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![]() neopeius wrote: Oh, I like that. :-D People forget that space law was a very hypothetical thing prior to the launch of Sputnik, and that it set the precedent by being allowed to fly over the U.S. without complaint...in that satellites were considered to be similar to ships at sea in international waters from that moment on. We already knew that Corona was in the future, and we'd learn a lot more about the Soviet Union via reconsats than they'd ever learn about us via their Zenits. Pat Yeah, I'm not sure what "Not True" is all about. It's not a secret. It was a calculated move by the President, and not a bad one in foresight or hindsight. There's a whole book devoted to the political aspects of the early space age; "The Heavens And The Earth". One of Eisenhower's big dreams was the "Open Skies" concept, that would allow both the USSR and the United States to overfly each other's territory in unarmed aircraft anytime they felt like it, so that no secrete weapons build-up could occur. This was a incredibly naive idea when it came to the Soviets, as the Germans had engaged in reconnaissance overflights of their territory in the weeks leading up to the invasion of Russia. By letting the Sputniks fly over the U.S. unchallenged, the precedent was set for the new "Open Skies" concept; that as long as satellites did not engage in overtly military actions, space was pretty much neutral territory - like Antarctica. In retrospect the Soviets may have screwed up by launching a satellite before us. They had a lot more to hide than we did, starting with the fact that the missile gap and bomber gap didn't really exist. Once we got all the bugs worked out, our Coronas became a very good way of gathering intelligence at a fairly knock-down launch cost due to using Thor boosters. Korolev may not have gotten funding for Vostok if it hadn't been for the fact that its primary use was the Zenit reconnaissance satellite version of the design. Pat |
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On Oct 8, 9:39 pm, Pat Flannery wrote:
neopeius wrote: Oh, I like that. :-D People forget that space law was a very hypothetical thing prior to the launch of Sputnik, and that it set the precedent by being allowed to fly over the U.S. without complaint...in that satellites were considered to be similar to ships at sea in international waters from that moment on. We already knew that Corona was in the future, and we'd learn a lot more about the Soviet Union via reconsats than they'd ever learn about us via their Zenits. Pat Yeah, I'm not sure what "Not True" is all about. It's not a secret. It was a calculated move by the President, and not a bad one in foresight or hindsight. There's a whole book devoted to the political aspects of the early space age; "The Heavens And The Earth". One of Eisenhower's big dreams was the "Open Skies" concept, that would allow both the USSR and the United States to overfly each other's territory in unarmed aircraft anytime they felt like it, so that no secrete weapons build-up could occur. This was a incredibly naive idea when it came to the Soviets, as the Germans had engaged in reconnaissance overflights of their territory in the weeks leading up to the invasion of Russia. By letting the Sputniks fly over the U.S. unchallenged, the precedent was set for the new "Open Skies" concept; that as long as satellites did not engage in overtly military actions, space was pretty much neutral territory - like Antarctica. In retrospect the Soviets may have screwed up by launching a satellite before us. They had a lot more to hide than we did, starting with the fact that the missile gap and bomber gap didn't really exist. Once we got all the bugs worked out, our Coronas became a very good way of gathering intelligence at a fairly knock-down launch cost due to using Thor boosters. Korolev may not have gotten funding for Vostok if it hadn't been for the fact that its primary use was the Zenit reconnaissance satellite version of the design. Pat What you said. Thanks, Pat. |
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![]() "neopeius" wrote in message ups.com... There's a reason it only took 90 says to dust off the Jupiter-C to launch Explorer 1. von Braun's team was *ordered* to destroy their work, and they complied. However, the order did not include instructions on how to destroy it, so von Braun & Co. chose to let them age to destruction. It's not von Braun's fault that the stuff ordered destroyed was needed before time did it's work, so it still happened to be viable... :P |
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Scott Hedrick kirjoitti:
However, the order did not include instructions on how to destroy it, so von Braun & Co. chose to let them age to destruction. It's not von Braun's Coffee warnings please. My old IBM-"Clicky"-M is a valuable piece of antiquity. JanneT -- http://jannetuukkanen.net/ |
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On Oct 8, 3:42 pm, "Jeff Findley" wrote:
"Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... On Mon, 8 Oct 2007 14:51:38 -0400, in a place far, far away, "Greg D. Moore \(Strider\)" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: At the *very* least, Eisenhower wanted the IGY probe to be at least ostensibly civilian. There was no place for ABMA in that scheme of things. This is correct. There's no evidence however though that Eisenhower did not want the American's to be first though. The administration certainly didn't mind letting the Soviet Union establish the overflight precedent. I'd forgotten about this issue. There was some fear that the Soviet Union would object to overflights of its country by US satellites, which could have made proposed military satellites problematic. This all now seems quite plausible from where I sat at the National Academy of Sciences IGY Earth Satellite Office. Our main focus was the Vanguard approach and a "strictly scientific" approach to IGY. However, we were also quite aware of the military implications of satellites and space access. Moreover, some of the same key people (Porter, Van Allen, and Pickering) were quite involved on both sides of this Vanguard/Jupiter C question. On the strictly scientific side, many of us were also keenly aware of the sensitivity of the military implications. These included unrestricted overflight at orbital altitudes, size and shape of the Earth, intercontinental distances, etc. In retrospect, I can see the wisdom in "allowing" the USSR to go--if this were really the case--although many of us were quite driven by the desire to be first ourselves. Len Jeff -- "When transportation is cheap, frequent, reliable, and flexible, everything else becomes easier." - Jon Goff |
#16
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On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 19:07:14 +0300, Janne Tuukkanen
wrote: Coffee warnings please. My old IBM-"Clicky"-M is a valuable piece of antiquity. ....Are we referring, perchance, to the 84-key version with the really *LOUD* clicks, and the 8 F-Keys positioned on the left, where God/Yahweh/Roddenberry intended them to be? I had one that I used for fifteen years, from 1985 to 2000, and the only reason I finally gave that one up was that I needed the F11 anf F12 keys for several apps taht wouldn't allow KB remapping. ....The other nice thing about those beauties is that, except for the cable, they were damn near indestructable. If it got dirty, you simply ran it through the washer a couple of times and let it air dry. The damn things wouldn't rust! And as far as toughness goes, there's actually *two* cases on record where someone's killed a co-worker by bashing them on the head with one! One of them lost only two keys, while the other didn't lose any! IBM made those keyboards to last! OM -- ]=====================================[ ] OMBlog - http://www.io.com/~o_m/omworld [ ] Let's face it: Sometimes you *need* [ ] an obnoxious opinion in your day! [ ]=====================================[ |
#17
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![]() "Janne Tuukkanen" wrote in message news ![]() Coffee warnings please. My old IBM-"Clicky"-M is a valuable piece of antiquity. That certainly brings back memories. Sounds like you have long nails no matter how softly you touch the keys. |
#18
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![]() "OM" wrote in message ... IBM made those keyboards to last! Hence IBM is out of the personal computer business. |
#19
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![]() "OM" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 19:07:14 +0300, Janne Tuukkanen wrote: Coffee warnings please. My old IBM-"Clicky"-M is a valuable piece of antiquity. ...Are we referring, perchance, to the 84-key version with the really *LOUD* clicks, and the 8 F-Keys positioned on the left, where God/Yahweh/Roddenberry intended them to be? I had one that I used for fifteen years, from 1985 to 2000, and the only reason I finally gave that one up was that I needed the F11 anf F12 keys for several apps taht wouldn't allow KB remapping. And pray tell where were F9 and F10? :-) ...The other nice thing about those beauties is that, except for the cable, they were damn near indestructable. If it got dirty, you simply ran it through the washer a couple of times and let it air dry. The damn things wouldn't rust! And as far as toughness goes, there's actually *two* cases on record where someone's killed a co-worker by bashing them on the head with one! One of them lost only two keys, while the other didn't lose any! IBM made those keyboards to last! Dang tooting. My blind-housemate had one. Loved the thing. OM -- ]=====================================[ ] OMBlog - http://www.io.com/~o_m/omworld [ ] Let's face it: Sometimes you *need* [ ] an obnoxious opinion in your day! [ ]=====================================[ -- Greg Moore SQL Server DBA Consulting Remote and Onsite available! Email: sql (at) greenms.com http://www.greenms.com/sqlserver.html |
#20
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On Thu, 25 Oct 2007 20:44:00 -0400, "Scott Hedrick"
wrote: "OM" wrote in message .. . IBM made those keyboards to last! Hence IBM is out of the personal computer business. ....That had damn near AbZero to do with it. 99.9% of the reason IBM is no longer making PCs - no, wait...make that *blame* - has to do with the mentalities running Big Blue. They're still hopelessly locked into the belief that PCs are a "toy", and that no self-respecting business wants anything but a large monstrous mainframe with dumb terminals and centralized storage controlled by BFOHs. They share the same dream that Larry "Caveman" Ellison over at Oracle has - that one day all PCs will be banned from the workplace, and everyone will go back to simple workstations. To that sort of backwards thinking, a system with as much power as a mainframe, with localized storage, is incomprehensible for business usage. ....More than Radio Shack, Sinclair, (cr)Apple, Atari and even Commode-Door, IBM created the PC market. They took it out of the hands of the garage kits and game boxes and put a serious, professional face on the personal computer. They made it respectable even when the game boxes still could run rings around them. By the time the 286 was out, the writing was on the wall for every other competitor system save for the Macs that were just around the corner. And yet, by the time the 386 came out, it was becoming apparent that IBM wasn't realy comfortable with being the leader in the PC market. They weren't willing to market their systems competitively, preferring to keep the prices artificially high to "protect" the perceived value of the IBM brand name, while at the same time sabotaging their own sales by keeping the system performance specs lower than the competitors, while at the same time creating proprietary technology that kept consumers locked into buying parts and upgrades only from IBM - PCjr and PS/2, anyone? By the time the homebrew and small computer shops came into their own, and the big companies like Dell, Compaq, HP, CompuAdd, Austin and Gateway finally started getting their **** together with their clones, IBM had already internally admitted to themselves that they considered the PC the "black sheep *and* ******* child" of their family, and was looking for any reason whatsoever to get rid of it. Which they did. And mark my words, kids - the fact that they sold their PC division not to Dell as originally planned, but to a company funded by the Chinese Communists, will one day come back and rebrand Big Blue as Big Red. They had the PC world in the palm of their hands, and they threw it away... OM -- ]=====================================[ ] OMBlog - http://www.io.com/~o_m/omworld [ ] Let's face it: Sometimes you *need* [ ] an obnoxious opinion in your day! [ ]=====================================[ |
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