NASA 'Emails' a Socket Wrench To the ISS
HughPickens.com writes: "Sarah LeTrent reports at CNN that NASA just emailed the design of a socket wrench to astronauts so that they could print it out in the orbit. The ratcheting socket wrench was the first "uplink tool" printed in space, according to Grant Lowery, marketing and communications manager for Made In Space, which built the printer in partnership with NASA. The tool was designed on the ground, emailed to the space station and then manufactured where it took four hours to print out the finished product. The space agency hopes to one day use the technology to make parts for broken equipment in space and long-term missions would benefit greatly from onboard manufacturing capabilities. "I remember when the tip broke off a tool during a mission," recalls NASA astronaut TJ Creamer, who flew aboard the space station during Expedition 22/23 from December 2009 to June 2010. "I had to wait for the next shuttle to come up to bring me a new one. Now, rather than wait for a resupply ship to bring me a new tool, in the future, I could just print it."
I really wouldn't want to use a plastic socket on much of anything. But, why on earth was there not a decent socket set on the ISS in the first place? (pun intended)
How much you wanna bet it'll break the first time they use it.
What is to stop someone from uploading a 3D-printed gun and possibly depressurizing the whole station?
it seems not working :)
Oh, hang on. Yes you would.
Sarah LeTrent is using "ironically" ironically.
I read that as NASA emails wrench to ISIS.
My first thought was, ISIS has an email address?
Put it on Thingiverse!
Print spare printer.
You wouldn't steal a car.
You wouldn't steal a handbag.
You wouldn't steal a tv.
You wouldn't steal a socket wrench.
3D PRINTING IS STEALING.
STEALING IS AGAINST THE LAW.
3D PRINTING. IT'S A CRIME.
(BTW: 2nd time I've tried to post this. Fuck your stupid fucking unreadable captchas, slashdot.)
We now return to Family Guy in Space:
(Printer spits out something...)
Peter: "Wait. That doesn't look like a tool,"
Quagmire: "It's frequently been called a tool."'
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
"I remember when the tip broke off a tool during a mission, ... I had to wait for the next shuttle to come up to bring me a new one.
I remember when the tip broke off a tool and we were out of filament. I had to wait for the next shuttle to come up to bring me more.
2.2 Angriffsmittel und -methoden 15
2.2.1 Spam 15
2.2.2 Schadprogramme 16
2.2.3 Drive-by-Exploits und Exploit-Kits 17
2.2.4 Botnetze 18
2.2.5 Social Engineering 19
2.2.6 Identitätsdiebstahl 20
2.2.7 Denial of Service 20
2.2.8 Advanced Persistent Threats (APT) 21
2.2.9 Nachrichtendienstliche Cyber-Angriffe 22
I can understand Spam but Drive-by-Exploits? Social Engineering? Denial of Service???
Surely there are German words for this? I mean 2.2.4 I'm pretty sure is botnet; which I should be a lot harder to give its own German translation than Advanced Persistent Threat?
Technology, the cause of and solution to all of life's problems.
Shouldn't that be "NASA Emails a 'Socket Wrench' to the ISS"? The realness of the email is not in question. The realness of the wrench is.
I'm surprised there isn't infringement - hasn't anyone got around to patenting 'using a socket wrench - in space'.
And how is 3D printing a plastic shape supposed to help that?
I wonder if the ISS gets any...
snark and terminal dissection? It's a first shot at something useful-ish. There's plenty of small parts on the ISS that could benefit from sooner-than-resupply-mission times.
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
In the same way that we have upped the standards of what "broadband" means, can we please up the standard of what "space" means to no longer include low-orbit? I'd like NASA to start referring to anything closer than the moon as "Above Earth". Anything farther than that they can call "space".
Suddenly everyone would realize how ridiculous NASA is: "Why has it been 50 years and NASA still hasn't taken humans into space? Shouldn't we be going to space by now?"
The most interesting thing here is they can print 3D in micro gravity, didn't know you could.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
ISS: "Could you please e-mail us the instructions for a wrench?"
Ground: "Please clarify. What kind of wrench do you need?"
ISS: "It doesn't matter. We are going to use it as a hammer."
Have gnu, will travel.
Surely once they verify that this process works OK, the next step is to just upload every design for every part and tool they can think of onto a flash drive/ SSD/ ...
Why do they need to wait for the plan to be sent up. What happens if something happens to comms (and they need the requisite part to fix comms). Seems like an awful idea to be reliant on comms (with the caveat of where they need to create a new design due to some unique situation).
"One of the problems included a toolkit that included a wrench needed to install a nuclear warhead atop an ICBM. Only one of the toolkits remained available for three bases to maintain the fleet of 450 Minuteman ICBMs. Crews working on the missile fleet relied on Fed-Ex to deliver the copy of one wrench." http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/...
Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.