A Space & astronomy forum. SpaceBanter.com

Go Back   Home » SpaceBanter.com forum » Astronomy and Astrophysics » Amateur Astronomy
Site Map Home Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Opportunity, the second Mars Explorer Rover is on the surface andtransmitting!



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #171  
Old January 26th 04, 06:31 PM
BllFs6
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Opportunity, the second Mars Explorer Rover is on the surfaceand transmitting!

I thought we made him an honorary American?

Which judge swore him in?

/BAH

Subtract a hundred and four for e-mail.







Well....there are some fossils on the supreme court old enough to have done it


take care

Blll
  #172  
Old January 26th 04, 06:31 PM
BllFs6
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Opportunity, the second Mars Explorer Rover is on the surfaceand transmitting!

I thought we made him an honorary American?

Which judge swore him in?

/BAH

Subtract a hundred and four for e-mail.







Well....there are some fossils on the supreme court old enough to have done it


take care

Blll
  #173  
Old January 26th 04, 06:42 PM
Richard Herring
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Opportunity, the second Mars Explorer Rover is on the surfaceandtransmitting!

In message aMcRb.155865$xy6.747162@attbi_s02, Robert J. Kolker
writes


Richard Herring wrote:
None of which provide a direct flow of $$$ to keep the control and
space sectors functioning.


Some of the tax $$$$ generated by the additional business go to pay for
the GPS.


However generated, they are still tax dollars, which is what you were
complaining about.

Another way it can be funded is by subscription, similar to the monthly
fee you pay your ISP. I don't know why it isn't funded that way.


Partly for the same reason lighthouses are no longer funded by port
taxes, I guess. It's too difficult even to identify, let along bill, the
direct users when they don't physically plug in to anything, and half of
them never set foot in your jurisdiction.

--
Richard Herring
  #174  
Old January 26th 04, 06:42 PM
Richard Herring
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Opportunity, the second Mars Explorer Rover is on the surfaceandtransmitting!

In message aMcRb.155865$xy6.747162@attbi_s02, Robert J. Kolker
writes


Richard Herring wrote:
None of which provide a direct flow of $$$ to keep the control and
space sectors functioning.


Some of the tax $$$$ generated by the additional business go to pay for
the GPS.


However generated, they are still tax dollars, which is what you were
complaining about.

Another way it can be funded is by subscription, similar to the monthly
fee you pay your ISP. I don't know why it isn't funded that way.


Partly for the same reason lighthouses are no longer funded by port
taxes, I guess. It's too difficult even to identify, let along bill, the
direct users when they don't physically plug in to anything, and half of
them never set foot in your jurisdiction.

--
Richard Herring
  #175  
Old January 26th 04, 06:42 PM
Richard Herring
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Opportunity, the second Mars Explorer Rover is on the surfaceandtransmitting!

In message aMcRb.155865$xy6.747162@attbi_s02, Robert J. Kolker
writes


Richard Herring wrote:
None of which provide a direct flow of $$$ to keep the control and
space sectors functioning.


Some of the tax $$$$ generated by the additional business go to pay for
the GPS.


However generated, they are still tax dollars, which is what you were
complaining about.

Another way it can be funded is by subscription, similar to the monthly
fee you pay your ISP. I don't know why it isn't funded that way.


Partly for the same reason lighthouses are no longer funded by port
taxes, I guess. It's too difficult even to identify, let along bill, the
direct users when they don't physically plug in to anything, and half of
them never set foot in your jurisdiction.

--
Richard Herring
  #176  
Old January 26th 04, 08:42 PM
Mark K.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Opportunity, the second Mars Explorer Rover is on the surface and transmitting!

"Robert J. Kolker" wrote in message news:%pRQb.115802$sv6.604631@attbi_s52...
Al wrote:
Do you think you may be a little too hard on NASA? After all, the space
shuttle is not quite like the shuttle from NY to Boston. All of the space
shuttle flights are experimental and failures are expected.


NASA received funding via Congress (a funnel reaching into your wallet
and mine) on the promise that it could loft payload for under $100/kg.
They sold Congress on the idea that the Scuttle was the Ace Trucking
Company of Space. This is not test mode, this is a promise of commercial
viablity. It was a lie, and a damned lie from day uno. If anything I am
easy on NASA. It is a racket and a criminal organization funded by you
and me.

On top of all this they claimed the odds of disaster were something like
one in ten thousand per orbiter. It is actually somewhere between one in
twenty five and one in fifty per orbiter. Their Ace Trucks are so unsafe
they are puting off further flights. The keep on delaying the resumption
of flight. This gives the lie to their prior (and bogus) claims of
reasonable safety.

Bob Kolker


For once, I actually agree with klonker.
Mark K.
  #177  
Old January 26th 04, 08:42 PM
Mark K.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Opportunity, the second Mars Explorer Rover is on the surface and transmitting!

"Robert J. Kolker" wrote in message news:%pRQb.115802$sv6.604631@attbi_s52...
Al wrote:
Do you think you may be a little too hard on NASA? After all, the space
shuttle is not quite like the shuttle from NY to Boston. All of the space
shuttle flights are experimental and failures are expected.


NASA received funding via Congress (a funnel reaching into your wallet
and mine) on the promise that it could loft payload for under $100/kg.
They sold Congress on the idea that the Scuttle was the Ace Trucking
Company of Space. This is not test mode, this is a promise of commercial
viablity. It was a lie, and a damned lie from day uno. If anything I am
easy on NASA. It is a racket and a criminal organization funded by you
and me.

On top of all this they claimed the odds of disaster were something like
one in ten thousand per orbiter. It is actually somewhere between one in
twenty five and one in fifty per orbiter. Their Ace Trucks are so unsafe
they are puting off further flights. The keep on delaying the resumption
of flight. This gives the lie to their prior (and bogus) claims of
reasonable safety.

Bob Kolker


For once, I actually agree with klonker.
Mark K.
  #178  
Old January 26th 04, 08:42 PM
Mark K.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Opportunity, the second Mars Explorer Rover is on the surface and transmitting!

"Robert J. Kolker" wrote in message news:%pRQb.115802$sv6.604631@attbi_s52...
Al wrote:
Do you think you may be a little too hard on NASA? After all, the space
shuttle is not quite like the shuttle from NY to Boston. All of the space
shuttle flights are experimental and failures are expected.


NASA received funding via Congress (a funnel reaching into your wallet
and mine) on the promise that it could loft payload for under $100/kg.
They sold Congress on the idea that the Scuttle was the Ace Trucking
Company of Space. This is not test mode, this is a promise of commercial
viablity. It was a lie, and a damned lie from day uno. If anything I am
easy on NASA. It is a racket and a criminal organization funded by you
and me.

On top of all this they claimed the odds of disaster were something like
one in ten thousand per orbiter. It is actually somewhere between one in
twenty five and one in fifty per orbiter. Their Ace Trucks are so unsafe
they are puting off further flights. The keep on delaying the resumption
of flight. This gives the lie to their prior (and bogus) claims of
reasonable safety.

Bob Kolker


For once, I actually agree with klonker.
Mark K.
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Mars Exploration Rover Update - April 17, 2004 Ron Astronomy Misc 0 April 19th 04 06:44 AM
Space Calendar - March 26, 2004 Ron Astronomy Misc 0 March 26th 04 04:05 PM
Mars Rover Pictures Raise 'Blueberry Muffin' Questions Ron Astronomy Misc 0 February 10th 04 12:05 AM
Spirit Condition Upgraded as Twin Rover Nears Mars Ron Astronomy Misc 53 January 27th 04 07:08 PM
Mars Rover Opportunity Mission Status - July 18, 2003 Ron Baalke Astronomy Misc 0 July 19th 03 01:56 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:02 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 SpaceBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.