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Two Radically Different Approaches to Private Access to Space (gizmag.com)

Zothecula writes: Commercial spaceflight company World View came a step closer to carrying tourists to the edge of space with a successful test flight last weekend. At Page, Arizona, a one-tenth scale replica spacecraft was carried by high-altitude ballon to a height of 100,475 ft (30,624 m) to demonstrate the technology that is intended for use in a full-size version slated to begin commercial flights next year. And with a note on the other end of the size spectrum for private access to space, reader Habberhead writes: As reported first by Wired Magazine and followed on by others including Discovery News, start-up company ThumbSat is aiming to provide turn-key access to space for students, experimenters and citizen scientists with a new femto-satellite and creative business model. Small payloads and experiments in space for $20k, including the launch? Sign me up!

6 of 44 comments (clear)

  1. Obligatory Zoolander quote? by Nidi62 · · Score: 3, Funny

    At Page, Arizona, a one-tenth scale replica spacecraft was carried by high-altitude balloon

    What is this, tourism for ants?! It has to be at least...3 times bigger than this!

    --
    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
  2. Not even close to the Karman line by RoverDaddy · · Score: 2

    100,000ft is nowhere near 100km. About 30%. But still, if this is an experience people are willing to pay for, good for them.

    --
    RETURN without GOSUB in line 1050
  3. Re:None of this is access to space by khallow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please tell me about these exciting problems you think you'll solve floating around in a deadly vacuum towards empty hostile rocks. That's better?

    Recycling of resources is the obvious huge one. Extracting space resources for use on Earth is another.

    Only Space Nutters look at a planet teemng with life and water nad air and think they have to leave, but look at empty, hostile, dry, barren, radiation-blasted Hells and think "abundant water".

    That teeming life also means Earth is poorly suited for a lot of industrial uses. Doing heavy industry in desolate places of space means we can get those benefits without the usual consequences of doing them on Earth (like massive pollution).

  4. Re: None of this is access to space by TimSSG · · Score: 2

    I have it on good authority that we are just cows. Slashdot tells me so every day!

    So, you have been cowed into thinking you are a cow.
    Your post failed to moove me at all in rating your post as funny!
    Tim S.

  5. If you can float in the air, it is NOT space by XXongo · · Score: 2

    one-tenth scale replica spacecraft

    it's not a spacecraft! It's not going to space!

    was carried by high-altitude ballon to a height of 100,475 ft (30,624 m)

    30 km is not space!

    Memorize this: if you can float in the air, you are still in the air.

    So, if you can float in the air, it's not space.

  6. Re:None of this is access to space by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How about getting us off this rock before we're wiped out by an asteroid?

    I'm not sure if anyone's told you, but there are asteroids in space, too.

    Space nutters are going to cheat death by having an asteroid kill them on Mars instead of in their nice warm beds on Earth.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.