Masten Qualifies For $1 Million Space Prize
RobGoldsmith writes "Masten Space Systems successfully qualified for first place in level two of the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge Wednesday. Flying a brand new vehicle named XA-0.1E (nicknamed Xoie), Masten demonstrated their ability to build, debug and fly a vehicle on a very short timeline. "
Reader lessgravity points out a video of the craft completing its mission. Apparently, the team was given an extra shot at the challenge on Friday after having trouble during their scheduled attempts on Wednesday and Thursday, which didn't please John Carmack, founder of rival team Armadillo Aerospace.
John's been working on his vehicle for about a decade. Losing the the prize because the judges decided to go soft on the rules has really got to hurt.
Heck, Carmack's spent so much money on his vehicle that he's had to take time off to put out new versions of Doom and Quake just to refill the coffers.
Jeff Miller
http://www.assistsolar.com
http://businesscredittips.weebly.com
Well, if they've got XA-0.1E, how about WA-5H for the next version. Or maybe KA-7.33?
No OS on the planet can protect itself from a user with the admin password. - Yvan256
gloriously off topic but who cares, it's just an idle chat space after all....
200g flour not the same as 200g of rice? run that one past me, I'm curious! :-)
Also I don't get your bit about cooking in metric needing special tools, suggesting that cooking in Imperial doesn't need special tools, that the overhead on using metric is higher than using Imperial. Over here in the UK most measuring devices do both but increasingly are metric so "special tools" is more like Imperial rather than metric. How does cooking 200g rice vs 200g flour need more tools than cooking 8oz rice vs 8oz flour?
Obviously too early in the morning for me but if a recipe asked for 200g flour and then 200g rice surely the weight is the same. They might displace different volumes but surely 200g is 200g on my scales? Recipes over here in the UK tend to be by weight rather than some things by weight and some things by volume (unless its a liquid).
Don't even get me started on US measurements of "cups" , that really confused me for a long time :-) I have lots of different cups in my cupboard and they are all different sizes. No idea which one is the official, standard sized one! Big chunky mugs for drinking tea when you're in the workshop, tea cups for nice meals, couple of little posh coffee cups for espressos, all different sizes.... no idea which is the official "cup".
cheers, idling away the morn...
While I really appreciate the parent's bringing up the matter of Wednesday's X-Prize competition, I was somewhat less impressed by all the links in the parent post going to the winner's own accounts of the event, particularly when the contest is somewhat mired in controversy.
You have to give a few points for including the one link to the New Scientist news report. But: ..." ... seems like a pretty good place to include a link to the x-prize dot org site, no?
"... in level two of the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge Wednesday. Flying a brand new vehicle
http://space.xprize.org/lunar-lander-challenge/
Seeing the article above this one they better de-bug it in more ways than one.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
The official rules, which are no longer available btw, contain many caveats of the form "at the sole discretion of the judges".. these give the judges power to change the rules as they go along and they're not ashamed to do it. If they have a competition next year I expect many people will be looking at this situation and seriously doubting if it is worth competing.. how can you put time and money into a competition built on shifting sands.
How we know is more important than what we know.
"very short timeline"
meaning it only stayed in the air for 30 seconds ;)
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
Your snotty comment would have teeth except that the US was the first country to put men on the moon (using imperial units) and has a very long and successful space exploration history compared to that of other countries.
NASA has only had two mishaps due to units conversion errors and these both occurred AFTER they started moving to metric. Their space program and code libraries are 50 years old, so it may take a few years to get all the conversion bugs out.
Of course, another viewpoint is that things worked better when they just stuck with the imperial system, hmmmmmmmm?
You can watch the Unresonable Rocket guys compete live right now.... http://space.xprize.org/lunar-lander-challenge
-Malakai
A Dragon Lives in my Garage
And your response exemplifies the attitude of the ESA, which has never actually done anything of significance in space compared to NASA - a bunch of whiny representative countries debating meaningless politics and technicalities instead of just getting off their asses and DOING something useful.
Congratulations, you should apply.
Well this definitely begs the question: Where's my ************ flying car?!