathwater... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The shuttle is one of the biggest wastes of money and manpower ever.

    3. Re:Baby & bathwater... by rpsoucy · · Score: 1

      I've seen a lot of cases where the "leader" doesn't know anything about the project and the real people who know what's going on are the minions below him. I'm guessing this is usually the case at NASA

    4. Re:Baby & bathwater... by Illserve · · Score: 1

      How about you consider that the bloated managerial staff could be the reason that these programs are foundering...

    5. Re:Baby & bathwater... by Edward+Ka-Spel · · Score: 2, Informative

      These people really have little to do with the detailed running of these programs. I'm sure that those efforts will continue on just fine. BTW: The article didn't mention it, but most of the people named have only been there for a year or two. The were all put there by the previous administrator, O'Keefe. It's not like Griffin is destroying decades of experience. Many of these people were bean counters, appointed by a bean counter.

    6. Re:Baby & bathwater... by vsprintf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The shuttle is one of the biggest wastes of money and manpower ever.

      Your numerous arguments and evidence are compelling, however, I'll disagree. Like most of the space program, the shuttle has been a successful experiment, and much has been learned. There have been a couple of missions that supplied us with innovative earth observation data, and without the shuttle, the ISS wouldn't exist. You may not consider that worthwhile, but I do. Hindsight is a wonderful thing that can be used only after you've been taken to a position where you can look back.

    7. Re:Baby & bathwater... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      vsprintf wrote: "without the shuttle, the ISS wouldn't exist"

      Nonsense. The ISS could have been built for a fraction of the price using Saturn boosters. The shuttle is an outrageously expensive failure that has set space exploration back by decades.

    8. Re:Baby & bathwater... by pfdietz · · Score: 1

      The shuttle wasn't intended to be an experiment. It was intended to be a working vehicle. Its goal was to reduce the cost of launching to orbit. It was on this basis that the shuttle was funded in the first place.

      It utterly failed to achieve this goal. In doing so, it blocked the continued development of expendable launchers in the US that very likely would have reduced launch costs (as they did in Europe and USSR/Russia.) We are considerably worse off today in space because of the shuttle.

      As for the ISS not existing: that would be a huge benefit! The only significant achievement of the ISS is to make the shuttle program look good in comparison. Something like ISS only makes sense if you have a workable, economic launch system, which the shuttle never was. ISS was based on the lie that the shuttle wasn't failing, and, like anything based on a lie, became a fiasco.

    9. Re:Baby & bathwater... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      The shuttle wasn't intended to be an experiment. It was intended to be a working vehicle. Its goal was to reduce the cost of launching to orbit.

      The purported goal has nothing to do with it. Anything that has not been tried before is an experiment. The fact that it worked makes it a successful experiment.

      Something like ISS only makes sense if you have a workable, economic launch system, which the shuttle never was.

      It has nothing to do with economics. Once again, it's an experiment in building orbital platforms following Skylab and Mir. Perhaps if the rest of us were all as brilliant as you we wouldn't need to try things out. I'm sure that with you in charge, a space station never would have suffered the problems and component failures that the ISS has, and we wouldn't have needed to learn from it. (In case you're still wondering, that was sarcasm.)

    10. Re:Baby & bathwater... by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1

      Fine then, as an experiment in cheap, reliable, regular transport to space, Shuttle was a failure.

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
    11. Re:Baby & bathwater... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      Fine then, as an experiment in cheap, reliable, regular transport to space, Shuttle was a failure.

      Although NASA is not a for-profit organization with an interest in "cheap", cheap in relation to what other reusable space transport that was tried, tested, and could support the assembly need of the ISS? Put the words "cheap" and "NASA" together, and you have the press screaming about shortcuts and a Congressional investigation.

      As for "reliable", it has been far more reliable than early airplanes or LTA craft which didn't face anywhere near the challenges the shuttle has.

      As for "regular", if there hadn't been those claims about NASA doing things on the "cheap" and the public incited by the media frenzy, there wouldn't have been such a long interruption. The astronauts have never sought delays in the program.

      As I said before, hindsight is a wonderful thing when you've been brought to a point where you can look back. Being unable to realize that you're looking back is being shortsighted. As for "failure", you're entitled to your opinion - it's a free country.

    12. Re:Baby & bathwater... by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1
      It's not hindsight - I'm actually (well, as of next month) a history PhD student who will be studying contemporary perceptions of precisely those early airplanes and LTA craft you mention. So I'm not into projecting current views backwards. Instead I'm talking about what Shuttle was supposedly going to be when it was proposed. I dunno how old you are, but I'm old enough to remember Columbia's first flight, and I still have all the newspaper articles about it I cut out about it at the time, as a major little space geek. Cheap, reliable and regular is what we were promised.

      Cheap? Yes, it was supposed to be cheap. Have a look through this annotated bibliography and search for "cost" - you'll see that in the 1970s it was often claimed that Shuttle would provide cheaper access to space (a "quantum leap" according to one article). I don't know what you are talking about with regard to cutting corners and so forth - in the 1970s this was not a public issue. After the massively costly Apollo and in such an economically uncertain period, space travel had to be done cheaply or not at all. At least it had be sold as cheap.

      Reliable? Not sure what early aircraft you are thinking of. Sure, it's much more reliable than the first generation or two of aircraft - Wright, Bleriot, Farman, Zeppelin. But those are the equivalent of Mercury, Gemini, Apollo. The proper comparison should be with the 1920s and 1930s, when you had breakthrough aircraft like the DC3, say, or the Empire class flying boats. These were far more reliable than the Shuttle in any terms you can think of. That's what we were promised. Something you could depend upon to get you up into space when you needed to go, not getting endlessly delayed because of maintenance or weather issues. (Safety is another reliability issue too - the DC3 sure didn't have a 3% flight failure rate.)

      Regular? I don't mean the grounding after the accidents, I mean the fact it was supposed to fly on the order of weekly, with a turnaround time of a month or so. Never happened. In fact originally it was claimed that the cost-effectiveness depended upon launching at the optimal (high) rate, but the Shuttle clearly requires far too much maintenance than was originally planned for this to work. (And who mentioned anything about the astronauts? I'm not having a go at them.)

      These factors were all part of the original justification for the Space Shuttle. You are the one who is employing hindsight to redefine its purpose - it wasn't meant to be an experimental vehicle at all, but a rugged, practical, cost-effective workhorse. If you are saying the original goals have been superseded, well, that's another argument.

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
    13. Re:Baby & bathwater... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      I dunno how old you are, but I'm old enough to remember Columbia's first flight, and I still have all the newspaper articles about it I cut out about it at the time, as a major little space geek.

      I remember watching the coverage of Shepard's first flight. Dad worked at Aerojet or JPL at the time, so there was no chance of missing it. I've followed the program ever since. I couldn't qualify as a military pilot because my eyesight wasn't perfect (the rules at the time), so my hopes for being an astronaut were dashed early on. Age took care of any later hopes.

      you'll see that in the 1970s it was often claimed that Shuttle would provide cheaper access to space (a "quantum leap" according to one article).

      Yes, I remember it being advertised as reusable, which could translate into savings over things like Apollo. If there was a big marketing campaign, it sure didn't make much of an impression on me, or perhaps I was sold already.

      I don't know what you are talking about with regard to cutting corners and so forth

      For someone claiming to be so well-versed in the program's history, you suffer remarkable tunnel vision. I guess you must have missed all the accusations that the Columbia's crew died because NASA put budget concerns and cost-savings over the safety of the astronauts. This is why it's not a good idea to put the words NASA and cheap in the same sentence.

      Reliable? Not sure what early aircraft you are thinking of. . . The proper comparison should be with the 1920s and 1930s, when you had breakthrough aircraft like the DC3, say, or the Empire class flying boats.

      I'd suggest you check the survival rate of the early test pilots (and planes) for military aircraft. Your comparison is invalid. The shuttle was the first American spacecraft that was not only reusable but also made controlled landings (not to mention the other features). It was the first of its kind, not a slightly larger or slightly faster improvement of an existing aircraft. (Compare the two - the shuttle doesn't bear any resemblance to an Apollo capsule.) Two failures in 113 missions is far better than Apollo's record of one disaster and one near-disaster scrubbed mission. The fatality ratio for the shuttle is also less.

      Regular? I don't mean the grounding after the accidents, I mean the fact it was supposed to fly on the order of weekly, with a turnaround time of a month or so.

      Perhaps there was some hype it didn't live up to. My car doesn't really get 36 MPG either, despite the government figures. 113 missions in about 20 years is pretty regular. The missions were so regular that I was one of the very few watching the launch when the Challenger exploded.

      You are the one who is employing hindsight to redefine its purpose - it wasn't meant to be an experimental vehicle at all, but a rugged, practical, cost-effective workhorse.

      The Mercury was an experimental vehicle. The Apollo was an experimental vehicle. The Skylab was an experimental vehicle. The shuttle is an experimental vehicle. SpaceShipOne is an experimental vehicle. The successor to the shuttle will be an experimental vehicle, no matter what the PR types say. Considering that it has done its job as a reusable LEO cargo transport, I'd say it has been proven as a rugged, practical workhorse. As to cost-effective, again, in comparison to which other resuable space transport that we have?

    14. Re:Baby & bathwater... by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1
      I remember watching the coverage of Shepard's first flight...

      OK, well, you've got me beat there! I'm jealous, I was just a baby when man last landed on the moon. The Shuttle was all I had.

      Yes, I remember it being advertised as reusable, which could translate into savings over things like Apollo. If there was a big marketing campaign, it sure didn't make much of an impression on me, or perhaps I was sold already.

      Well, it's pretty clear from that NASA bibliography that this is exactly how it was being sold. Not just in the press, but to Congress. You can find this in any standard history of the space program, eg in McDougall's ... The Heavens and the Earth, pp. 422-3: "The only major new program still in the running [in 1971] was a space shuttle meant to provide routine access to earth orbit at a much lower cost-per-pound than expendable rockets."

      For someone claiming to be so well-versed in the program's history, you suffer remarkable tunnel vision. I guess you must have missed all the accusations that the Columbia's crew died because NASA put budget concerns and cost-savings over the safety of the astronauts. This is why it's not a good idea to put the words NASA and cheap in the same sentence.

      I'm not sure what we are arguing about here. You seem to equate cheap with unsafe. Maybe that's so - but in that case, it seems rather foolish to use a manned spacecraft as a heavy lifter. Use a manned spacecraft to put people into space and nothing else. Use an unmanned spacecraft for payloads so you can get them up there cheaply. Cheap is good if you want get real space development going. But - I wasn't even saying Shuttle should be cheap (it shouldn't, if it's then going to be unsafe). I'm saying Shuttle was supposed to be cheap. It's not. That's all.

      Anyway, the very fact that such accusations were made suggests that there was a period when NASA and cheap did go together - and that period was the 1970s, which is what I am talking about here. I'm not saying safety was not a concern back then, but you know, there's a reason why both the Rogers commission and the CAIB were able to make safety recommendations - because safety was not the primary concern when the Shuttle was originally designed and built. In fact, the Rogers commission report noted: "Costs were the primary concern of NASA's selection board [for Shuttle contractors], particularly those incurred early in the program." (vol 1 chapter 6 p 120).

      I'd suggest you check the survival rate of the early test pilots (and planes) for military aircraft. Your comparison is invalid. The shuttle was the first American spacecraft that was not only reusable but also made controlled landings (not to mention the other features). It was the first of its kind, not a slightly larger or slightly faster improvement of an existing aircraft. (Compare the two - the shuttle doesn't bear any resemblance to an Apollo capsule.) Two failures in 113 missions is far better than Apollo's record of one disaster and one near-disaster scrubbed mission. The fatality ratio for the shuttle is also less.

      This is all irrelevent - to my point, anyway. All I am trying to get across is that Shuttle has not performed as initially advertised - nowhere near it. In science, when you perform an experiment, you make your predictions in advance. You don't perform the experiment first and then decide if it was successful or not. In those terms, the Shuttle was a failure, because it did not perform as it was supposed to. This does not mean it's a useless spacecraft. It still has a fine record. But as an experiment in cheap, reliable, regular access to orbit, it's a failure.

      Perhaps there was some hype it didn't live up to. My car doesn't really get 36 MPG either, despite the government figures. 113 missions in about 20 years is pretty regular. The missions were so regular that I was one of the very fe

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
    15. Re:Baby & bathwater... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      OK, well, you've got me beat there! I'm jealous, I was just a baby when man last landed on the moon.

      We were glued to the TV during the moon landing. Our TV was still B/W, but that was okay since the transmission was too. Once we recovered from the LEM's landing, we were expecting John Carter type bounding leaps across the lunar surface, and we got bunny-hops instead. It was educational, to say the least, about mistaken expectations. In any case, it was one of the most fascinating things I've ever seen. Of course it's widely available in replay now, but it was better in (vicarious) person when space travel was a very new thing.

      You can find this in any standard history of the space program, eg in McDougall's ... The Heavens and the Earth, pp. 422-3: "The only major new program still in the running [in 1971] was a space shuttle meant to provide routine access to earth orbit at a much lower cost-per-pound than expendable rockets."

      So? NASA proposes, and Congress disposes. The projects selected for continuation are done via the Congressional budget appropriation. As I recall, the shuttle was a keystone in the proposed space station (to eventually become the ISS). How much would it have cost to get the ISS building materials into orbit aboard an Apollo capsule?

      I'm not sure what we are arguing about here. You seem to equate cheap with unsafe.

      So does the rest of the world these days. You still haven't remembered the Columbia press coverage?

      Use a manned spacecraft to put people into space and nothing else. Use an unmanned spacecraft for payloads so you can get them up there cheaply.

      So use two missions in the place of one where you need to assemble the stuff you're lifting, as in the case of the ISS? And how are you going to get a platform for that mobile robotic arm?

      I'm saying Shuttle was supposed to be cheap. It's not. That's all.

      You still haven't shown that it isn't cheap in relation to the other shuttle program.

      In fact, the Rogers commission report noted: "Costs were the primary concern of NASA's selection board [for Shuttle contractors], particularly those incurred early in the program." (vol 1 chapter 6 p 120).

      Costs are a major concern for any US federal agency. There are laws (designed to protect the taxpayers) that may require an agency to select the lowest bidder against the agency's better judgement. I've posted a number of times about this in the past. If you need some (basic, totally non-secret) information about how government agency contracts work, we can take this offline.

      This is all irrelevent - to my point, anyway. All I am trying to get across is that Shuttle has not performed as initially advertised - nowhere near it.

      As advertised by whom? If you're as interested in history as you claim, perhaps you might want to use the FOIA to get the relevant NASA documents rather than relying on wire service tips and aerospace contractor presentations. As far as I'm concerned, it has done well, but that wouldn't fit in with your thesis, would it? It's all a matter of viewpoint.

      One early plan contemplated an eventual rate of a mission a week, but realism forced several downward revisions.

      Um, yes, that's called budgetary constraint. With enough money, you can do most anything. When Congress says, "Whoa", you whoa. NASA does not control their budget, unfortunately. You seem to have a problem separating proposals and possible projections from approvals and allocated funding.

      That's putting the cart before the horse.

      Really? It seems to me that horse did a yeoman's job of pulling the mandated cart. 111 times.

      There are no alternatives precisely because of the committment to Shuttle. A better question would be, what more cost-effective, reuseable spacecraft might you have if you hadn't been forced to use Shuttle?

      LOL. Again were back to perfect hindsight.

    16. Re:Baby & bathwater... by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1
      Firstly, thanks to Slashdot for eating my first attempt at this post ...

      So? NASA proposes, and Congress disposes. The projects selected for continuation are done via the Congressional budget appropriation.

      What's a non sequitur? How does this change the fact that - whoever is responsible - the Shuttle was originally supposed to be routine and cheap?

      As I recall, the shuttle was a keystone in the proposed space station (to eventually become the ISS). How much would it have cost to get the ISS building materials into orbit aboard an Apollo capsule?

      Straw man. Why would you use a tiny Apollo capsule to launch ISS components? They don't have to go to the Moon and back. You presumably remember Skylab; that was launched on top of a single Saturn V booster with the top stage replaced by the payload. One launch. 77,000 kg. That's three times the payload of the Shuttle, so you'd only need a third as many launches. (Admittedly Saturn V cost twice as much in 2005 dollars per launch as Shuttle - though with a longer production run unit costs would have come down - but that's still cheaper overall.)

      So does the rest of the world these days. You still haven't remembered the Columbia press coverage?

      I'll discuss the Columbia press coverage when you tell me why I should care about press articles written in 2003 when I am talking about the 1970s and 1980s! I don't see why you keep going on about this.

      So use two missions in the place of one where you need to assemble the stuff you're lifting, as in the case of the ISS?

      Why not? It's no more risky for the astronauts because there are still the same number of manned flights. Plus several unmanned launches could be sent up for every unmanned one, and perhaps assembly could be partly automated. Anyway, this method has already been used for the ISS. Not all elements have been delivered by the Shuttle: the control and service modules and the docking compartment were all delivered by unmanned Russian rockets.

      And how are you going to get a platform for that mobile robotic arm?

      I'm not an aerospace engineer, but I doubt there is no way to get the same functionality other than the Shuttle's arm. You could build a specialised, permanent platform for this, for one thing (just as the ISS has its own arm, this could be useful after construction too). The current way of doing things is not necessarily the only way or even the best way. Use your imagination.

      You still haven't shown that it isn't cheap in relation to the other shuttle program.

      What other shuttle program? Are you saying that because there is no other shuttle to compare it to, by definition it must be cheap? What absurd Panglossian logic.

      Anyway, the proper comparison is with other heavy lift systems. Ariane V is about $7k/kg to LEO (Saturn V would be about the same), and Proton is about $3k/kg. The Shuttle is $11k/kg. This is not cheap. And I assume I don't need to explain to you how important lowering this cost is for opening access to space and getting real space development kickstarted.

      Costs are a major concern for any US federal agency. There are laws (designed to protect the taxpayers) that may require an agency to select the lowest bidder against the agency's better judgement. I've posted a number of times about this in the past. If you need some (basic, totally non-secret) information about how government agency contracts work, we can take this offline.

      I'm well aware that costs are a "major concern", and that's as it should be. (Although the cost-plus system used hardly ensures cost-effectiveness.) But if you'll go back and read what I actually said, the Rogers commission's criticism was that cost was the primary concern; that is, more important than performance and safety. You'd also have to show that this legislation applied to NASA contracts during the Shuttle development phase. Plus - again - even if s

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
    17. Re:Baby & bathwater... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      Firstly, thanks to Slashdot for eating my first attempt at this post ...

      It did the same thing to my previous response. Perhaps it's a sign that the discussion is worn out. It does seem to be becoming redundant on both sides.

      How does this change the fact that - whoever is responsible - the Shuttle was originally supposed to be routine and cheap? [And several other arguments that said the same thing.]

      It was routine. I provided figures. 111 freakin' times. That's more often than I've had my tires rotated in my lifetime, which is a lot longer than the shuttle's. You still have not defined "cheap" other than to say the shuttle isn't it.

      Straw man. Why would you use a tiny Apollo capsule to launch ISS components? They don't have to go to the Moon and back.

      No straw man; it was an attempt to get you to look at the different purposes for the different craft. Ineffective, as usual.

      Why not? It's no more risky for the astronauts because there are still the same number of manned flights. Plus several unmanned launches could be sent up for every unmanned one, and perhaps assembly could be partly automated.

      Yes, of course. Running two programs instead of one would be far *cheaper*. Do you realize how much of NASA's funds get spent on the planning and support for different vehicles? Same thing for your possible assembly platform. It all costs money (apparently cheaper money than shuttle money?).

      What other shuttle program? Are you saying that because there is no other shuttle to compare it to, by definition it must be cheap? What absurd Panglossian logic.

      I shouldn't think it's that hard to follow. You've been claiming ad nauseam that the shuttle isn't "cheap". Once again, in comparison to WHAT? All I'm claiming is that it is the only one of its kind and costs what Congress has allocated for it.

      Good grief - since when do I need to submit FOIA requests to back up a claim I made on Slashdot of all places?

      My mistake. I thought the topic had something to do with your thesis and that you would be interested in the truth. But, since you're apparently a Brit, it wouldn't work anyway. My bad. Remember, you were the one who brought the fact that you were a Piled Higher and Deeper candidate into this discussion - otherwise I wouldn't have made a connection between the two.

      Which, as I will point out yet again, is that FOR WHATEVER REASON, the Shuttle did not fulfill its original goals of cheap. reliable, regular access to space.

      Which, as I will point out yet again, aside from your peculiar definition of "cheap", the shuttle has done its job. Without some grandstanding by certain members of Congress who are interested in publicity, the shuttle would still be flying routine missions. Yet again, I don't see how you can blame the shuttle for PR-based decisions from Congress that hamstring the program.

      I'm just trying to point out that the Shuttle did not perform as initially promised. So what! It's still done a great job overall, and I'd say yes in an instant if NASA offered me a place on the next flight. But that's not going to change my objective view of the history of the Shuttle program.

      Actually, it seems you have changed your view. The remark that started this was your claim that the shuttle was a failure. No doubt you will now explain how "great job overall" equals "failure".

      You say that like it's a bad thing! I didn't realise every Slashdot post these days had to be some major piece of original thought.

      Huh? I said you didn't have anything in the real world to compare the shuttle to, therefore your claims were invalid. Clearly, there is little original thought on Slashdot these days as our constant reposting of the same arguments illustrates.

      So, I don't have any vested interest here, and anyway you might do me the courtesy of not assuming that I'm either a knave or a fool.

    18. Re:Baby & bathwater... by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1
      It was routine. I provided figures. 111 freakin' times. That's more often than I've had my tires rotated in my lifetime, which is a lot longer than the shuttle's.

      I told you, I'm not interested in your opinion. 111 times? That's less posts than I've made to slashdot! What do such absurd comparisons prove? I provided objective criteria, ie the original NASA goals for the number of flights per year right up until Challenger and even after. The Shuttle has failed to even come close to these goals.

      You still have not defined "cheap" other than to say the shuttle isn't it.

      Right, so just ignore the bit in the previous post where I explicitly compared the Shuttle's costs to other heavy lift systems. I'm sure to let that slip by.

      No straw man; it was an attempt to get you to look at the different purposes for the different craft. Ineffective, as usual.

      What on Earth are you talking about? I never mentioned Apollo; you asked how long it would take to launch ISS components in Apollo capsules; I then pointed out how silly this was. Why did I need to "look at the different purposes for the different craft" [Shuttle and Apollo] when you were the one who brought up Apollo out of nowhere? And what exactly was your point anyway?

      Yes, of course. Running two programs instead of one would be far *cheaper*. Do you realize how much of NASA's funds get spent on the planning and support for different vehicles? Same thing for your possible assembly platform. It all costs money (apparently cheaper money than shuttle money?).

      Do you realise that Saturn V had already been developed? That the factories and infrastructure were already in place? Anyway, the development cost of the Shuttle was small compared to the operating cost (less than a tenth). Spend a bit more up front to get a more efficient system and you'll save money in the longer term.

      Oh, and it's worth noting that again I'm not claiming to be original here. After Shuttle, NASA won't be launching payloads inside manned spacecraft anymore. CEV will only have room for a few astronauts and supplies - no payload bay for 25000 kg satellites, they'll be going up on top of unmanned boosters. Likely won't be a reuseable spaceplane either. So you better hope that NASA has more imagination than you do when it comes to overcoming these oh-so-insurmountable obstacles you see. (I could turn this around and ask if the Shuttle has been such an unqualified success as you seem to think, why is NASA ditching the whole concept for something completely different, instead of going for an improved Shuttle design? Might it be that ... gasp ... Shuttle isn't as perfect as you think?)

      I shouldn't think it's that hard to follow. You've been claiming ad nauseam that the shuttle isn't "cheap". Once again, in comparison to WHAT? All I'm claiming is that it is the only one of its kind and costs what Congress has allocated for it.

      And once again, in comparison to OTHER LAUNCH SYSTEMS. You know, the ones that are launching everything that the Shuttle doesn't? Yes, Shuttle is the only reuseable spaceplane (if you ignore Buran, which I'm happy to do). But why use a reuseable spaceplane if it's not cheaper/more reliable/more regular than other ways of getting people and payloads into space? You are obsessed with the Shuttle to the exclusion of other ways of doing the same job.

      My mistake. I thought the topic had something to do with your thesis and that you would be interested in the truth. But, since you're apparently a Brit, it wouldn't work anyway. My bad.

      Ah, so we're resorting to puerile national slurs, are we now? How delightful. By the way, you're wrong yet again - I'm Australian. (The .au in my email and URL is a bit of a giveaway.)

      Remember, you were the one who brought the fact that you were a Piled Higher and Deeper candidate into this discussion - otherwise I wouldn't have made

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
    19. Re:Baby & bathwater... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      111 times? That's less posts than I've made to slashdot! What do such absurd comparisons prove?

      How many other reusable space transports have a comparable record? How many times have you done something as easy and simple as flying on an international aircraft? It seems the only comparisions you don't consider absurd are the ones you make.

      Right, so just ignore the bit in the previous post where I explicitly compared the Shuttle's costs to other heavy lift systems. I'm sure to let that slip by.

      And let's ignore the bit where you admitted it would likely take several missions/launches to do the job of one shuttle mission. This is getting old and repetitive.

      Do you realise that Saturn V had already been developed? That the factories and infrastructure were already in place? Anyway, the development cost of the Shuttle was small compared to the operating cost (less than a tenth). Spend a bit more up front to get a more efficient system and you'll save money in the longer term.

      No kidding about the Saturn? Really????!!!!11 Do you think there weren't misgivings and doubts? Funding is limited, even for NASA. Again, where is your alternative to the shuttle that fits into the entire design with a space station that was on the table at the time? It's good to see that you realize the cost of running two programs (including keeping the Saturn alive) would be far greater than developing two programs, even if you didn't take it to the conclusion. Welcome to the world of budget constraints instead of ivory towers.

      So you better hope that NASA has more imagination than you do when it comes to overcoming these oh-so-insurmountable obstacles you see. (I could turn this around and ask if the Shuttle has been such an unqualified success as you seem to think, why is NASA ditching the whole concept for something completely different, instead of going for an improved Shuttle design? Might it be that ... gasp ... Shuttle isn't as perfect as you think?)

      I never said it was an "unqualified" success, nor that the objectives couldn't be completed in another way, and you probably are already aware of that if your reading comprehension is as great as you think. Once again, I consider it a successful experiment (I know that just irritates you no end, so I had to repeat it). I think I said before that the successor to the shuttle would be an experimental craft. In the normal succession of things, we learn from our minor successes and build on them. I realize that's not good enough for omniscient types like you who could dictate the course of space exploration full blown from your brow. Alas, the rest of us are mere mortals; mea culpa.

      Ah, so we're resorting to puerile national slurs, are we now? How delightful. By the way, you're wrong yet again - I'm Australian. (The .au in my email and URL is a bit of a giveaway.)

      I didn't realize it was a slur to be called a Brit, my apologies - I really haven't bothered to check your info, it didn't seem important or germane (note, that's not "German", so don't get offended). The point is, I believe there are residency requirements for FOIA applications. Please continue to feel free to accuse me of whatever you like. You can even call me a Brit, although my ancestors are Welsh - if you can find a slur for that, feel free to use it.

      Doesn't really say much for your close reading skills, does it?

      Maybe not. I tend to assume someone bringing a subject into an argument is tying it in to the argument. Should I apologize again? Wearing a hair shirt, maybe?

      This is what I get for extending an olive branch to you. Obviously, you don't do nuance.

      Yes, I love olive branches with poisoned thorns. The olives, without the thorns, are better - very good with martinis. As to nuance, well, I actually like some Yellow Tail wines, although they can be a bit brash.

      The cognitive dissonance is kil

    20. Re:Baby & bathwater... by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1
      How many other reusable space transports have a comparable record? How many times have you done something as easy and simple as flying on an international aircraft? It seems the only comparisions you don't consider absurd are the ones you make.

      I see, so it's more sensible to compare the shuttle to car maintenance tasks, than to other spacecraft, actual or possible? The only other non-spacecraft comparisons I made were both following in your own footsteps (aircraft and cars), and I wouldn't have made them if you hadn't gone there first. I've been trying to stick to facts and figures, but you seem to think in analogies.

      And let's ignore the bit where you admitted it would likely take several missions/launches to do the job of one shuttle mission. This is getting old and repetitive.

      Firstly - you've still ignored the fact that I compared the Shuttle's costs to other heavy lift systems, so contrary to your assertion I did define what I meant by cheap. You could at least own up to that. Secondly, I did not "admit" that it would take several mission/launches to do the job of one Shuttle mission. As Saturn V can lift three times as much as Shuttle, you only need a third as many launches. Even assuming one Saturn V launch required one manned launch for assembly (which as I said would not necessarily be true, just as it wasn't quite true for ISS), that's only 2/3 as many launches as you would need for Shuttle! It would be twice as many launches as a shuttle of equivalent payload capacity to Saturn V. Of which none exists or has exists, or is planned to.

      No kidding about the Saturn? Really????!!!!11 Do you think there weren't misgivings and doubts? Funding is limited, even for NASA. Again, where is your alternative to the shuttle that fits into the entire design with a space station that was on the table at the time?

      The design of the space station obviously depends on the capability of the launch system and service vehicles. If NASA had been using some alternative system instead of the Shuttle, they would have designed it differently. Bigger modules, for one thing, with Saturn V ... And there were no firm space station plans in the 1970s (excepting the temporary Skylab, of course). That didn't start until well into the Reagan years, and of course we didn't actually get the space station until Shuttle was two decades old. So you've got it the wrong way around here: the Shuttle was not tailored around the required space station design.

      It's good to see that you realize the cost of running two programs (including keeping the Saturn alive) would be far greater than developing two programs, even if you didn't take it to the conclusion. Welcome to the world of budget constraints instead of ivory towers.

      Err ... no, I didn't conclude that, because it's hard to do so on the available evidence. Shuttle launches are a billion apiece. Saturn V was twice that - for three times the payload and based on a very small production run. So Saturn V alone would have been at least a third cheaper than Shuttle and probably a bit more. You could have used those savings to run a small, manned spacecraft. It might have turned out more expensive, as it wasn't done we can't be sure, but you haven't made any case for that.

      I never said it was an "unqualified" success, nor that the objectives couldn't be completed in another way, and you probably are already aware of that if your reading comprehension is as great as you think.

      Well now, what criticisms would you make of the Shuttle? Every one I've made just makes you angry, so if you don't think it was an unqualified success, then just what criticisms would you make? Ditto for the alternative methods.

      Once again, I consider it a successful experiment (I know that just irritates you no end, so I had to repeat it).

      Not at all, you are entitled to your own opinion. It's your continual lack of understan

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
  6. Re:Proof. by ravenspear · · Score: 1

    I swear that is the most misspelled word on the intarweb.

  7. Political motivation behind firings by SuperMario666 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Senior NASA officials and congressional and aerospace industry sources said yesterday that Griffin wants to clear away entrenched bureaucracy, and build a less political and more scientifically oriented team to implement President Bush's plan to return humans to the moon by 2020 and eventually send them to Mars.

    So, essentially, we're just throwing out the folks who might have some misgivings about our upcoming pissing contest with China?

    1. Re:Political motivation behind firings by MattWhitworth · · Score: 0

      I agree, that statement seems like an oxymoron. Surely a more scientific team would not spend millions of pounds on a mission to Mars to prove Americans greatness when it could be spending it on asteriod research and solar sails. But why is President Bush talking about a mission to Mars by 2020? Surely he'll be out of power by then?

    2. Re:Political motivation behind firings by Martin+Blank · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Kennedy made it the goal of the nation to land a man on the moon and return him safely by the end of the decade, knowing that someone else would be in the White House then.

      It looks to me like Griffin has decided that whether or not the president's new goal was diversion or eagerness, he's going to do his best to get it done.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    3. Re:Political motivation behind firings by TheFlyingGoat · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, they're getting rid of the managers that Slashdotters like to complain about. You know, the ones that don't understand the technical end of things, and as a result end up setting unrealistic deadlines and promising impossible accomplishments. They're getting RID of the political bureaucracy and replacing it with scientists. Oh the shame!

      Of course, since you can attribute it as another negative of the Bush Administration, you will. And most of Slashdot will agree.

      --
      You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life. --Winston Churchill
    4. Re:Political motivation behind firings by iserlohn · · Score: 1

      Um.. did you read the post above that said that both of the officials named are both enginners? (Aerospace and Mechanical)

    5. Re:Political motivation behind firings by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Yes, anytime somebody in government says that upfront that an action is not political or intended to remove politics, it's really about removing the opposition's politics and installing their own brand of politics.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    6. Re:Political motivation behind firings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any endeavor, be it a corporation or a governmental agency, needs a vision. The management of the organization is then charged with developing strategic and tactical plans that achieve the goals of the vision. NASA, unfortunately, receives its vision from a politician, namely, the President. NASA, also unfortunately, is now getting its visionary direction from a goddamned moron.

      Lots of luck, whomever.

    7. Re:Political motivation behind firings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who, apparently, is STILL smarter than Kerry! Or haven't you seen the Yale grades comparison? Funny how the liberal media doesn't trumpet that fact...oh wait it would benefit Bush, wouldn't it? I guess it's not so funny after all.

    8. Re:Political motivation behind firings by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      He may be out of power, but we will not be able to afford to go to the Moon, let alone Mars. A country must have the ability to fund such ventures. That takes a good tax base with a solid budget.

      We are losing our tax base and already run a .5 trillian deficit a year. Combine the deficit with Regan's monster debt and you have a nation that will shortly be incapable of funding such loft goals.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    9. Re:Political motivation behind firings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not go on about Bushs war record too..

      Seriously though why is every rebuttal to a comment made about Bush is to compare him to someone worse in that area and claim he is better.

      "Sure Bush is destroying rights in this country but at least he isn't Kim Jong il!".

      Btw, here is what I think is going to happen in NASA. Huge amounts of cash put into it which will be pissed away to corporations that are friends of Bushs regime. Take a look at Iraq for examples.

    10. Re:Political motivation behind firings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, in the previous respondent's defense, you called Bush a moron. He was merely pointing out that the only other option available was an even bigger moron.

    11. Re:Political motivation behind firings by bluGill · · Score: 1

      What is there to go on about his record? He early in the campaign that Kerry's war record was better than his. The swift boat guys may or may not have had a point, and may or may not have had a better record, but they are not Bush. (In any case even if everything they said about Kerry was true in the worse light, Kerry's record is still better than Bush's and Bush would agree)

      Of course Someone has to be ready for local problems at all time, even though they are highly unlikely. It is no accident Bush was that person, but it wasn't something you can blame him for - his family was powerful enough that no general in his right mind would all Bush in a likely line of fire, so all the dangerous jobs (like Kerry was one) were out. Bush could have sat in Korea (though that war just cooled, so perhaps not), but not in Vietnam. Even democrat general in charge would make sure that nothing happened to young Bush that could be prevented.

      Or are you referring to the lies CBS tried to pass off as truth? Get over it if that is the case - they were forgeries, and now even if true versions would show up nobody would believe them.

      NASA has always been about powerful politicians getting the pork home. Doesn't matter who was in charge, that has always been the first priority. Science has always been a backseat. Beating the Russians (Now it is the opposite - keeping Russian rocket scientists from trading their skills for food to someone evil) was important for a while, but even then the pork was what counted more important. Don't blame Bush, both parties do it, and always have. (Well you can, but quit trying to make it seem like something different)

  8. Re:Proof. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Counterpoint: "teh", any variation of 'newbie'. Both by people who think they're cool, of course.

  9. Episode VII by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 0, Troll

    This purge will clear the way nicely for NASA to refocus its science on the Earth. By developing the infrastructure for a bankrupting, warmongering, nonfunctional Star Wars space weapons system.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Episode VII by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Moderation -1
      40% Troll
      30% Informative
      30% Overrated

      TrollMods: you might not like the insight, but how is that post a "Troll"?

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  10. MARS ATTACK! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right after he smoked the nuclear bomb in a crack pipe? This has NASA written all over it.

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

    No, actually the most mispelled word(s) are "a lot", commonly spelled "alot". Alot is not a word, allot is. "A lot" is two, count em you yanks, TWO words.

  12. Re:Proof. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forgot "rediculous" on Slashdot, "their here", "there car" and others like definately (again really on Slashdot that one).

  13. s/loose/lose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I'm really shocked that Slashdot "editor" CowboyNeal didn't catch that.

  14. Cleaning House Somewhere Else Would Help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    decrease the spread of Weapons Of Mass Destruction.

    Have a marijuana-induced weekend,
    Kilgore Trout, CEO

  15. zerg by Lord+Omlette · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Does anyone have the political affiliations of the people who were fired?

    --
    [o]_O
    1. Re:zerg by Detritus · · Score: 1

      The people in question are not political appointees, only the Administrator and Deputy Administrator of NASA fall in that category.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    2. Re:zerg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The people in question are not political appointees, only the Administrator and Deputy Administrator of NASA fall in that category.

      It was the Administrator who did the firing. Why would you think that party affilitiation wasn't relevant when you revognise that he is a polotical appointee?

    3. Re:zerg by palfrey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Given that the new Administrator is a politicial nominee, and given that he's the one hiring/firing here, people being shifted by a politicial nominee might well have political reasons for their change in state.

      Of course, this might not be the case, but given the current US administration's track record of replacing good people with duckspeakers, it's a good idea to check their backgrounds.

      --
      Beware the psychokinetic mimes!
    4. Re:zerg by Detritus · · Score: 1

      NASA isn't Tammany Hall. They don't go around asking people what political party they support or who they voted for. Most people would say that it is none of your damn business.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    5. Re:zerg by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      Do you title every post you make "zerg"?

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    6. Re:zerg by lawpoop · · Score: 3, Funny

      Probably Terran or *possibly* Protoss. Very rarely do Terrans ally with Zerg, unless...

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    7. Re:zerg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you title every post you make "zerg"?

      No, he doesn't. Out of his last 24 posts, only 15 have been titled "zerg", though another 1 has been titled "zergs".

      I think it would be true to say that he titles his posts "zerg" considerably more often than most other people do.

    8. Re:zerg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The CIA and the FBI are presently undergoing purges of anyone that is not politically inline with the republican administration. These purges happening at NASA smacks of the same thing.

    9. Re:zerg by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      The next question is: "Why?"

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    10. Re:zerg by PingXao · · Score: 1

      And the State Department too. Where, oh where, are my mod points when I need them?

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

      You have a poor understanding of federal organizations. The closer you are to the top the more politics matter. It is true the private sector as well, but the politics are different.

    12. Re:zerg by balthan · · Score: 1

      Followed by: "Why not?"

    13. Re:zerg by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      Why not? The subject line is where you put the subject of your comment. It helps attract attention to your comments. Usually people try to add content to their posted comments, by saying something more than "I wonder what the connection between a and b is." (I've looked at your posting history, that's the majority of your posts)

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    14. Re:zerg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The CIA and the FBI are presently undergoing purges of anyone that is not politically inline with the republican administration.
      Source? Besides a simple "just Google it" response?

      These purges happening at NASA smacks of the same thing.
      Yes...rumor, innuendo and unverifiable gossip.
    15. Re:zerg by databyss · · Score: 1

      Dear Lt. Kerrigan,

      Make sweet, sweet love to me for days on end.

      --
      Hmmm witty sig or funny sig? Maybe elitest techy sig!
    16. Re:zerg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's probably his password and he just manages to type it in the wrong box.

  16. Politics by nnet · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While its certainly pleasant to see altruism be attempted, if the funding comes from the feds, not private sector, politics/bureaucracy must be involved. I wish the new administrator well, but I hope he's not so naive to think he can rid NASA of the dead weight of politicos and entrenched senior bureaucrats. No way in hell NASA will ever be free of fed interference when it relies solely on fed money.

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

      While its certainly pleasant to see altruism be attempted, if the funding comes from the feds, not private sector, politics/bureaucracy must be involved. I wish the new administrator well, but I hope he's not so naive to think he can rid NASA of the dead weight of politicos and entrenched senior bureaucrats. No way in hell NASA will ever be free of fed interference when it relies solely on fed money.

      I think you've got it backwards there. The moon mission, arguably NASA's most spectacular success was 100% publicly funded. The space shuttle disasters were predicted by all the watchdogs who warned against the privatization of NASA and the substitution of the profit system for the scientific method. History shows that Big Science has to be publicly funded, period. Privatization and the profit system are deadly to science (not to mention shuttle astronauts).

    2. Re:Politics by BitGeek · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      History shows that "Big Science" is only Big because there's a lot of public (Eg: stolen) dollars they want to soak up.

      NASA spends about a billion dollars per shuttle *flight*.... Space Ship one developed an entire program for $20 million. While they are not equivilent.

      And the space shuttle is a disaster-- not because of it was built with private contractors, but because the politicos wanted to dole out the stolen money to a wide variety of states-- necessitating a complicated design that could have major parts built in a wide variety of states.

      This is all to be expected--look at the commercial airline industry-- thousands of flights per accident. Let them into space nad you'll have a commercial space flight industry and all the NASA money can be left in the pockets of the poor starving americans it was stolen from (And the rich industrious americans who will invest it in jobs for the poor starving americans.)

      I love how the lovers of government always point to failures of the government system as proof that its the only way. Terrorists crash into skyscrapers? Well, lets spend even more on the screening system that let them go thru.

      Richard Branson has spent $100 million to have Burt Rutan design an advanced version of spaceship one. But because Richard Branson is a british citizen the US government won't even let him look at the designs for his own ship! The FAA is in the middle of what looks to be a 20 year process for making rules that will "allow" space ship two to fly commercially-- and gives no indication of when they will ever finish the rules, or that they have any incentive to not make the rules so onerous that safety is impaired The FAA's interference with SpaceShip One made safety worse, not better.

      Government is a disease masquarading as its own cure. All NASA does is let government control the "high ground" for military purposes and *PREVENT* space science or access to space.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    3. Re:Politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummmmm, Say what? NASA is a FEDERAL AGENCY so of course it has Federal Money.
      And yes it has an entrenched bureaucracy of Civil Service types as well as political hacks and appointees. That's how Federal agencies are.
      That seems to disappoint some folks who lose sight of NASA's place in the system and think it should set it's own agendas, its own goals, etc., but just like every other agency it's job is to do what the Congress and the President tell it to. If they tell it to go to the Moon then it will attempt to do so with whatever money it gets allocated. If they tell it to fund science museums and high school programs and build statues or whatever, then it will do that instead. The politicians control the programs and the funding, they dictate the priorities and the pace, this new guy can dictate internal policies but other then plotting the seating chart of the deck chairs, he can only try and persuade Congress and the President which way to steer the ship, the Congress critters and the Prez will tell him the heading and the course.
      And that's the way it is.

    4. Re:Politics by BitGeek · · Score: 1


      Mis-edit. Scaled composites developed SpaceShipOne for $20 million... and the capacity of the shuttle is not greator and its capabilities are a little better (it can get into low earth orbit, but not geosync orbit) the costs are massively higher. Rutan's plans have him getting into shuttle type low earth orbit for a couple hundred million.... a whole program for far less than the cost of a single shuttle launch.

      Even by the lowered expectations set by NASA the space shuttle is a total disaster. They wanted to fly 24 times a year and have 500 mission life span for a shuttle... they've never achieved that. And they expected the launch costs to be about a tenth of what they are.

      NASA's political orientation and inefficiency mean that everything it does is ineffecient and overly expensive.

      High cost and lack of access to space signficiantly inhibits science and research. On the other hand, the NASA and FAA burorats want to keep the cash coming, so they actively oppose all attempts to develop and launch cheaper alterantives in the private sector.

      Remember, NASA can simply ground you, without reason or recourse. We're lucky scaled composits was allowed to launch at all, and I think this is because they were a plane based launch rather than a missle style launch.

      But they have learned their lesson-- looks like they are going to ground Virgin Galactic-- AND prevent Burt Rutan from taking his own technology out of the country and launching there.

      Interesting how they just nationalized his labor-- actually everyon'es labor-- by claiming that the government owns all your work if it wants to, and you can therefore not export it if they declare it strategic. That's akin to enslavement, or at the very least, outright theft.

      Government is the problem, not the solution.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    5. Re:Politics by Forbman · · Score: 1

      And you think that if funding comes from "the private sector", it won't similarly be encumbered with agendas, targets to be reached, people to hire/benefit regardless, etc.?

      Most of NASA's budget is tied up in running the Space Shuttle (think Boeing and Lockmart). Yes, those are two major "private sector" enterprises.

      They influence NASA directly or indirectly through Congressional pressures, especially come election time or for budget blood-letting.

      The Space Shuttle goes on, but any new alternative that NASA has started to develop recently to replace the Space Shuttle seems to get dropped like a lead balloon as soon as it starts to show promise or viability.

    6. Re:Politics by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1
      Mis-edit. Scaled composites developed SpaceShipOne for $20 million... and the capacity of the shuttle is not greator and its capabilities are a little better (it can get into low earth orbit, but not geosync orbit) the costs are massively higher.

      Er ... what? The capacity of Shuttle is enough to get Hubble - that's 10000kg - into orbit, SS1 has a payload capacity of 3 people ... for a sub-orbital hop! That's not just "a little better", it's a completely different ballgame. SS1 did not and cannot, repeat cannot reach any sort of orbit so you cannot compare it to Shuttle like this. For all its problems, Shuttle is far superior to SS1 in every way that matters - because, like, it can actually get to orbit and SS1 can't.

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
  17. cleans house? perhaps shave by matt+me · · Score: 1

    Bet you this guy as facial hair. I worked at the Space Science department of the Rutherford-Appleton Labs in Oxfordshire. All the people their had beards of mustaches. Even the women.

    1. Re:cleans house? perhaps shave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you had to go this far to cross the Thames ?

    2. Re:cleans house? perhaps shave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We (a NASA group) once joked that all of our first-line managers had mustaches, and was it realistic to accept that as a criteria for advancement. Some one pointed out that it might make women unsuitable for the positions, to which another enigneer replied, "no, most of them qualify."

      (better remember to post AC on this one!)

  18. what are your thoughts on..... by tloh · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I wonder what Griffin, as a genuine no nonsense space scientist would make of the rants that appear on slashdot from time to time among space enthusiasts. If any of the folks who run slashdot can score an interview with him, I have a ton of questions I would like the head of NASA to address. Hey, it's possible right? As a public official, public relations are an integral part of his job. I believe he would have to regard a high profile mob like slashdot as a sort of "constituency" he needs to take seriously.

    --
    Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
    1. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      Do you honestly think that outside of slashdot, people care what slashdotters think? Not even the EDITORS of /. care what their paying customers think.

      We're a medium to large community who can take down servers from time to time, but we don't represent 1% of the geek population.

      Disclaimer: All stats were made up on the spot.

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    2. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by astrashe · · Score: 1

      Conspiracy whackos who believed that the "face on mars" was being covered up got them to reimage the sites (at the expense of other sites that were bumped).

      It happened because of Art Bell's radio show, and the deluded ravings of a specific guest, Richard C. Hoagland.

      Of course when the pictures showed natural formations, the whackos said that NASA was covering up the real data. So rerouting the imaging mission didn't even satisfy them.

      Space tends to attract a lot of whackos, and I'm not sure too much direct public input would be a good thing. The craziest people would shout the loudest.

    3. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by tloh · · Score: 1

      If you really believe what you say, if you have such a low regard for the concerns of this community, then truely, "What *ARE* you doing here"?

      go away.

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
    4. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      You're almost retarded.

      I enjoy the community and think it's great. I didn't say "OMG /. R TEH S UCK" I said "We assume that people outside of /. give a shit about us, when in fact, they don't."

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    5. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by tloh · · Score: 1

      "I didn't say "OMG /. R TEH S UCK"

      I think it would be best for everyone if you didn't say anything at all.

      "...when in fact, they don't"?

      Where are you getting your facts, sir?

      retarded or not, it is a no brainer deciding how to deal with the likes of you.

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
    6. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by Forbman · · Score: 1

      While it might be a "high profile" mob, it's not part of the Space Shuttle infrastructure, or the space science academia group, Cal-Tech/JPL, JHAPL, etc. It makes a lot of noise, but in the end our group doesn't really matter, unless we somehow can sway those entities.

      Then there is the 800-tonne leviathan known as "Congress".

      And the current mouse with a mighty roar that seems to be doing a good job at wagging the dog as well.

    7. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by tloh · · Score: 1

      And the current mouse with a mighty roar that seems to be doing a good job at wagging the dog as well.

      Pinky, are you pondering what I'm pondering?
      Gee, Brain, I don't think a trip to Mars would make you popular with the pest controller's union, poit!

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
    8. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      And how's that? By being so sure of yourself that you refuse to listen to any idea that isn't your own? Sounds like a great way to live your life, Mr. Bush.

      You want proof that nobody outside of slashdot gives a shit about slashdotters, go ask some leaders in any tech field "Do you care what /. thinks of what you do?"

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    9. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by tloh · · Score: 1

      And how's that? By being so sure of yourself that you refuse to listen to any idea that isn't your own? Sounds like a great way to live your life, Mr. Bush.

      What does any of that have to do with a potential interview from slashdot with the head of NASA? Hello?!?! FOCUS!!! Either put up a good arguement or rebuttal or shut the hell up. Besides, if you're going to get political, at least make some effort to do so intelligently.

      You want proof that nobody outside of slashdot gives a shit about slashdotters, go ask some leaders in any tech field "Do you care what /. thinks of what you do?"

      You bring me proof, I'll bring you an apology. For now, you'll just have to settle for my pity that you're too ignorant to be embarsssed by your own turpitude.

      there, there, eat up.....that's right, there's a nice troll.

      --
      Stay sentient. Don't drink bad milk.
    10. Re:what are your thoughts on..... by quarkscat · · Score: 1

      "If any of the folks who run slashdot can score an interview with him, I have a TON of questions I would like the head of NASA to address."

      That's a rather vague quantity: imperial or metric TON? short or long TON?
      Could you please quantify the number of questions on other terms, like MASS?

      The real problem is that absolutely no one in leadership positions within the Dubya regime are authorized to answer any questions not submitted in advance and vetted for neo-con political correctness. Anyone who watches US news with a critical eye knows that press interviews are only used in the current regime to propagandise the "party line".

      Do not expect either candor or nonpartisanship from the new NASA Director Griffin

  19. Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by CyricZ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Perhaps this cleaning of the administration is being done in order to facilitate a more military-centric NASA. There has been much speculation (see References) that the US military will begin to weaponize space. A NASA that is less interested in scientific discovery will of course be beneficial to the Pentagon, as they have the capabilities and know-how to design, implement, launch, maintain and control this upcoming space-based weaponry.

    References: http://www.reuters.com/audi/newsArticle.jhtml?type =technologyNews&storyID=8522373
    http://news.ft.com/cms/s/a4a4e198-c8cf-11d9-87c9-0 0000e2511c8.html
    http://msnbc.msn.com/id/7896613/

    --
    Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
    1. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by GileadGreene · · Score: 2, Informative

      Highly unlikely. NASA is a civilian organization, tasked with civilian space missions. The DoD maintains its own space operations (the Navy through SPAWAR and the Air Force through Space Command). The military side of space is quite distinct from the NASA side. Yes, many of the same contractors (Boeing, Northrop Grumman, Lockheed) work both kinds of projects. But the management and direction is done by quite different entities.

    2. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by sunwolf · · Score: 2, Funny
      There has been much speculation (see References) that the US military will begin to weaponize space.
      ...there's also rumors that they might even begin to to breaderize toasters, or childrenize the playgrounds.

      Come back when you learn English.

      *looks up "weaponize" on Dictionary.com*

      Oh. Damn.
    3. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by Edward+Ka-Spel · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Make NASA more military-centric? Most of the people being canned are ex-military generals. The stated plan of Griffin is to make NASA more engineering and science driven. If anything, it sounds the opposite.

    4. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by BDew · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Mod parent up!

      Leaving - Sean O'Keefe: Former Secretary of the Navy.
      Adm (Ret.) Craig Steidle.
      Maj. Gen. (Ret.) Michael Kostelnik.

      Most of the military folks O'K brought in are being swept out by Griffin.

      --
      "Fifty million Americans can't be wrong," said Rep. Billy Tauzin. Gore - 50,999,897 Bush - 50,456,002
    5. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by rocker_wannabe · · Score: 1

      I believe you're right. I think the whole "Let's go to Mars" idea is just a cover for the current administrations real plans to create the technology necessary to build a weapon platform in space.

      Any administration that can say with a straight face "We invaded Iraq to bring freedom to that country" can rationalize just about anything. Their rationale will be something like: "We had to be the first to put a weapon platform in space to protect the world. An evil nation could beat us to it and threaten the globe.". I think we should be concerned. Especially if you get drafted to serve on it. It would be intolerable to other countries to have it there and would be incredibly easy to destroy.

      --
      "Meaningless!, Meaningless!" says the Teacher. "Utterly meaningless!"
    6. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      Perhaps this cleaning of the administration is being done in order to facilitate a more military-centric NASA.
      Extremely unlikely given the massive space infrastructure the military already owns, much larger in fact than NASA's.
      There has been much speculation (see References) that the US military will begin to weaponize space.
      Only idiots utterly ignorant of space and military history believes that is speculation. Informed analysts and laymen know it to be fact, as the Pentagon has been working on space power theory and how to implement it for about fifty years.
      A NASA that is less interested in scientific discovery will of course be beneficial to the Pentagon, as they have the capabilities and know-how to design, implement, launch, maintain and control this upcoming space-based weaponry.
      ROFL. NASA has nearly zero experience in long term command and control of significant dispersed systems, nearly zero experience in long term support and maintenance of significant systems, nearly zero experience in logistics... All things the military has done, and for the most part well, for decades. And all things that will be badly needed to support such weapons systems.

      In addition NASA's design experience and know-how is slightly behind that of of military. In addition, NASA hasn't actually launched a vehicle other than the Shuttle in decades - it's long been subcontracted out to either private industry or the USAF teams at CCAFS.

      The parent poster isn't Insightful, he merely panders to the ignorance of space issues and knee-jerk hatred of the Bush Administration that characterizes the slashdot hivemind.

    7. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by ShagratTheTitleless · · Score: 0
      ..the US military will begin to weaponize space

      At a Terrorist camp somewhere in the Middle East...

      Terrorist 1: Allah-damnit! The Americans are attacking us!

      Terrorist 2: Where? I don't see any planes or tanks.

      Terrorist 1: Look up. It's coming right for us. It looks like some kind of weaponized-space.

      --
      Sometimes at night I imagine the darkness is filled with horrible things with too many teeth, like Julia Roberts.
    8. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      R-i-g-h-t. Let's just run with that baseless speculation accepted as fact, shall we?

      Militaristic NASA gave us:
      - Mercury
      - Gemini
      - Apollo
      - a host of probes, satellites, technology.

      "Civilianized" NASA has given us:
      - the Space Shuttle
      - about a 50/50 success rate on mars shots
      - a couple of OUTSTANDING landers on mars
      - cassini

      I don't think militarized NASA did quite so badly.

      And FWIW, I think
      a) if someone is going to develop space weapons, I hope it's us that develops space weapons first
      b) I'm not naive enough to believe that we're the only ones working on it.

      --
      -Styopa
    9. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Make NASA more military-centric? Most of the people being canned are ex-military generals. The stated plan of Griffin is to make NASA more engineering and science driven. If anything, it sounds the opposite.
      You must be new here. You're not supposed to poke holes in anti-Microsoft, anti-Bush, anti-American, anti-U.S. Military or anti-Republican theories.

      Questioning those who question authority is a serious no-no.
    10. Re:Preparing for a more military-centric NASA? by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1

      Hang about, what do you mean by "militarized" NASA? NASA was a civilian agency right from the get go, though of course there's always been a strong military influence. Not a flame, I'm genuinely curious what you're referring to.

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
  20. Loose their bowels, you mean? by Sleet01 · · Score: 1

    I would, if I were getting shitcanned from NASA. Oh, and FYI: there shouldn't be a comma between replacements and that.

    --
    -- Let him who is without spelling error ignite the first flame --
  21. Lose, Loose by lousyd · · Score: 1

    You know... "Lose" and "Loose" are not even one of the more challenging mix-ups. I don't understand how people do it.

    --
    If aspiration is a virtue, achievement cannot be a vice.
    1. Re:Lose, Loose by gbpuckett · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Shouldn't that be '"Lose" and "Loose" is not even one of the more challenging mixups.' ?

      Ironic, ain't it.

    2. Re:Lose, Loose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a tard for not understanding. The phonetical way to spell these words is:

      lose -> looze
      loose -> looce

    3. Re:Lose, Loose by derdesh · · Score: 1
      Without defending poor spelling, it does make sense. The vowel sound in "lose" is the same is "boot" or "look". Properly spelled, "lose" looks like it should rhyme with "rose".

      Just another idiosyncrasy of English.

    4. Re:Lose, Loose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but in this case "is" and "are" is one of the more challenging mix ups!

    5. Re:Lose, Loose by supmylO · · Score: 1

      They must be loosing their minds!

    6. Re:Lose, Loose by Symbiot · · Score: 1

      "loose bowels" is the first association I come to when trying to interpret "loose" where a "lose" should be. It's kind of gross. "let loose" comes up next which only makes it worse.

    7. Re:Lose, Loose by lousyd · · Score: 1
      Shouldn't that be '"Lose" and "Loose" is not even one of the more challenging mixups.' ?

      sigh... Yes, you're right. I'm loosing my touch.

      --
      If aspiration is a virtue, achievement cannot be a vice.
  22. You're shocked? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you new here?

    Catching that error would require that CowboyNeal a) read the submissions. reading is hard and b) give a fuck.

  23. the changing of NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nasa is changing. It must make way to private enterprises to compete in space. Therefore don't look to NASA for anything big in the future, a few moonlandings will be about all there is left for it.

  24. separate manned and unmanned by cahiha · · Score: 1

    I think it's a serious problem that unmanned and manned space exploration are so intertwined.

    Unmanned exploration is science and should be funded as such. It shouldn't have to compete with politically motivated "manned exploration" projects.

    In fact, ideally, I think NASA should leave manned exploration to the private sector. NASA should be turned into an agency dedicated to unmanned exploration: remote sensing, robotics, and new propulsion technologies.

    1. Re:separate manned and unmanned by Eisvogel · · Score: 1

      Manned and unmanned space exploration don't mutual exclude eachother.

      First stage "mapping" can very efficently be done by unmanned probes. "Exploration" and especially "engeniering" are a real hard core task much more suiteable for humans. Maybe in 20years time the automatic parts will improve by several magnitudes but problems like the speed of light - think comand and controll - will remain.

      The real problem is that we are nowere near the "exploration" or the "engeniering" stage and try to use humans.

      Granted space stategy is planed on decades or even longer terms - thus a 14year target just shows how wishfull thinking the administration is.

    2. Re:separate manned and unmanned by shaitand · · Score: 1

      There is nothing scientific about an unmanned space program. Unmanned probes can do a number of things and gather lots of useful data without a doubt.

      However, there are numerous things that they can not do and there is nothing that can do that can not be done by a human supplied with life essentials.

      Willfully refusing to conduct experiments that would yield valuable data because of the budget concerns is NOT scientific at all. Willfully refusing to conduct experiments that would yield valuable data for ANY reason is an opposition to science. There are times when it is the right choice (for instance an experiment might destroy a rare specimen and prevent future testing) but that does not make it science.

      If you feel the money could be better spent on unmanned probes so be it, but quit trying to pretend that budget related decisions are scientific or not scientific.

    3. Re:separate manned and unmanned by BitchKapoor · · Score: 1

      FYI, the English word is "engineering"

    4. Re:separate manned and unmanned by cahiha · · Score: 1

      Maybe in 20years time the automatic parts will improve by several magnitudes but problems like the speed of light - think comand and controll - will remain.

      Sufficiently intelligent probes do not need to communicate in real time.

      In any case, I think we basically agree: unmanned probes for the next couple of decades, and we can reevaluate the tradeoffs again then.

  25. Why won't NASA fortify its competitive prizes??? by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 1

    Why won't NASA simply fortify its competitive prizes? Do we really need for central planners to decide what numerous competing teams nationwide could if only more of NASA's $16 billion dollar annual budget went to incentivizing them through prize offerings? NASA has $10 million allocated and congressionally approved for competitive prizes this fiscal year, and yet less than $1 million has been allocated thus far. Even DARPA's Grand Challenge in October (autonomous robotic roving) is worth $2 million. Isn't it obvious that the bureaucrat statists and / or the pork barrelers in Congress FEAR this long overdue reform? For more details about this badly needed STRUCTURAL change at NASA: http://www.spaceprojects.com/prizes

  26. Re:Proof. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Slashduh English and English aren't compatable.

    /Foreigner's observation

  27. Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NASA stops stealing money from hard-working Americans for their lies. Moon landing, especially with the technology of 35 years ago? Don't make me laugh.

    http://www.apfn.org/apfn/moon.htm

    I fail to see how otherwise intelligent Slashdotters could fall for this obvious crock of shit. It's even worse than creationism!

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

      waste of time, but I figured I'd address the stupid comment the rest ignore.

      Russia accepted the moon landing, when they would have loved to prove it a hoax. that should be enough in and of itself.

      the junk is still sitting up on the moon, so at least robots put it up there.... you know they had great robotics back then...

  28. Good / Bad ??? by lucky_2000 · · Score: 1

    Well, it's too soon to say what the intentions are, but I do believe that NASA was long overdue for a shake-up. Although I disagree with the Bush administration on just about every other issue, I have been pleasantly surprised by their space policy. I strongly support a return to manned space exploration. If this shake-up clears the way for manned missions to the Moon and Mars then it is a positive. Manned exploration of space is about returning NASA to the glory days of the Apollo missions. Bold goals will produce great science. That was the experience of the Apollo programs. Also, manned missions inspire the public in a way that robots never can. Speaking personally, it was my love of the Space program that made me choose engineering as a profession. That said I do have a lingering concern that this purge could be clearing the way for the militarization of space. I don't want to see NASA become a branch of the Pentagon. NASA is a civilian agency dedicated to the peaceful exploration of space to benefit "All mankind."

    1. Re:Good / Bad ??? by cybpunks3 · · Score: 1

      How can you be pleasantly surprised?
      They are spending a lot of money to get a lame duck platform (Shuttle) back to space. The thing only has 5 years left before it's scheduled for retirement.

      Meanwhile, the budget is being penny-pinched to the level where even tiny things like Voyager are being cut.

      If they wanted to control costs they should just contract out all manned spaceflight to Russia, or license the technology and start building that design in the US. Then they could axe the Shuttle and not have to worry about reinventing the wheel.

      That would be equivalent to the Apple goes Intel decision.

      They are already relying on Russia as it is. I don't see the big deal making that permanent.

      Then they can build their Mars program off of Russian boosters.

  29. Re:FIRST SPELLCHECK POST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is not flaimbait. This is a seriously common mistake, which is embarassing. It means that people are so dependent on spell checkers, that they don't read what they write (only look for red squiggles).

  30. Re:FIRST SPELLCHECK POST by rah1420 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Ah, but the word "loose" was spelled correctly. Used incorrectly, mind you but the spelling was impeccable.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens.
  31. And this is news because why?? by ZuperDee · · Score: 1

    If it had been some other government agency, or some private company that "cleaned house" this way, like the energy or the defense department, or like Adobe or Microsoft, would this be news on Slashdot? What makes NASA so special?

    1. Re:And this is news because why?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Becuase unlike Microsoft or Adobe, YOU pay for this every year come tax time.

    2. Re:And this is news because why?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There have been purges of people in the CIA, and other government organizations of anyone that does not have political views in line with that of the present republican administration. This is one more.

      http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion /oped/articles/2004/11/19/the_purge_at_cia/

    3. Re:And this is news because why?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i have a feeling that if Bill Gates started firing people left and right at M$ that we would see it on Slashdot. Now where's my Google story...

  32. NASA's competitive prizes remain too small by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 2, Informative

    I couldn't agree with you more. NASA has $10 million allocated and congressionally approved for competitive prizes this fiscal year, and yet less than $1 million has been allocated thus far. Even DARPA's Grand Challenge in October (autonomous robotic roving) is worth $2 million. Isn't it obvious that the bureaucrat statists and / or the pork barrelers in Congress FEAR this long overdue reform-fortification? Why won't NASA simply fortify its competitive prizes? Do we really need for central planners to decide what numerous competing teams nationwide could if only more of NASA's $16 billion dollar annual budget went to incentivizing them through prize offerings? For more details about this badly needed STRUCTURAL change at NASA: http://www.spaceprojects.com/prizes

    1. Re:NASA's competitive prizes remain too small by Professor_UNIX · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Read Mike Griffin's "internal memo" to NASA posted on spaceref.com or nasawatch.com. He (rightly so) believes that private industry does not have the resources or drive to implement the kinds of multigenerational missions that space exploration requires. Getting to Mars will take decades (not the trip itself, but the planning, building the vehicles, and implementation). When was the last time you saw any corporation plan more than 10 years out? How about 20 or 30? Now, take all profit motivation out of that equation and how many of them are left... purely scientific and research oriented undertakings by a corporation that took decades to bring to fruition. A government organization is the only kind of organization that will be able to span that timeframe without breaking apart.

  33. Re:Why won't NASA fortify its competitive prizes?? by Overzeetop · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sorry, there is no payback in this. It's not like a class action suit, where you put up $1-$2M in real money with a pretty good chance of getting back 20-30X your investment. Space exploration really is hard, and bigger projects are very unpredictable. Nobody is going to spend $100-$500M on a project, possibly competing with several other companies, for a $200M prize (or even $1-2B prize for that matter). These things take years, and Wall Street is going to expect some returns buy the end of the fiscal quarter.

    No, those prizes are for rich folks with nothing better to do and corporations who have a few million in pocket change they'd have to pay taxes on, so they "fund a team" and hope for some good press.

    NASA needs to go back to its roots. If you look at the real technical departments at Goddard, some of the smart folks are still there. So is the atmostphere. That spark thats left is going to need a lot of oxygen and some carful tending to earn back NASA the "rocket scientist" moniker, but I think it can be done, and I think Griffin has a chance.

    By the way - Griffin has been a Mars mission fanatic for a LONG time. Heck, it was part of the final he gave when I took my graduate class in space vehicle guidance an navigation from him a decade ago. He's one smart guy (and a PITA as a professor, though a nice one). Given enough time, I think he's got a good shot at turning NASA around. If he can't do it, there's not much chance of it happening.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  34. Re:since everyone agrees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, fuck, another ESR
    fanboy. Why don't you and Eric spend some quality time pissing on
    each other, or whatever it is you alpha-fags do exactly, and leave
    the rest of us in peace?

  35. Re:since everyone agrees by mankey+wanker · · Score: 1

    There's about as much evidence for your assertions as against them, thereby reducing your post to a trolling crock of shit that someone should mod down.

    The reality is that in a world of 6 billion people we are going to have to learn cooperation over competition as a way to live. Or would it not bother you if I killed your family and robbed you of your earthly possessions? Survival of the fittest and most fucked up, right? Is that what you want?

    Do you want the law of the jungle or the law of civilization? Choose wisely, because so far you seem like a fucking idiot.

  36. Paul Allen; Elon Musk; Burt Rutan; Jeff Bezos; etc by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 1

    I'm not familiar with the PITA acronom. Please enlighten me? But as for: >>>Nobody is going to spend $100-$500M on a project, possibly competing with several other companies, for a $200M prize (or even $1-2B prize for that matter).>>These things take years, and Wall Street is going to expect some returns buy the end of the fiscal quarter.>>No, those prizes are for rich folks with nothing better to do>> and corporations who have a few million in pocket change they'd have to pay taxes on, so they "fund a team" and hope for some good press. Would you prefer they simply keep over-subsidizing the Super Bowl for that same desired effect? Prizes tend to leverage around 40 times their amount in terms of collective expenditures pursuing them. If you work at NASA or a NASA contractor, you're selling your chances short by around 1/40th by bashing prizes. Don't you want to get to make more money and more of a difference?

  37. how could they get "more military"? by SuperBanana · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Perhaps this cleaning of the administration is being done in order to facilitate a more military-centric NASA.

    More? Most of what NASA does is research for the Air Force (missiles, planes, etc), and the Shuttle was used primarily for lofting spy satellites.

    Did you really think that we lit off the Shuttle just to take a bunch of plants and gerbils from 4th graders to space to see how they grow? Not quite. The military is known for doing all sorts of trickery, including deployed structures and whatnot to hide what satellites look like from telescopes and other satellites. One of the first steps towards covertness was the whole "pay no attention to the man behind the curtain" routine, with silly little useless experiments from school children and whatnot (spacelab provided much of the data we needed for long term effects of weightlessness in space on people, btw).

    1. Re:how could they get "more military"? by BDew · · Score: 1

      You are a Grade A moron.

      Duck, the black helicopters are coming!

      --
      "Fifty million Americans can't be wrong," said Rep. Billy Tauzin. Gore - 50,999,897 Bush - 50,456,002
    2. Re:how could they get "more military"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's true, U.S. government agencies really don't keep secrets from the public. All those millions of classified and redacted documents are actually love letters between department employees.

    3. Re:how could they get "more military"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The shuttle pretty much stopped being used to deploy defense satellites after Challenger. There have been some joint things that have dual civil/military application (e.g. SRTM) but shuttle really has been pretty dedicated to construction of station in recent years, with a few science flights thrown in to keep the science communities from becoming too unhappy. From now forward it will be pretty much limited to station (and maybe a trip to HST).

  38. "sell your programs to the executive branch" by infonography · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Selling Science to the this Congress and the bush administration, that's a losing cause. You need to tell them that Jesus is on Mars. Then they will open the spigots of money. If you think I am kidding watch the people they replace these guys with. Can you say Doctorate in Theology?

    --
    Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
    1. Re:"sell your programs to the executive branch" by Eneff · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      For all of Bush's faults (and they are legion), space is a safe science outlet to him. Frankly, he's pro-science as long as that science isn't biology.

      Besides, maybe he thinks if we get to space, we can get high enough to meet his god! :)

    2. Re:"sell your programs to the executive branch" by mmkkbb · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      we can get high enough to meet his god! :)

      it's not space travel that will get people high enough to meet bush's god.

      --
      -mkb
    3. Re:"sell your programs to the executive branch" by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      I do not give a damn if the administrators of NASA paint themselves blue and howl on top of buildings during the full moon. Just Get Our Collective Butts Up In To Space!

  39. SPACE matters much more. Here's why... by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 1

    This is news because SPACE matters much more. Here's why... First of all, we could probably repay our record high $8 trillion dollar national debt with the benefits resulting from less inefficient colonization efforts on the Moon and Mars. Such breakthroughs would pertain to energy production, the biotech sector, robotics, mining, chemistry, and telemedicine, etcetera. One also cannot overlook explorations exciting ability to potentially inspire students to eagerly embrace math & science like they did during the Apollo Era when folks like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and Amazon.com's Jeff Bezos initially fell in love with such subjects. We could even learn to increasingly view others as fellow Earthlings, not enemies, while we struggle together against the shared hardships of the unknown. But we need structural (not personal) reforms at NASA to realize our potential: http://www.spaceprojects.com/reforms

  40. Re:Proof. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Affect and effect also come to mind, but you'll find most of these on Slashdot fairly often: http://www.wsu.edu/~brians/errors/errors.html#erro rs

  41. Hopefully this re-posting will post better... by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 1

    I don't know where my answer went(?) but it mentioned (in detailed fashion) Paul Allen, Elon Musk, Burt Rutan, Jeff Bezos and John Carmack as being entrepreneurs who pursue space prizes of one sort or another that are worth considerably less than the amount they invest in pursuit of them. Prizes are part of the compensation, but there's also commercial potential (tourism, mining, technology spinoffs that can be patented, etc.). Even Wall Street is forgiving where delayed gratifications seem worthwhile (as Intel's embracing of WiMax wireless broadband technology well before a payoff could come about, demonstrates). And in conclusion, I said: would you prefer that publicity-seeking corporations and the like simply keep over-subsidizing the Super Bowl for that same desired effect? Prizes tend to leverage around 40 times their amount in terms of collective expenditures pursuing them. If you work at NASA or a NASA contractor, you're selling your chances short by around 1/40th by bashing prizes. Don't you want to get to make more money and more of a difference?

    1. Re:Hopefully this re-posting will post better... by alienw · · Score: 1

      First, you are making too many bad assumptions. What makes you think prizes will always attract 40x the amount of money? What makes you think anyone will attempt anything truly hard (ie. something NASA has trouble doing)? What exactly does NASA get from paying someone to pursue their pet space project? Let's say they funded the X prize. What would they be getting from it? Nothing except negative publicity. Yeah, the billionaires end up giving a few pennies to someone who makes cool toys, but space is much more expensive than $10 million here and there.

      Second, you are way off base on your discussion of ROI. The payoff for something like WiMax is measured in months, and Intel isn't even investing too much money in it. Even something like HDTV (which will probably have rather large ROI in the long term) causes companies to drag feet, just because they don't want to spend money now and get a return in 5 years. Nobody will invest billions when there's a 1% chance of a project even paying for itself within 50 years.

  42. Re:Proof. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    YOUR A DOUCHEBAG

  43. Hmm by mcc · · Score: 1

    I think something of this sort was needed, clearing out entrenched and increasingly useless NASA upper management who have in the last 20 years largely robbed the program of both vision and scientific relevance.

    Unfortunately with an event as large-scale as this, and given some of the other circumstances involved, I have serious questions as to whether the 20 managers axed are the ones who have been holding NASA back, or if they were selected on some other criteria...

  44. Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why not incorporate a simple client-side JavaScript script into the Slashdot submission process that points out potential spelling mistakes like lose/loose, their/there...There aren't that many to cover and I see them soooo often.

  45. They are also looking for people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...who can use a comma correctly.

    I hear they are looking for replacements that know the difference between the word "loose" and "lose".

    not

    I hear they are looking for replacements, that know the difference between the word "loose" and "lose".

  46. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by scavok · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This was painful to read it's so stupid, and full of misinformation and lies.

    First of all, Bush isn't defunding NASA. He is, infact, doing the opposite. He increased NASA's budget 5% last year, and plans 2 more 5% increases in the next 2 years. Far more than Clinton can claim.

    Bush's budget request for Project Constellation, the product of his "brave speech," is $6.6 billion over the next 5 years.

    The CEV, part of Project Constellation, will have the concepts from the major contractors completed and sent to NASA by the end of this summer.

    http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2004-01-13 -bush-nasa_x.htm http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/01/14/tech/mai n593063.shtml

    I would like you see your source on that these men were engineers and that they're being replaced by businessmen. I would find it hard to beleive that a man with a doctorate, 5 masters, and 1 bachelor degree in sciences and engineering would purposely sabotage NASA.

    I recommend you get your news from a source other than democraticunderground.

  47. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by Emeye · · Score: 1

    What do you define as 'the wealthiest'?

    I know that my family saved quite a lot of money thanks to these cuts, and we are by no means 'wealthy'. These tax cuts don't just benefit the rich. It's just that those who are rich, who PAY MORE TAXES get money back as well.

    As for NASA, they suffer from a lack of good publicity. Most of what reaches the average person's ears are their mistakes and failures. People, including those who affect funding, are probably looking for some results. Results that they might be able to use in a re-election campaign or might see as not being a waste of money.

    If you want more money for NASA, write to people who can make those decisions, don't complain about administrators who LOSE (I can get it right sometimes) their jobs. Because whether they deserved it or not, it won't change now and they probably didnt have the same funding impact as certain influential senators.

  48. You slashdotters really get on my nerves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In previous stories about NASA, you all complain about how much bureaucracy there is in NASA, and how that led to problems like the shuttle crash. Now when they try to clean it up, you're all still complaining.

  49. We don't let the inmates run the asylum. by glrotate · · Score: 1

    two of which are very big loud & public successes (in NASA-land anyway)

    It should be referred to as the NASA, just like the CIA, the FDA, or the IRS. It is a government agency, not a private enterprise allowed to do its own bidding. It really appears as though many in the organization feel that the NASA exists for their sake, not to carry out the orders of Congress.

    Its about time the organization got a shake up.

  50. cleaning house? by freeschwag · · Score: 1

    Well, unfortunatly civil servants can't be fired, only reassigned, so he's moving the bloated buearauacy engine from his organization to....where? We'll never know.

    Some new crew gets to work for these guys, as soon as they are "involuntarily" re-assigned. Anyone familiar with gov't ogranzations knows what kind of good ol boys club that is, I'm sure they will have thier choice of new cooshie jobs to choose from.

    The place I work for is full of administrative senior "engineers" most of which should have retired 10 years ago....thier usefullness as real engineers has long since expired, but since the mob isn't great career choice, you can still be "made" as a civil servant.

    I hope my offer letter shows up soon :)

    --
    Tweet, tweet, all id10t's out of the gene pool, open swim is over.
    1. Re:cleaning house? by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Well, unfortunatly civil servants can't be fired

      Well, the people he might be replacing are probably political appointees, or directly tied to political appointees. They're probably way higher than your GS-5 job title.

    2. Re:cleaning house? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Civil Servents CAN be fired. It's called a RIF.

  51. Re:FIRST SPELLCHECK POST by Laebshade · · Score: 1

    Yes, that would be what some of us call a grammatical error.

  52. MOD PARENT UP by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    That is exactly the problem. So many ppl have spoken highly of O'Keefe, but he came through and put in exactly what you do not wish to see.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  53. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by flomulgator · · Score: 1

    Ahh money. Let me tell a little story about money. First, Moon-Mars is not a brainchild of bush, it is a brainchild of the previous NASA administrator Sean O'Keefe. It was just embraced by the Executive idea, so please don't give them credit for such a crappy idea. So why is it a crappy idea? No money. When the presidential directive came out it included no provisions for additional appropriations. NASA was just supposed to "figure it out." Since it arrived within shooting range of the next eleciton, everyone at NASA (most of which thought the "manned" at least was foolishly machismo and excessive) did their best to stall, praying someone else would land in office. After the reelection, NASA has been forced to rearrange their existing budget to shoot for a goal they know will NEVER happen without more money. What they've done as a good-faith effort to fund this on their own coin is axe the entire Earth and Planetary Science office. That means all global-warming, remote-sensing based etc... academic research funding has been chopped unless it can spin a Mars connection. That's where I come in. As a grad student studying Cold Region Processes (and influence on global climate) who like most of my colleagues relied on funding from this source, I have been hit particularly hard. I can now thank Manned Moon-Mars courtesy of our hero Bush for my current credit card debt. So I take it a little perosnally. As an administrative move though, thank god they got rid of O'Keefe. He was NOT a scientist, and he wanted to scuttle Hubble because he was paranoid about risking Astronaut safety (which, incidently, the astronauts who would be risking their lives were desperate to save it, so really his motivation was political fear of another PR disaster). I'm no Astronomer, but that would break even my heart to see that beauty burn. I like the idea of a new shuttle and all that stuff, but for god's sake don't axe good programs, just add more money.

  54. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by Edward+Ka-Spel · · Score: 1

    That was a lovely rant. I do love to hear a good rant about saving NASA. I just wished it had some facts behind it. These admins being canned ARE the MBAs and accountants and lawyers and bean counters. Griffin, the NASA administrator who is doing the canning, IS the engineer/scientist with a PhD and 5 masters degrees, mostly in technical areas. I don't know who is going to fill those positions, but chances are they will be good engineers who know how to handle the technical side. In this case, I think this is the RIGHT step for NASA.

  55. Which Griffin do you mean? by MungoBBQ · · Score: 1

    Now, when you say Griffin, do you mean the new NASA administrator Michael D. Griffin, or do you mean the mythological creature, half eagle, half lion?

    Sorry... had to steal a Dilbert joke. I'll go hide in a corner now.

  56. as many as 50 LOOSE their positions ???????? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    "loose" their positions?
    Is that something like having a more flexible rules at work?

    Geez, i would think that this was a serious article, involving people LOSING their positions... but if it's all about LOOSE ones... uuf, then it's all good.

  57. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by mbrother · · Score: 1

    I am an astronomer, and a Hubble user, and it will break my heart too to see it burn. I'm still hopeful that it will be later rather than sooner thanks in part to the change to Griffin.

    --
    Professor of Astronomy, Author of Spider Star & Star Dragon (Tor)
  58. Red Faction by Mozk · · Score: 1

    Red Faction is the first thing I thought of when I read the title...

    --
    No existe.
  59. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shhhhhh.... if you let these mouth-breathing Air America sycophants get their blood pressure high enough, they flat out explode! It's fun to watch!

  60. Kostelnik Biography link by Phelan · · Score: 1

    here is his official military biography

    http://www.af.mil/bios/bio_print.asp?bioID=6097&pa ge=1

    He seems to have a lot of history in research field of the military. Having been a test pilot, commanded the test pilot school and also been the commander of the worlds largest Air Force Base Eglin, which is mostly used test and research new arms.

    Seemed to be more than qualified, considering that he has only been in the job of 1-2 year.

    --
    "Nimis exaltatus rex sedet in vertice - caveat ruinam!"
  61. A NASA woman proposed competitive prizes... by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 1

    A LOT of what you posted makes sense. The only two potential objections that I might raise are: *NASA's annual budget is $16 billion. The fact that the cost of launching humans into space from the USA has gone nowhere but up over time is not particularly attributable to women as much as it is to the good ole' boys' network and the Shuttle huggers (i.e. pork-barrelers), right? *Lori Garver was the one who got NASA to propose competitive prizes to Congress (which squashed them the first time around, half a decade ago, in part because Dan Goldin didn't push the idea being the corrupt sort that he was). But upon that foundation, we have since made NASA prizes a reality. No engineer in Lori's place had previously done anything comparable. And I'm not aware that her predecessor Alan Ladwig is an engineer. I do know, though, that that Policy and Plans office was subsequently eliminated altogether. But the rest of what you said is RIGHT on the money. I guarantee you that you will enjoy this: http://www.spaceprojects.com/minority-contracts

  62. Republican by Phelan · · Score: 1

    I know for a fact one of two mentioned is a Republican.

    --
    "Nimis exaltatus rex sedet in vertice - caveat ruinam!"
    1. Re:Republican by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1
      That'll keep them dern homosexuals outta' space.

      In all seriousness, what does political affiliatioin have to do with anything NASA related?

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
  63. Prizes leverage 40 times their amount in investmen by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 1

    Burt Rutan told me in 2000 that prizes typically leverage 40 times their amount in investment pursuing them. And we saw that happen with the DARPA Grand Challenge, although the effect was tapered by participation restrictions. I VAGUELY recall that the prize that Charles Lindberg won for crossing the Atlantic only attracted 15 times its amount in terms of investment pursuing it. But this vague recollection's based on hearsay and is nearly a century old (before cyberspace made putting investors together with innovators in pursuit of prizes that were meant to generate publicity so much more efficient). Regardless, what's NASA's ratio? NASA has to pay to build stuff like X-33 that it never even gets. And it's not NASA's money to give to the X Prize Foundation; it's taxpayers'.

  64. ITS ABOUT TIME. by axlr8or · · Score: 1

    What we've lost in America is the drive to better ourselves and the human race without trying to make a million dollars at it. (at least most of us) Look how many enthusiasts write free OS's and terrific software. I've found in my own travels that people who 'CAN' offer things free or next to free have much better offerings than the profitable equivilant. Their reason for offering is because it gives them a chance to gain experience and knowledge. Obviously, THE reward for us geeks (that and sometimes a peck on the cheek). NASA has been senior staffed for decades by ex hippies that want to show the world how smart they are. Whoopie. Sure, it appears they enjoy success of their hard work but they really aren't in it for knowledge, adventure, exploration, or even for helping their fellow man. Frankly, I'd gladly see Nasa's tek rolled back if it got a better crew!! We've been pitching rocks onto the shore of our ultimate destiny for years when we could have been 'dropping anchor' at the moon and mars a long time ago. They are holding us back, along with politicians and our educational system. What are they keeping us on this planet for, so they can maintain control? Eh, this subject exposes my angst:D There is a universe of possibility waiting just outside the atmosphere but here we are.

    1. Re:ITS ABOUT TIME. by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      So, what's your saying is: you smoke an awful lot of crack on the weekends?

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
  65. Re:Proof. by SlimFastForYou · · Score: 1

    Your wrong.

  66. Re:Hurray! Maybe NASA Quota based hires will end t by rijrunner · · Score: 1

    Of course, no male dominated program at NASA has ever failed. Mars Observer Mission was a stellar example of quality, for example. As was any number of other missions.. I guess women so completely dominated Shuttle development that no one could ever recover from their core flaws..

    The fact of the matter is that the Discovery Missions have been systemically flawed since they started adding elements to them. Exactly what was the success rate the past couple launch windows? 30%? Comes from taking a small budget, cramming as much stuff in as possible and leaving no budget for testing. There is a systemic flaw in NASA. It is called "Incapability to build to a budget". They keep adding features to each successive layer of a prgram to do *more* each mission rather than do the same amount, but with different objectives, because they have the *same* budget.

    You're specific example is, by far, the most technically challenging task in the last round of flights. Slamming impactors into an unknown surface at orbital insertion velocities with a period of about 18 months from proposal to hardware with *zero* testing allowed for in the budget (time and equipment).. What did you expect? At least they *hit* the planet instead of mistaking how close it will flyby..

    That is not a male/female issue. That is just plain bad engineering and it happens in male dominated programs as much as anywhere else.

    NASA prizes were pushed through by a female. You sure you want to advocate this?

    The truth of the matter is that NASA has managed a grand total of *one* piece of man rated flying hardware in the past 20 years and it took 15 years between Reagan proposing the space station in 1984 until they actually flew it. If NASA had a better track record the 20 years prior to the time you are complaining about, you might have had a point, but really? You're just blowing smoke. NASA flew a space mission once every 6 months, or so, and had variable success rate long before the hiring practices you are complaining about were implemented.

  67. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by deacon · · Score: 1
    Well, for those suffering from Bush Derangement Syndrome, anything Bush does must be BAAAAD, even if he isn't actually doing it.

    Don't waste your time and raise your bloodpressure by getting angry at BDS victims. Work to defeat them, certainly, but don't take it personally or you will get ulcers.

  68. stop the bullshitting by cahiha · · Score: 1

    Willfully refusing to conduct experiments that would yield valuable data for ANY reason is an opposition to science.

    Who said anything about "willfully refusing"? In cases where manned exploration yields the same bang-for-the-buck as unmanned probes, I'm all for manned exploration. Until then, we should stick with unmanned probes.

    However, there are numerous things that they can not do and there is nothing that can do that can not be done by a human supplied with life essentials.

    Most scientifically interesting missions are, in fact, only possible with unmanned probes at this point. Human missions are infeasible for many reasons: humans want to have a return trip, they need to be shielded from radiation, and they can't endure years in space, for example.

    1. Re:stop the bullshitting by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Who said anything about "willfully refusing"? In cases where manned exploration yields the same bang-for-the-buck as unmanned probes, I'm all for manned exploration. Until then, we should stick with unmanned probes."

      You did, just now. Your suggesting we refuse manned exploration unless it makes economic sense. Science says we send manned probes so long as there is data that can be gathered by a human being that can not be gathered by unmanned probes.

      Considering that the most valuable potential results of space exploration involve humans leaving Earth it makes good sense to continue gathering data and researching how to get us farther away.

      After all, who cares about the conditions on foreign bodies if we have intention of finding opportunities to exploit.

    2. Re:stop the bullshitting by cahiha · · Score: 1

      You did, just now. Your suggesting we refuse manned exploration unless it makes economic sense. Science says we send manned probes so long as there is data that can be gathered by a human being that can not be gathered by unmanned probes.

      No, that's not what "science says". Science is always about making tradeoffs under budgetary constraints.

      Considering that the most valuable potential results of space exploration involve humans leaving Earth it makes good sense to continue gathering data and researching how to get us farther away.

      Even if your premise were true, continuing manned space travel using known technologies doesn't yield any useful data or research results. The best way of advancing manned space travel right now would be through funding for new propulsion technologies, antimatter generation, fusion, and medicine, and those are either terrestrial or unmanned projects for now.

    3. Re:stop the bullshitting by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "No, that's not what "science says". Science is always about making tradeoffs under budgetary constraints."

      No, practicing science is about making tradeoffs under budgetary constraints. If you review the scientific process again you will find that it does not allow for tradeoffs.

    4. Re:stop the bullshitting by cahiha · · Score: 1

      If you review the scientific process again you will find that it does not allow for tradeoffs.

      There are millions of experiments one could do at any one time. The ones that get done are the ones that are economically feasible and get funded. Those are the tradeoffs working scientists make every day.

  69. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by jesterzog · · Score: 1

    As in so many other programs, he will say one thing and do the Orwellian switch, with no one bothering to note the discrepancy. Education, environment, energy policy, on and on. Say something thing positive, then defund and kill.

    To me it sounds as if the problem is at least as much with your media as it is with your federal government.

    Who votes for the journalists?

  70. Apparently they "politically affiliated" already by jesterzog · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Does anyone have the political affiliations of the people who were fired?

    I don't know specifically about their affiliations, but if you trust the article, page 2 says:

    Instead, the sources said, [Griffin] expressed dismay that NASA over the past several years had put a lot of people in top management positions because of what one source described as "political connections or bureaucratic gamesmanship -- not merit."

    Several sources spoke of a corps of younger scientists and engineers, including Griffin, who had been groomed in the 1970s and 1980s as NASA's next generation of leaders only to be shoved aside during the past 15 years. They said Griffin hopes to bring them back.

    In principle, this sounds like a very good thing. Apparently, he's kicking out people whom he believes were hired more for their political affiliations than their competance. Before taking this as it's written, however, can anyone comment on any political affiliations of Griffin himself? For all we know, and as I think you're implying, his definition of competance might be synonymous with republican.

  71. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by Forbman · · Score: 1

    It's just that those who are rich, who PAY MORE TAXES get money back as well.

    Maybe in gross amount, but not in net percentage.

  72. Tin-Foil Hat Brigade by Detritus · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    What is it about stories on NASA that brings out the tin-foil hat brigade? Are they having a special on half-baked conspiracy theories?

    --
    Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  73. Party loyalty by lemur337 · · Score: 1

    counts for more with Bushco than technical expertise does. Same thing happened at the CIA and just recently with a group of telecommunications experts sent to South America to represent the U.S. People who had made campaign contributions to Kerry were purged.

  74. Bush's other unsafe sciences by infonography · · Score: 1

    Climatology, simple chemistry, pharmacology Ethics, Mathematics, Economics, Archaeology, History, and the list goes on and on. The guy is a Luddite.. If he could read I would get him a copy of Jesus on Mars by Philip José Farmer

    --
    Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
  75. Musk, Bezos, Carmack, Paul Allen, Rutan, etc. by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 1

    Thank you for the reply. I insert your comments in asterices and reply afterward: ***Read Mike Griffin's "internal memo" to NASA posted on spaceref.com or nasawatch.com. He (rightly so) believes that private industry does not have the resources or drive to implement the kinds of multigenerational missions that space exploration requires.**** In the absence of adequate competitive prizes, YES, that's less untrue. But we've got a lot more high tech visionary space lovers out there now who are willing to make the commitment (and are doing so). Can you imagine how much better it would be if only NASA offered adequate competitive prizes? Again, think: Musk, Bezos, Carmack, Paul Allen, Rutan, etc... ***Getting to Mars will take decades (not the trip itself, but the planning, building the vehicles, and implementation). When was the last time you saw any corporation plan more than 10 years out?*** Tire companies have successfully lobbied to keep metro / subway systems from being built in certain parts of our country even though they'd take as much as a decade to complete. Meanwhile, Microsoft designed the internet explorer a decade ago around how Bill Gates figured the internet would be a decade later (and beyond). There are other examples but who says it must take as long as you say for us to go to Mars? NASA contractors and their bureaucratic ilk do, of course, because they still profit from saying so. Taxpayers deserve better, especially given our record high $8 trillion dollar national debt and aging population. *** How about 20 or 30? Now, take all profit motivation out of that equation**** It's unrealistic to do so in this era of space tourism and potential private property rights in space. ***and how many of them are left... purely scientific and research oriented undertakings by a corporation that took decades to bring to fruition. A government organization is the only kind of organization that will be able to span that timeframe without breaking apart.*** NASA could offer different prizes for different endeavors and alliances would naturally emerge between the best launchers, the best life support system designers, the best ....

  76. still anti-science by lorelorn · · Score: 1
    No, he is is still anti-science. If you've been paying attention to NASA you would notice that all scientific programs that would actually advance our knowledge are being cancelled or delayed.

    Projects like the Jupiter Icy Moon Orbiter, James Webb Telescope (Hubble's replacement), and the Terrestrial Planet Finder are gone.

    In their place are empty flag-waving execises (let's go to the moon!!) that will not increase our knowlegde of the universe or solar system at all.

    Fundamentalist religous types are discomfited by the idea of finding life elsewhere (Europa's oceans) or finding Earth Analogues, or of seeing back in time more than 5,000 years. Programs that would do this are being shut down.

    Remember to wave as those brave astronauts lift on on their taxi journey.

    1. Re:still anti-science by dlass · · Score: 1

      Well, no, that's precisely wrong about missions that are gone. JIMO is gone, as such, but Webb and TPF are quite alive, if perhaps delayed a bit. If you've been paying attention to NASA, you would have known that. By the way, those missions are delayed because of their own budget overruns, and out-of-control congressional earmarks. Not because of Moon-to-Mars. (Well, not yet at least.)

    2. Re:still anti-science by pfdietz · · Score: 1

      JIMO is gone for excellent reasons. The nuclear propulsion technology sucked (completely pathetic thrust/mass ratio, so the mission would take far longer that it really should have), the mission was very expensive (and that expense was growing), and the relevance to the new goals at NASA was tenuous at best.

      Freeman Dyson commented that JIMO would set nuclear propulsion technology back a generation. I'm sure he's glad to see it gone.

    3. Re:still anti-science by lorelorn · · Score: 1
      You are kidding yourself.

      Those projects are all gone.

      Excessive delays are what bureaucracies do when they want to kill projects without actually plunging the knife in.

      You need to pay attention. Everything I said stands. Anti science administration = scietific projects gone.

    4. Re:still anti-science by dlass · · Score: 1

      Umm, Webb is gone? Since when?

      That outlook is pretty simplistic, looking at the history of NASA space science, in which virtually all successful missions were stretched out in development. Get a grip.

      "Anti science administration = scietific projects gone."

      Gotta tell the administration that. They gave the Science Mission Directorate a budget increase. Oops. (But there is no question that this administration needs some education about the value of basic science.)

  77. THIS posting's formatting works better. Sorry. by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 1

    Thank you for the reply. I insert your comments in asterices and reply afterward:

    ***Read Mike Griffin's "internal memo" to NASA posted on spaceref.com or nasawatch.com. He (rightly so) believes that private industry does not have the resources or drive to implement the kinds of multigenerational missions that space exploration requires.****

    In the absence of adequate competitive prizes, YES, that's less untrue. But we've got a lot more high tech visionary space lovers out there now who are willing to make the commitment (and are doing so). Can you imagine how much better it would be if only NASA offered adequate competitive prizes? Again, think: Musk, Bezos, Carmack, Paul Allen, Rutan, etc...

    ***Getting to Mars will take decades (not the trip itself, but the planning, building the vehicles, and implementation). When was the last time you saw any corporation plan more than 10 years out?***

    Tire companies have successfully lobbied to keep metro / subway systems from being built in certain parts of our country even though they'd take as much as a decade to complete. Meanwhile, Microsoft designed the internet explorer a decade ago around how Bill Gates figured the internet would be a decade later (and beyond). There are other examples but who says it must take as long as you say for us to go to Mars? NASA contractors and their bureaucratic ilk do, of course, because they still profit from saying so. Taxpayers deserve better, especially given our record high $8 trillion dollar national debt and aging population.

    *** How about 20 or 30? Now, take all profit motivation out of that equation****

    It's unrealistic to do so in this era of space tourism and potential private property rights in space.

    ***and how many of them are left... purely scientific and research oriented undertakings by a corporation that took decades to bring to fruition. A government organization is the only kind of organization that will be able to span that timeframe without breaking apart.***

    NASA could offer different prizes for different endeavors and alliances would naturally emerge between the best launchers, the best life support system designers, the best ....

  78. Its called ROCKET SCIENCE! by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    everything else "isnt rocket science"

    wakeup.

  79. I will be damned. by Catbeller · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Flamebait? I will be damned. Listen: the reason why the people are being canned at NASA is because the budget is shrinking, and because Bush says one thing while he does another: No Child Left Behind, in which he dumps the funding onto the individual state; Clear Skies, in which pollution controls are dismantled or the enforcement defunded; Healthy Forests, where the lumber companies are given carte blanche and free roads; pumping up patriotism for the armed forces while cutting funding for their retirement, their wages, and their medical care; disassembling bankruptcy laws while declaiming concern for struggling families... the list can go on for hours. Not that Americans hear anything about it on the news.

    DO NOT USE YOUR MOD POINTS, BUSHITES, TO SHUT PEOPLE UP.

    NASA is being defunded and beheaded by Bush and his brain trust. I doubt very much Bush even knows about the process, being who he is and limited as he is in capacity to understand detail.

    Modding this as "flamebait" is like saying a man forced you to riot, rightwingers. If the truth upsets you, too bad, but mod points are for keeping people on topic and legal, not for smothering the voices telling you the truth.

    This is what happened to ABC, CBS, NBC, and CNN. Everyone is terrified to mention obvious truth because the right wingers are ready to Ratherize anyone who defames the Leader or points out that their worldview is bullshit. And BTW, Rather's report was correct: Bush bugged out, never got sent to Vietnam as a normal punishment, and walked away whistling, his Daddy's friends cleaning up after him. It's the Texas Way. Deal with it.

    1. Re:I will be damned. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...Bush says one thing while he does another...pollution controls are dismantled...companies are given carte blanche...BUSHITES...beheaded by Bush...rightwingers...the right wingers are ready to Ratherize anyone...their worldview is bullshit...ever got sent to Vietnam...his Daddy's friends cleaning up after him...
      Oh yeah.

      You're objective.

      Please, keep spouting hate at Conservatives and Republicans. That'll turn people onto your point of view.
  80. Re:No Astronaut Left Behind by Catbeller · · Score: 1

    Adjusted for inflation? And how much for Star Wars or the laser cannons or the new nuclear weapons programs? 6.6 billion is horseshit. NASA is getting defunded by atttrition and inflation. Paper raises in funding mean nothing.

  81. But what are they doing? by pfooosk · · Score: 1

    A slightly ignorant question:

    What is NASA doing? I mean that literally... I would think their goal is space exploration. Probes are launched here and there but I'd like to know where the billions go.

    (Given that we are decommissioning Hubble, that we have errant probes and remote vehicles scattered about the neighborhood)

    Can someone state, equivocally, what their most important pursuit is?

    That question posed, I'm glad that someone's thinking that something has to change.

    1. Re:But what are they doing? by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      A slightly ignorant question:

      What is NASA doing?


      It's definitely not an ignorant question. Certainly, most slashdotters seem to be in conflict about what the answer is. Some say that NASA's goal is science, others say it's exploration, others say it's just an arm of the military, others say it's a prelude to colonization.

    2. Re:But what are they doing? by Riot+Nrrrrd · · Score: 1

      A slightly ignorant question:

      What is NASA doing?


      I can't speak for the rest of NASA, but I know what we're doing, and it's a lot:

      http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/

      (So, how many of you /.'ers out there knew that Deep Impact is about to launch a probe into the comet Tempel 1 on the 4th of July? Raise your hands ... oh dear.)

      --
      .signature? Why, I haven't heard that word since before the Clone Wars ...
    3. Re:But what are they doing? by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      (So, how many of you /.'ers out there knew that Deep Impact is about to launch a probe into the comet Tempel 1 on the 4th of July? Raise your hands ... oh dear.)

      Hey, I know about it. :)

  82. Re:Prizes leverage 40 times their amount in invest by alienw · · Score: 1

    You are basically saying that there is some mysterious effect which makes competitions attract investment. It exists to some effect, but that money is quite limited (just try to start up a DARPA GC team). By NASA standards, that amount of money is miniscule. Trust me, nobody will compete in a contest to make a space shuttle replacement if it takes $2 billion to do that (even with a $50 million bounty).

  83. DARPA had to TURN AWAY competitors by NASAWatch.INFO · · Score: 1

    *DARPA had to TURN AWAY competitors, last time. Universities have the money and want the fame. So do some companies and individuals. Granted, money doesn't grow on trees even if NASA wastes it like it does. *I don't agree that it would take $2 billion to restore the USA's ability to send humans into space, nor do I agree that NASA should be able to get away with offering merely a $50 million prize like the private sector one offered impressively enough by Robert Bigelow. But as it stands, NASA offers NADA in terms of launching correct?

  84. Organizational bloat==lack of response by waferhead · · Score: 1

    I work at a medium sized, (mostly) defense related company as a Sr. maintenance tech, ~6K employees worldwide.

    One of the things that I LOVE about this place is the it has an (almost) excruciatingly SHORT food chain//chain of command.

    There are (at last count) 4 layers between myself (layer zero) and the CEO.

    I'm not thinking of job progression here... I'm thinking communication. IMHO THAT'S NASAs issue.

    Where I work, when there is an "issue", it gets dealt with at the lowest possible layer, and QUICKLY. If it doesn't happen quickly, it progresses quickly.

    (Sort of like the military is supposed to (and occasionally does) work)

  85. decommision NASA by grikdog · · Score: 1

    So, somebody's cutting out jobs. Is this "fiscal responsibility" (i.e., downsizing Big Guvmint), or does it have something to do with a leaner, meaner NASA, or is it just peeling off a top layer of brain cells nobody needs because the fiefdoms in question are due to be slashed and set ablaze? Hubbard as tip of the iceberg sort of thing. Why not decommision NASA outright, and privatize it like the Post Office? Have all those shuttle flights accomplished anything, except to demonstrate the feasibility of shuttle flights which work well in space but occasionally kill people taking off and landing? At least, when NASA flew to the moon, it took our minds off the Tet Offensive. And it came back with Teflon.

    --
    ``Tension, apprehension & dissension have begun!'' - Duffy Wyg&, in Alfred Bester's _The Demolished Man_
  86. Re:since everyone agrees by SuperMario666 · · Score: 1

    Illiteracy - it's what's for dinner!

  87. Basket case by robotkid · · Score: 1
    Ehh, NASA's been shaking themselves up ever since the end of the cold war and it hasn't done much except change the logos and buzzwords. All their cold war talent is either retired, dead, or went to industry. Hiring new talent, well, they contract out everything. I'm not sure the concept of "lowest bidder" is even sound when there are only two mega-aerospace contractors left, and whoever wins the contract subcontracts out to the other guy.

    I worked at a NASA center briefly as a computer technician. The high level bureaucrats had plush carpeting, receptionists, potted palms trees, and $20,000 sparc workstations to check their email with. While the engineers in the basement actually designing a *&(* satellites would come and asked me what type of computer I could acquire for them with their discretionary fund of 50$. I scrounged around and they were the new, proud owners of a 386sx with a yellow screen (monochrome!) that noone else wanted (I'm dating myself here).

    There was plenty of lower middle management that had engineering backgrounds, which you'd think would be a good thing (i.e. being able to communicate with subordinates and translate to superiors, etc). Thing was, ones I met were ex-engineers who were lucky enough to be civil servants. If their project failed miserably, but not so miserably to cause an inquiry, they got reassigned to lower management. Civil servants have tenure and are hard to fire, so obviously contractors are preferred. Which means all your talent leaves the moment a project ends and then the next project doing the exact same thing has to re-learn everything the last guys figured out.

    It also doesn't help that between the space station and the space shuttle (neither of which can be lowered any more due to politics), and salaries for 10 levels of bureaucracy, thats already 90% of the entire budget. AFAIK the only thing keeping any science alive is the Jet Propulsion Lab. Caltech is still attracting young talent away from industry instead of vice versa.

  88. how many? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you are saying there are only 50 SESers at the Agency? I thought there were closer to 350 or so.