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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."

14 of 64 comments (clear)

  1. Its sad by phpmysqldev · · Score: 5, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:Its sad by mrisaacs · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Anyone (with the right team and skills) can scavenge parts to build a lander - but the idea is to develop technologies and components that could be used on and reduce the cost of real missions.

      Using stuff that's cheap because it's left over doesn't meet the goals.

      Spending limits are also a good idea in contests of this kind - if you win, with a solution even more expensive than currently in use technologies - what have you accomplished?

      This is not just a gee whiz contest, the idea is to advance the science and technology in hopes of jump starting private industry in the space arena.

      --
      ...carrier dead.....
    2. Re:Its sad by phpmysqldev · · Score: 3, Interesting

      yeah nothing wrong with what you just said. but the team was mainly upset with the vagueness of many of the rules and questions they had about what could and couldn't be used. Its fine if you want strict rules for a contest like this, but you need well defined rules from the start in order for that model to be effectively followed

    3. Re:Its sad by evangellydonut · · Score: 5, Informative

      Being a former member of the team...

      first, the tanks can be purchased on the open market if you know the proper vendor.

      second, the tanks in question was not the first choice, was not even the second choice. it just happens that we were able to get our hands on some, and may consider using them when the stars aligned.

      third, something novel WAS disallowed due to vagueness of the rule.

      fourth, to our knowledge we are the only team who's even trying to achieve the goal within the stated prize money. everyone else is doing it for the publicity, especially the CMU team.

      4.1 - I wonder where does the CMU team's student's stipend come? research grants? university? or they truly do all their work AFTER they fulfilled their obligatory research.

    4. Re:Its sad by FleaPlus · · Score: 4, Informative
      Its sad that bureaucracy has caused an entire team to become disillusioned with the competition.

      What's weird though is that in a post by the same person at the Southern California Selene Group earlier that day, instead of blaming bureaucracy she said that their reason for disillusionment was their opposition to human space missions (and the idea that the Google Lunar X Prize could support that), and their (somewhat belated) realization that the Google Lunar X Prize was intended to promote commercialization of space. I personally think they were being terribly silly, but you can read the post for yourself:

      http://www.googlelunarxprize.org/lunar/teams/scsg/blog/some-serious-thinking-at-the-southern-california-selene-group

      n my first blog, I wrote why Harold Rosen formed the Southern California Selene Group. In short, he and I registered our team to compete for the Google Lunar X PRIZE to demonstrate that a low-cost space mission to the moon could be accomplished and could lead to lowering the cost of some future robotic missions to planetary moons. Plus, we intended to have fun! Harold and I both are strong supporters of space science and robotic space exploration. (For one, I'm an astronomy and cosmology enthusiast.) We love the kind of work that JPL is doing, for example. But we most definitely are not in favor of human space missions. That is not our goal, nor do we support such a goal.

      The Team Summit turned out to be a real wakeup call. In the Guidelines workshop that I attended just last Tuesday, the cumulative effect of hearing all day from Peter Diamandis, Bob Weiss and Gregg Maryniak that the "real purpose" of the Google Lunar X PRIZE was to promote the so-called commercialization of space (which I took to mean highly impractical stuff like mining the moon and beaming power to the earth, as shown in one of GLXP kickoff videos), humanity's future in space, etc. etc., took its toll. I couldn't help but think "what am I doing here?" When I spoke to Harold about it on the phone later, he agreed - no way did he want to be involved in promoting a goal he does not believe in.
    5. Re:Its sad by FleaPlus · · Score: 4, Funny

      Did you know that if a solar flare had occurred during the original Lunar Landing, everyone would've died?

      Did you know that a rogue wave can strike without warning, rapidly sinking an ocean-going vessel and killing everybody on it? It's happened many times already. Clearly, for safety's sake we must put an end to putting humans on ocean-going craft, regardless of whether or not they volunteer for it.

    6. Re:Its sad by crymeph0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Did you know that a rogue wave [wikipedia.org] can strike without warning, rapidly sinking an ocean-going vessel and killing everybody on it?

      rogue wave doesn't accumulate inside the body and does permanent and irreparable damage like radiation.

      FleaPlus' point was that people can die either way. Are you saying the problem isn't that people can die, but how they might die, e.g. cancer versus drowning? That seems like a choice better left to the individual who wants to be an astronaut, not to society.

      --
      It should be illegal to say that freedom of speech should be limited.
  2. Effort doesn't mean it's a good idea by RoastingHeart · · Score: 4, Funny
    "HUH? Do they know how hard we have worked on this? " (Their Camera Design) and the denying of the "ARCA guys (who had lugged across Europe a full-scale mockup of their craft to ISU for display!)"

    I could drag hot dogs through shag carpet all day to the point of exhaustion. Doesn't mean that's productive science.

  3. non-compete? by bsDaemon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:non-compete? by bornyesterday · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I doubt NASA has a non-compete agreement, but the goal of the X-Prize is a privately funded venture. Just because a guy who worked at NASA has the knowledge to design a similar system doesn't mean that he can get the necessary money to make the prize worthwhile economically speaking.

  4. "really, really hard" to get to moon by 192939495969798999 · · Score: 4, Funny

    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.

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    stuff |
  5. Only one comment to make by johnlcallaway · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Waaaahhhh!!!!

    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 ... 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???"

    --
    I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
  6. Re:Childish? by evangellydonut · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's nothing in our camera design that doesn't meet the rules. It's just that simple.

  7. Re:Childish? by evangellydonut · · Score: 4, Informative

    thank you. I've spent 2 grand out of my own pocket so far, and will probably spend more if we continued on. what if by the end, after we find a sponsor who puts up all that money, and ready to launch, and have the X-Prize foundation tell us "even though your design meets all our requirements, it's not what we had in mind, thus you are disqualified", what then?