Houston, We have a problem...
>> Newest Entry My Profile <<
>> Archive Contact Me <<
>> Recommend Diaryland <<
takeoff!
If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put foundations under them. -- Henry David Thoreau

Life is either a daring adventure, or nothing. -- Helen Keller
Live, from my camera phone:

Read all about other people's lives:
Karen
Sarah
Cari
Jen O.
Nick S.
Carter
gtcrows
Irwin
Chris L.
Jo
Jen & Gavin M.
Kelly
Chris B.
James
Christina
Maayan
Georgy

Sign My Guestbook!
Sign my Slambook!

The weather in Houston, TX is:
The WeatherPixie
waxing philosophical about space
Oct. 04, 2004
10:23 a.m.

[Sounds of thunderous applause] I just watched Space Ship One win the X-Prize. Its an entirely privately financed vehicle that made it into space (defined by an altitude of 100 km) twice in two weeks. Today is also the anniversary of the launch of Sputnik, which was the start of the "space age." I even have an autograph from the pilot who flew Space Ship One today (ironically, it says "come back in August", which was the team had originally planned on making their attempt at the X-Prize). Hopefully this is just a step toward awesome things to come for manned space flight -- privately financed orbital vehicles, cheaper manned access to low earth orbit, regular suborbital trips for cargo and tourists, N*ASA getting out of the business of doing something it knows how to do and moving onto exploring and pushing back new frontiers.

I'm feeling really optimistic about the future of manned space flight right now. I'm feeling not so chipper about N*ASA's prospects, as the space shuttle's return to flight has just been delayed again - now, its no earlier than May 14.

Since I'm waxing philosophical about space exploration anyway, I should probably also comment on my obsessive watching of "From the Earth to the Moon." The entire mini-series was on (repeatedly) on TNT this weekend. Its amazing to me every time I am reminded of the scope and technological achievement of the Apollo program. The dramatized young engineers in the program could've been me (well, if women's lib had come a couple decades earlier) - and right now, I can't even imagine being given leave to make decisions and work on projects like that. Hell, its taking two years to get an existing, tested spacecraft that's flown 100 times back into shape to fly again -- all the while, engineers are sitting on the ground deciding if risks are worth taking. In TEN YEARS, we went from not even knowing if manned space travel was possible to landing on the moon. The moon! How much longer until we go back? How about pushing onto Mars?

ha ha ha, good on the google home page today for commemorating space ship one:

Previous Entry: stubborn
Next Entry:
annoying cartoons

Becca/Female/21-25. Lives in United States/TX/League City/South Shore VIllage, speaks English. Spends 80% of daytime online. Uses a Fast (128k-512k) connection.
This is my blogchalk:
United States, TX, League City, South Shore VIllage, English, Becca, Female, 21-25.