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#121
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"Robert J. Kolker" wrote:
Craig Davidson wrote: At 15 cents a day, would you agree that your efforts would be much more productive if spent on the other much more expensive programs being funded by the federal government ? If I had my druthers I would eliminate -every program- or function of government that was not directed toward defense of the lives and property of citizens or peacefully resolving conflicts (law courts). That means goodbye to welfare, both individual and corporate. By the way, corporations are the biggest welfare bums in the country. Subsides to corporations and other business should stop forthwith. If you want something, pay for it. I am particularly ****ed at NASA because its management is homicidally negligent. They have killed two crews and destroyed two expensive (albeit ill designed vessels). And they have not learned a damned thing from these misfortunes. Furthermore they have lied to the crews about the magnitude of the risks they are to take. That is unspeakable immoral. Any engineer who brings up a safety concern when the management has declared a mission "do or die" is in grave danger of losing his job and being publicly denounced as a whistleblower and a trouble-maker. It is very hard to find another job with such an albatross hung about the neck. I am very interested in space-based enterprise. Our communication systems are now dependent on comm-sats. We would be much worse off without a working GPS. All these unmanned projects are not only technically excellent, but -they pay for themselves-. The taxpayers do not have be looted to keep these systems in operation. You and I pay for these systems when we make telephone calls or subscribe to the services that our ISP-s provide to us. That is how it -should- be. We pay (of our own free will) and we get services we value. If I thought a private company could make a go of launching NEO functional sattelites I would invest my money. That is MY money. Not YOUR money. If you are pro-space, join the L5 society. The mark of a cillized man is that he knows what is his and what is not his. The savage makes no such distinction. He looks, he wants, he grabs. That is how our space program is now funded and it is a disgrace. Bob Kolker Please take your rants and go away. plonk That is the sound of you going into the killfile. |
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On a sunny day (Sun, 25 Jan 2004 21:54:55 GMT) it happened "Robert J. Kolker"
wrote in PWWQb.150687$na.257871@attbi_s04: I am very interested in space-based enterprise. Our communication systems are now dependent on comm-sats. We would be much worse off without a working GPS. All these unmanned projects are not only technically excellent, but -they pay for themselves-. The taxpayers do not have be looted to keep these systems in operation. You silently leave out that the launches use rockets, rockets that were developed for military purposes, (all comes from the V1 V2, Von Braun was captured and taken to the US to make rockets for them). WITHOUT that program there would have been no satellite, no commercial ones NOW. The east - west rally (Sputnik - etc..) was what started it. I am not a militarist (?) but not against a good defense. Many many things you use today were (including some of the computer you use now), developed by the military and on a military tax budget, BEFORE they became even available for the consumer market. But you know all that, so stop drawing a BW picture where a color one would be more appropriate. It is extremely difficult to say what the spin off in the long term will be from the mars missions. If not only for claiming the ground... :-) That may not seem important now, but wait until resources are found or its military aspect becomes more important. At 15 cents / day, you have spend the last few days more on posting objections. JP |
#123
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On a sunny day (Sun, 25 Jan 2004 21:54:55 GMT) it happened "Robert J. Kolker"
wrote in PWWQb.150687$na.257871@attbi_s04: I am very interested in space-based enterprise. Our communication systems are now dependent on comm-sats. We would be much worse off without a working GPS. All these unmanned projects are not only technically excellent, but -they pay for themselves-. The taxpayers do not have be looted to keep these systems in operation. You silently leave out that the launches use rockets, rockets that were developed for military purposes, (all comes from the V1 V2, Von Braun was captured and taken to the US to make rockets for them). WITHOUT that program there would have been no satellite, no commercial ones NOW. The east - west rally (Sputnik - etc..) was what started it. I am not a militarist (?) but not against a good defense. Many many things you use today were (including some of the computer you use now), developed by the military and on a military tax budget, BEFORE they became even available for the consumer market. But you know all that, so stop drawing a BW picture where a color one would be more appropriate. It is extremely difficult to say what the spin off in the long term will be from the mars missions. If not only for claiming the ground... :-) That may not seem important now, but wait until resources are found or its military aspect becomes more important. At 15 cents / day, you have spend the last few days more on posting objections. JP |
#124
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On a sunny day (Sun, 25 Jan 2004 21:54:55 GMT) it happened "Robert J. Kolker"
wrote in PWWQb.150687$na.257871@attbi_s04: I am very interested in space-based enterprise. Our communication systems are now dependent on comm-sats. We would be much worse off without a working GPS. All these unmanned projects are not only technically excellent, but -they pay for themselves-. The taxpayers do not have be looted to keep these systems in operation. You silently leave out that the launches use rockets, rockets that were developed for military purposes, (all comes from the V1 V2, Von Braun was captured and taken to the US to make rockets for them). WITHOUT that program there would have been no satellite, no commercial ones NOW. The east - west rally (Sputnik - etc..) was what started it. I am not a militarist (?) but not against a good defense. Many many things you use today were (including some of the computer you use now), developed by the military and on a military tax budget, BEFORE they became even available for the consumer market. But you know all that, so stop drawing a BW picture where a color one would be more appropriate. It is extremely difficult to say what the spin off in the long term will be from the mars missions. If not only for claiming the ground... :-) That may not seem important now, but wait until resources are found or its military aspect becomes more important. At 15 cents / day, you have spend the last few days more on posting objections. JP |
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On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 22:23:26 GMT, Chris L Peterson
wrote: On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 22:02:05 GMT, "Robert J. Kolker" wrote: Jeepers. Edison invented the light bulb and Marconi invented wireless telegraphy without government subsidy... Sure, and huge amounts of scientific development continue to be done privately. I didn't say it should all be publicly funded. I just think there is a certain class of science where the commercial benefits may be small, or too far out, for private funding to be viable. These may nevertheless have great value (I, for one, believe something can be valuable without being commercial.) Space exploration, particle physics, certain social studies... these are things that I think should happen, and I don't see where the money is going to come from except the government. I don't have a problem with that, and I give my vote to people supporting this kind of research. Then there are also the things that were funded by the government which originally had no commercial application but via technology transfer have affected our lives in ways the original developers could never have guessed. A prime example is the internet. Without government funded development (no corporation would ever have funded work on the arpanet back then without a clear view of commercialization) Mr. Kolker would not have this soapbox with which to vent. Steve |
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On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 22:23:26 GMT, Chris L Peterson
wrote: On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 22:02:05 GMT, "Robert J. Kolker" wrote: Jeepers. Edison invented the light bulb and Marconi invented wireless telegraphy without government subsidy... Sure, and huge amounts of scientific development continue to be done privately. I didn't say it should all be publicly funded. I just think there is a certain class of science where the commercial benefits may be small, or too far out, for private funding to be viable. These may nevertheless have great value (I, for one, believe something can be valuable without being commercial.) Space exploration, particle physics, certain social studies... these are things that I think should happen, and I don't see where the money is going to come from except the government. I don't have a problem with that, and I give my vote to people supporting this kind of research. Then there are also the things that were funded by the government which originally had no commercial application but via technology transfer have affected our lives in ways the original developers could never have guessed. A prime example is the internet. Without government funded development (no corporation would ever have funded work on the arpanet back then without a clear view of commercialization) Mr. Kolker would not have this soapbox with which to vent. Steve |
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On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 22:23:26 GMT, Chris L Peterson
wrote: On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 22:02:05 GMT, "Robert J. Kolker" wrote: Jeepers. Edison invented the light bulb and Marconi invented wireless telegraphy without government subsidy... Sure, and huge amounts of scientific development continue to be done privately. I didn't say it should all be publicly funded. I just think there is a certain class of science where the commercial benefits may be small, or too far out, for private funding to be viable. These may nevertheless have great value (I, for one, believe something can be valuable without being commercial.) Space exploration, particle physics, certain social studies... these are things that I think should happen, and I don't see where the money is going to come from except the government. I don't have a problem with that, and I give my vote to people supporting this kind of research. Then there are also the things that were funded by the government which originally had no commercial application but via technology transfer have affected our lives in ways the original developers could never have guessed. A prime example is the internet. Without government funded development (no corporation would ever have funded work on the arpanet back then without a clear view of commercialization) Mr. Kolker would not have this soapbox with which to vent. Steve |
#128
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![]() Steven Shelikoff wrote: guessed. A prime example is the internet. Without government funded development (no corporation would ever have funded work on the arpanet back then without a clear view of commercialization) Mr. Kolker would not have this soapbox with which to vent. There were bulletin boards prior to the internet. They could have evolved into a wide computer network. There were also intermachine protocols in addition to TCP/IP. Arpa was not the only entity working on hooking up computers. IBM was doing a lot of work independently of defense contracts. Hooking up computers by telephone lines was done independently of and well before Arpa. Bob Kolker |
#129
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![]() Steven Shelikoff wrote: guessed. A prime example is the internet. Without government funded development (no corporation would ever have funded work on the arpanet back then without a clear view of commercialization) Mr. Kolker would not have this soapbox with which to vent. There were bulletin boards prior to the internet. They could have evolved into a wide computer network. There were also intermachine protocols in addition to TCP/IP. Arpa was not the only entity working on hooking up computers. IBM was doing a lot of work independently of defense contracts. Hooking up computers by telephone lines was done independently of and well before Arpa. Bob Kolker |
#130
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![]() Steven Shelikoff wrote: guessed. A prime example is the internet. Without government funded development (no corporation would ever have funded work on the arpanet back then without a clear view of commercialization) Mr. Kolker would not have this soapbox with which to vent. There were bulletin boards prior to the internet. They could have evolved into a wide computer network. There were also intermachine protocols in addition to TCP/IP. Arpa was not the only entity working on hooking up computers. IBM was doing a lot of work independently of defense contracts. Hooking up computers by telephone lines was done independently of and well before Arpa. Bob Kolker |
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