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User: Hadlock

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  1. Re:For the novelty! on NASA Offering Contracts To Encourage Asteroid Mining · · Score: 1

    What's it like, being a former Enron accountant

  2. Re:For the novelty! on NASA Offering Contracts To Encourage Asteroid Mining · · Score: 1

    Space-procured Palladium and Platinum has the potential to make space-based mining possible. If you could put an asteroid in earth orbit containing a couple of tons of platinum group metals and extract them (that's the tricky part) you would own the global market for those materials.

  3. Re:What do you mean "may be"? on Russia May Be Planning National Space Station To Replace ISS · · Score: 1

    That was true in 2004, however with redundant systems installed since then, the US portion is capable of running on it's own today.

  4. Re:What would happen? on Russia May Be Planning National Space Station To Replace ISS · · Score: 3, Informative

    It was designed with a 10 year service life, then re-rated for 20 years. Current plan is 2024 but after that is really stretching things and major modules need to be replaced due to stressed placed on them by boosting the orbit (the ISS is actually in the upper atmosphere and loses about 2km (1 mile) altitude per month due to atmospheric drag. It gets reboosted by Soyuz and Progress spacecraft periodically.
     
    Yes you could keep it going indefintiely but eventually the safety factor drops below an acceptable point. Based on what's there right now, that safe point is 2024-2030.
     
    A next generation space station could possibly exceed a 25 year design life, but really, 25 years is pretty damn good given this was the first try since Space Lab for the US. For the Russians this is old hat, their segment(s) are just repurposed MIR 2 parts.

  5. Re:Why such a short lifetime ? on Russia May Be Planning National Space Station To Replace ISS · · Score: 1

    It's not like we had hundreds of years of heritage in designing these things. We have yet to have a satellite collide with a human-populated space station. I'm sure we'll learn a lot about what to do/not not do with space stations in the years after that first event. Designing a space station module to survive multiple tens of thousands of MPH impacts with space debris, satellites, micrometeorites, etc for not just 10 years but 100 years is asking a bit much, don't you think?
     
    We've only been building "semi-permanent" space station modules for 10-15 years. It's not like you can just ship 3 tons of bricks, some cement, mortar and trowels and tell the astronauts to build something "roughly airtight and space station-y looking" and hope for the best for 100+ years.

  6. What do you mean "may be"? on Russia May Be Planning National Space Station To Replace ISS · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Russia announced that they were planning to end their involvement with the ISS in 2009 or so. This is nothing new. They've been telegraphing their displeasure with the ISS program for half a decade or more, and their lack of willingness to continue with it past 2020. The portions they're sending up to the ISS will be detached and converted in to a separate space station shortly after 2020. This is not "news", this is "established fact". Maybe it's more noteworthy the second time that they publish this through official channels?
     
    The ISS will be a 20 year old international experiment at that point, yes the US and Russian halves of the ISS share a common "atmosphere" but mechanically they're completely separate space stations capable of detaching at any time. Most of the Russian segment of the ISS is made from leftovers from their MIR 2 project. It's no surprise that they're wanting to separate from the ISS. Those space station modules have a finite lifespan and most of them will be nearing their operational limits around 2020, with a maximum lifespan of 2030. Either we replace them with new modules or deorbit the whole thing. Russia has decided to replace them with new modules and go their own separate way. They've been talking about this for a looong time. The ESA has been talking about teaming up with the Russians moving forward, rather than NASA on the next space station. China ended up building their own space station after being turned down by the Americans. We're not making a whole lot of friends in the aerospace field with the ISS these days. The New ISS may be everyone - (minus) America next time around, due to our overwhelming fear of sharing orbital technology with the Chinese (who aren't allowed inside NASA buildings, just ask any Chinese aerospace engineer).

  7. May 2015 on What Would Have Happened If Philae Were Nuclear Powered? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Due to several sources closely linked with the Rosetta program, Philae will be getting a whole lot of sun come May 2015 due to the position of the comet as it adjusts it's precession around the sun and moves that particular part of the comet in to near-constant daylight. Expect more news at that point from Philae. You heard it here first, folks.

  8. 20M drilling project on very fist lunar mission on Lunar Mission One Proposes To Take Core Sample, Plant Time Capsule On the Moon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Did these guys just say "hey let's do a lunar sample return mission! high five!" and throw together a kick starter? They don't even have a target launch vehicle chosen yet. Not only do they want to do a return sample mission (something China has been working on for 15 years) but they want to drill a 60 ft hole in the moon while they're at it. This is, to use a pun, lunacy. The logistics involved of entering lunar orbit, let alone landing are incredible. And they want to throw a 60' drilling apparatus on there that will work flawlessly? Not even the ESA can get their 8" drill to work on the comet correctly and that's just ice.
     
    Good luck with that.

  9. Re:How much longer will Foxconn need Apple? on Nokia's N1 Android Tablet Is Actually a Foxconn Tablet · · Score: 1

    You don't need a whole lot of CPU to check Facebook while listening to Pandora, or watch cat videos on Youtube.

  10. Re:They WILL FIght Back on Rooftop Solar Could Reach Price Parity In the US By 2016 · · Score: 2

    Yeah but now that it's in place how many trucks are up there? Other than periodic maintenance, how many 18 wheelers service that farm in a given year? Three? Plus now you have a bunch of awesome ridge top mountain biking trails, improved access to the wilderness etc etc. Other than the short term inconvenience of a major infrastructure project going in (oh no!) your long term view of the even longer term benefits of the site seem awfully jaded given the extremely low impact (i.e. none) to your daily life.

  11. Re:How do I refill it? on Toyota Names Upcoming Hydrogen Fuel Cell Car · · Score: 1

    Probably contract with Tesla to put a hydrogen station next door to their electric station, since there's already an all-electric network from coast to coast. The "green infrastructure" is already there, now Toyota can leverage off of that

  12. Re:How?? on How To Anesthetize an Octopus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Octopus are basically water going aliens that crash landed on earth, they have separate brains for each eyeball and almost as many neurons in the tentacles as the brain, plus their motor cortex is doughnut-shaped and encircles their throat. Yet they're smart enough to unscrew the lid of a peanut butter jar if they're trapped inside one, and more often than not can pick the winner in a soccer match. The fact that we have any idea of how to do anything with something as weird as an octopus is pretty damn impressive. This is hard core nerd biology/medicine, cutting edge right here.
     
    Look, just be glad they didn't post pictures of ktitens, ok?

  13. Re:I use Uber over public transit on Will Lyft and Uber's Shared-Ride Service Hurt Public Transit? · · Score: 1

    There was a HUGE pushback against the Dallas DART light rail in the mid-90's when it was announced, however initial turnout was 50% higher than even the best expectations and they accelerated plans for the subway portion through uptown to the suburbs. Nowadays there's 4 or 5 lines, one even connects with the major international DFW airport. The station by my office has a train leaving every 1-2 minutes during peak rush hour, completely packed for the suburbs. I am the only person in my office that doesn't take the train (because I bicycle in).
     
    People fucking hate riding the bus, but they love the train, for whatever reason. Maybe because they're bigger inside and you can walk around. And the route/stops never change. Now DFW boasts 96+ miles of commuter focused light rail, with another 20+ miles coming over the next decade (compare to 650 miles for NYC). That does take quite a few cars off the road. I would guesstimate our office takes about 800 cars off the road every day using rail.

  14. I use Uber over public transit on Will Lyft and Uber's Shared-Ride Service Hurt Public Transit? · · Score: 2

    Parked my car a year ago and I ride my bike to work most days. There's a bus stop less than 200 feet from my house. If it rains or gets below 40F (it's Texas, only gets that cold maybe 3 weeks a year) I take an Uber. Since I live 3.2 miles from downtown it costs between $6.43 and as much as $8. A single bus ticket costs $2.50, drops me off six blocks from my office, and runs on their schedule, and is frequently late. For $3 more I get dropped off in front of my office, they pick me up on my schedule, I get a real seat belt, appropriate heating/A/C, listen to NPR, nobody asking for money or sitting next to someone not having showered for a week etc etc. I usually take the bus home for $2.50 as I have more time in the afternoons to wait for a bus.
     
    Parking downtown costs $5 for the bad lot four blocks from my office, $7 for a semi private parking garage. That's $100-$150/mo to rent an 8x10' piece of ground.
     
    There's a very slight premium for using uber, but compared to paying for car insurance, maintenance, gas + the hassle of driving myself around, Uber is a fucking deal. In my very very corner case. That $1.50 a day premium is a really nice premium that really improves my morning, for those days that I need a car to get to work.

  15. Re:Couldn't they have used an RTG? on Comet Probe Philae Unanchored But Stable — And Sending Back Images · · Score: 1

    France operates a number of breeder reactors that could be repurposed possibly. Since the Regan administration (in fact, Regan himself) we've lost the capability to manufacture Plutonium in abundance. Not that there's a lot of use for the stuff but the supply is running low as is it's half life.

  16. Re:bananas on Fukushima Radiation Nears California Coast, Judged Harmless · · Score: 3, Funny

    Especially near that smoke detector

  17. Re:Uh on Amazon's Echo Chamber · · Score: 5, Informative

    Re: Cable Cutting
     
    The Amazon FireTV (the full size square, not the HDMI dongle) is a fantastic device for $99 and XBMC has native support for it now. Once you bump the buffer from 20MB to 500MB and remove the bandwidth cap XBMC + Amazon Fire TV is a fantastic device for streaming the largest uncompressed 1080p video. It also handles your standard 100MB-4GB video files without cache modification as well. Also it does stuff like Netflix, Amazon Prime (aka HBO), most Android apps (like BombSquad, a Smash Brothers clone), you can side-load APKs without rooting it etc etc Amazon did a great job with the device and I use it daily instead of owning a cable box.
     
    Absolutely zero interest in an Amazon branded phone though. I heard their Fire Tablet or whatever was pretty fantastic for the time but the market has moved on and even the $79 chinese branded tablets are competitive these days for most users.

  18. Re:Another Teledesic? on Elon Musk's Next Mission: Internet Satellites · · Score: 1

    Of note, high efficiency station-keeping engine technology has exploded in recent years, there's at least six cubesat kickstarter projects, mostly in the 2U-3U size which can at least partially get out of LEO on just a tiny, tiny amount of "fuel". Ion/electron propulsion has made huge advances in the last 15 years and is expected to bring the cost and size of communications satellites way, way down.
     
    Right now fuel + engines + station keeping makes up 50% or more of a communication's launch mass. With electric propulsion, station keeping will make up less than 10% of the satellite, which in turn means less fuel required to push that mass around.

  19. Burn PHP on The Effect of Programming Language On Software Quality · · Score: 1

    Not sure if it's the fact that you can host PHP on Godaddy's lowest tier(s) or what, but PHP seems to be the lowest hanging fruit and a lot of "babby's first project"s are written in PHP. I know a few people who avoid PHP projects based on that principle. The average PHP project seems to be dramatically lower in quality compared to similar ones written in Python, Ruby, heck even C#/ASP.

  20. Re: Old saying on New Atomic Clock Reaches the Boundaries of Timekeeping · · Score: 2

    As of about 2010 we already had clocks so accurate you could demonstrate relativistic effects by separating them by just a few feet. It sounds like the vibration from walking in the same room as these is enough to knock them out of sync.

  21. Re:So, lemme get this straight... on Facebook Sets Up Shop On Tor · · Score: 1

    China, Iran, North Korea, occasionally Turkey, Libya, Egypt, perhaps Russia, Ukrane, Hong Kong. Something like 25% of the internet either can't or potentially can't access Facebook right now. But with TOR you can.

  22. Re:We can do that thing you like on Windows 10 Gets a Package Manager For the Command Line · · Score: 1

    We're already assigning resources to see how we can leverage this next year at our office/windows shop.

  23. Re:Irrelevant on Microsoft Works On Windows For ARM-Based Servers · · Score: 1

    Win8 and WS2012 run on the same kernel, the only difference is Win8/8.1 has the "desktop" role enabled rather than the server roles. It's not uncommon to see people hack in server roles to their desktop machine as an exercise

  24. Re:And... on The Classic Control Panel In Windows May Be Gone · · Score: 1

    If you want more control, stop using the GUI and start using Powershell. Windows Server is designed to be used with Powershell. There's a lot of storage options that are only available from the command line that you wouldn't even know existed if you tried setting it up via the GUI. And you can do this remotely.

  25. Re:How hard is it to recognize a stoplight? on Will the Google Car Turn Out To Be the Apple Newton of Automobiles? · · Score: 0

    I think the problem is that "good accuracy" is not yet to the point where the driverless car is less likely to run over a pedestrian at an intersection than a car piloted by a human. Until that threshold is met it's just a science experiment.