High-Altitude Balloon Tweets Earth
celsomartinho writes "Spacebits is yet another low-cost High-Altitude Balloon (HAB) with a computer probe being launched to near space on 30 May, this time in Portugal. The twist with this project, besides the cool electronics, cameras, and sensors on board, is the fact that the team provided the online community with a real-time web dashboard so that everyone can follow the two-hour journey up to 100,000 feet and back to earth. Real-time data includes measurements from all its sensors, including temperature, pressure, humidity and air quality, altitude, acceleration, and GPS coordinates and a live Twitter feed. The team is also using a public GSM network to send SMS lat/lon/alt coordinates to anyone willing to go on launch site and participate in the probe hunt." The balloon goes off Memorial Day weekend, so bookmark the page if you're on call.
A mindless orb looking down on us all posting updates about its uninteresting activities? How will we distinguish this from anybody else on Twitter?
Okay I have learned to live with things like putting "Portugal, Europe" instead of just Portugal but was there a reason that "Memorial Day weekend" seemed more appropriate than an actual date? This kind of thing does nothing to dispel the rumours that the USA doesn't recognise places outside of its borders you know.
11:00 : I'm flying! ...
11:05 : Still flying!
11:10 : Yep. Still flying.
11:15 : I'm bored.
11:20 : I spy with my little eye something beginning with S.
11:25 : Yep. It was sky. I'm so bored.
11:35 : Booooring.
13:15 : Kiiiil meeee. Kiiiiiil meeee please...
These two patterns don't make news:
Bla bla bla bla uses twitter!
Bla bla bla bla uses facebook!
Does this sound possible? What if we take some HABs and tether them to an amature rocket. Might it be possible to get into space on the cheap? Maybe we can crash into the moon or something.
I was going to post a rather trolling post about the misuse of "it's" instead of "its", but then thought that the submitter probably didn't have English as their first language and thus doesn't deserve my trolling. CmdrTaco has no such excuse, though. Anyway, please fix the mistake.
Its allways rong to be a grammer or speling troll. Get a lief. English evolves and it's ussers makes they're own rooles.
This ain't rocket surgery.
There were a few meters on the page to measure things but they were all in English.
I assume you are talking about units of distance. Metres are used almost everwhere exept the USA. Not just Portugal.
30,000m does not round nicely to anything from the pre-industrial measurement system. According to my phone, it is 98,425.1968504 feet, 149.1290861 furlongs and a load of other peculiar things that nobody has ever heard of. The best I can offer is 18.6410985 miles.
I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
wao srsly, ur makin me loose my cents of humer about this stuff
The date was in the summary - right in the second line. The comment about Memorial Day weekend (incorrectly not capitalized) was at the end and added to the summary by the editor. So anyone seeing 'evidence' of anything about the USA is reading into the article and the summary something which simply isn't there - and thus confirming their own biases. (Which also goes for the people modding it up without bothering to compare crimperman's complaint against what was actually written - Slashdot reflexive moderation at work.)
I've been working on my own HAB for a couple months now. Amazed noone has mentioned the use of cell phone in this experiment and the huge LOS coverage this will cause being at such a high altitude. A couple HAB's have used this, in fact there was a post a while back where some MIT students did it for less than $150 using a modified phone that sent GPS packets over SMS. However is it legal? As I'm designing mine, I've been very tempted to go this route since it's A LOT cheaper than buying even a minimal arps rig. Alas it doesn't seem so so am dismissing it as an option. So can we get back on topic and stop talking about typo's and Portugal, Europe. What happened to /.
This in fact is not new, various groups have had quite sophisticated online tracking for some time. Perhaps the best of the bunch is the UKHAS [1] balloon tracking program which you can find here:
http://www.spacenear.us/tracker
It's open source (of course!) and is run on bits of software contributed by various groups. It integrates with the UKHAS 'distributed listener', where anyone with a suitable radio (most HAMs) can listen in to a balloon flight and automatically decode and upload telemetry to the online map. The sound card software is a fork of fldigi [2] which has been modified to do all the uploading, and is cross-platform.
The UKHAS tracker also makes use of some flight prediction software from the Cambridge University Spaceflight group [3] to give live real-time flight and landing predictions so anyone chasing the balloon knows where to drive.
All of this stuff is FOSS. It's a glorious little cul-de-sac of geeky openness. Happy days!
[1] http://www.ukhas.org.uk/
[2] http://ukhas.org.uk/guides:tracking_guide
[3] http://www.cuspaceflight.co.uk/ (/predict for the flight predictor)