SoCal Selene Group Drops Google Lunar X Prize Bid
anzha writes "On Saturday, after the vaunted First Team Summit was completed in Strasbourg, The Southern California Selene Group announced publicly that they are dropping out of the Google Lunar X Prize. Citing very strong differences in opinions over how the X Prize was being run, the team felt they could no longer participate. On the flip side, the X Prize Foundation announced at the team summit that there are four new teams. With the drop out, there are now thirteen official competitive teams. Assuredly, there are more to come."
Its sad that bureaucracy has caused an entire team to become disillusioned with the competition. The spirit of this competition has always been in the name of science and exploration, but it is becoming more and more bureaucratic to make it 'fair' to everyone. If someone can obtain the materials they need and come up with an innovative way to accomplish the underlying mission, I say more power to them.
I could drag hot dogs through shag carpet all day to the point of exhaustion. Doesn't mean that's productive science.
I don't know if NASA people have to sign any sort of non-compete (I did to intern at the DOE a few years ago, so they might), but otherwise I would assume that a team of engineers that has done something like this before -- for instance, one of the Mars rover teams, would start their own team and be done with this.
Have none of them thought of it, or are they not allowed to? Perhaps a reader from JPL might tell us? I know there are a few from comments in the Phoenix thread the other day.
Your courageous and selfless spelling corrections have made me a better person.
I know my team dropped because after reviewing the objective of getting to the moon, we concluded that it would be "really, really hard" to get there.
stuff |
Waaaahhhh!!!!
... take your toys and go home. Nothing prevents anyone from continuing the task on their own. I'd say if someone was really interested in doing this, they would continue. Imagine taking the wind of of the XPF sails by being able to say "That's nice. Did you see the pictures from our landing 6 months ago???"
The article as written makes the author look like a cry baby. Whether that is an accurate representation or not I can't tell until someone with better communication skills can provide something of substance.
You sign up for something someone else is running, you better make sure you understand everything ahead of time. If the rules are vague, get someone to clarify them first before dragging mock ups across country.
Or accept the fact they are vague and someone may make decisions you don't like but will have to live with.
Or
I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
We don't like your rules, so we're taking our ball and going home.
Nice.
I don't buy into that mentality all the time, but... bureaucracy or not, you're participating in their prize, get used to their rules or play a different game. Shut up and win.
The number of teams is irrelevant to who wins; it's only an interesting stat for the organizers to advertise. How many teams were signed up for the first X PRIZE? Something on the order of 20, right? How many teams had a legitimate chance to win? 1.
By and large, it's a unicorn race, then someone shows up with a horse and wins. I expect roughly the same from GLXP: both (1) a low ratio of legitimate to total entrants; and (2) a really cool finish.
Selene has to drop out now? No big deal. Their unicorn wasn't ahead of the others anyway.
Kurt Vonnegut: "If you can do a half-assed job of anything, you're a one-eyed man in the kingdom of the blind."
If you don't like the rules, don't play the game.
Interesting how few people here actually realize the painful reality of X PRIZE's attitudes about human life. It is well known to many insiders that XPRIZE and their "royalty" do not care about the sacrifices other people make to help achieve their goals. It is a just cause to RISK another human's life to achieve their dreams.
... [Multiple audience comments -- "SLAVE LABOR"]
While what X PRIZE does is very cool, everyone should remember these words:
Tragedy in the new space race - MSNBC July 29, 2007
"This was an industrial accident. This has nothing to do with spaceflight," he was quoted as saying. "I have complete confidence that they are building a safe and robust spaceship."
Totalitarian Temptation in Space - SPACEDAILY May 21, 2006
DIAMANDIS: If you look back at what von Braun did in Nazi Germany it was incredible what you can do with literally a dictatorship. Look at the numbers. 6,000 V-2s built. 6,000 missiles were built in Nazi Germany. The recurring cost was $13,000 a launch for those vehicles. You can bring the cost down with mass production. We'll come back to what will drive
DIAMANDIS: Yea, and slave labor, Sorry.
[NERVOUS LAUGHTER]
DIAMANDIS: But you know - again to you, the rest of us would happily be slave labor for that mission... Can you erase that from the video tape?
Deep insights into the man running the show.
These are just a few of the quotes that are in press that really show their/his true colors. Don't get me wrong, there are very good people within X PRIZE that are still hanging on in hopes it will get better, but sadly these last, very underpaid "nice-guys" and girls are drinking the Kool-Aid.
To Dr. Rosen, Ms Castleman, evangellydonut and the rest of the SELENE team I say Bravo! Thank you for taking the high road. Good for you for having a BRAIN to understand where the real innovations in space activities need to occur; for having a HEART and caring about how X PRIZE treats people and the public, and a SPINE to stand on your principles and walk out of this project.