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"Julius Kilo" wrote in message
gy.com... .... I second that. They have this expensive and incredible hardware safely on the surface of Mars and are afraid to actually use it. Every press conference is basically a teaser about how good it's gonna be real soon now--after the engineers get done dicking around with studying ephemeral motor current spikes and such. Oh, and the scientists can do their science like the cleanup crew after a parade--like take a look at those airbag marks, will ya? Cool huh? Incredible even. Study that. I DO understand why they are "afraid" to "use" the expensive rovers - think if YOU had to press the buttons (I'm sure that it's not a single button!) to let one of the rovers egress - and the egress went wrong... I'm sure that they do it step-by-step - and due to the distance from earth to mars "a step" takes some minutes (30 minutes?) to complete. Here's a good test for Opportunity: just drive it to that outcrop for cripe sakes and test it on something real. CARPE SOL!!! It's might be best to stay in the dark in order to cool the rover ;-) Look at Spirit for a continuing case in point. They know they have a corrupt file system on the flash memory, but are so worried about losing the files because they give the engineers something to chew on for maybe several more weeks to analyze what happened. So they're gonna try to get a stack trace, or try to do minor surgery every day to save what they admit are not very valuable or irreplacable data. Just reformat the ****er and get going! Final engineering report: it was hosed. OK, move on! IMHO I think that they are afraid of losing control of the rover - It's quite expensive to send a service rep to mars! My rule of thumb - to fix SW problems - has always been to try to understand it! If you don't understand why your software behaves as it does - bug-fixing always seems to introduce more errors than it solves! At least that seems to be my experience. Actually, it's getting slightly better. If Opportunity rolls off on Sunday, that will be a quicker egress than with Spirit. Lets hope so! --- Henrik |
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Disappointing yes, but in reality, if the rover's travel 1m or 3000m it's
much the same muchness, the terrain isn't any more important really because it's further away, it could study the rocks right next to the lander just as much as those 500m away. Though I agree, it would be nice to see it moving more, and just for the pace to pick up in general. But I'm just glad they landed for now, just the fact they managed to send back a panorama of their landing sites already is a great accomplishment far as I am concerned, imagine if they hadn't made it like Beagle, you'd still be wondering what those landing sites looked like! I'm still annoyed the Polar lander buggered up, so these ones are doing great by comparison. I think the rovers, generally are doing a great job, any real dissapointment isn't really related to the mission, which is great, but more to a broader view of the situation, namely, how come we're still sending rovers instead of a manned mission etc etc. Kris My Energia HLLV page: http://www.k26.com/buran/ "Mike Morris" wrote in message ... While I am totally onside with the idea of exploring mars and the rest of our solar system; I am starting to wonder whether we have been sold a pup with these MER rovers. I have to say that so far I'm not too impressed with the science that has come from the Mer rovers. I know that more science should be forthcoming when the rovers get on the road; but up to now, its been pretty bland. Also, we keep being told that once such and such happens, we'll know alot more. Another thing is that with 2 rovers on the ground you'd think NASA could give us a daily briefing but instead we seem to get less briefings now. I agree that NASA deserves great applause for getting 2 rovers safely on the ground; but I'm pretty disillusioned by the very slow pace of the science teams. Maybe they could stop gloating long enough to tell us something about Mars, we didnt already know. The only interesting science is the soil. I stand to be corrected, but thats my take on this so far. |
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Someone someday will also be disappointed in the discovery of a cure for
cancer. Geezus. |
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![]() "t_mark" wrote in message news:hovSb.10847$L_4.1109@okepread01... Someone someday will also be disappointed in the discovery of a cure for cancer. Geezus. That is going a bit far. |
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"Mike Morris" wrote ...
"t_mark" wrote ... Someone someday will also be disappointed in the discovery of a cure for cancer. Geezus. That is going a bit far. "Hey Jo!" "Yes, Fred?" "I've discovered the cure for cancer!" "Well, Gee. That's nice an'all - just a pity that an asteroid the size of Australia is about to hit Earth." |
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"Mike Morris" wrote in message ...
While I am totally onside with the idea of exploring mars and the rest of our solar system; I am starting to wonder whether we have been sold a pup with these MER rovers. I have to say that so far I'm not too impressed with the science that has come from the Mer rovers. What science! - Soil structure? Or may be life signs? It is interesting to look at the curious combination of known but price is too high to satisfy this curiosity. There are indeed fundamental areas of research that will affect humanity destiny: -New physics (meta physics ;o) -Genome ingenerating -Nuclear fusion; it is not as fundamental but it has the highest practical priority. 20-30 years and US oil-economy will face total annihilation if do not take care today. Unfortunately, the prestige of scientist in US is much lower to be adequate to attract sufficient number the most gifted part of generation. The typical mass-media scientist image is a good illustration of its social status (freaks). The tax money has to be spent not for personal reelection campaign but keeping in mind the strategic country benefits. The nuclear fusion is a good example that even trivial/evident strategic solution is neglected since it does look as a threat for current corporative lay out. Anyway this crisis will come and it will be overcome but the price may be very different and may be very unfortunate for US. George |
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"Mike Morris" wrote in news:bvddin$5ur$1
@titan.btinternet.com: While I am totally onside with the idea of exploring mars and the rest of our solar system; I am starting to wonder whether we have been sold a pup with these MER rovers. I agree that the pace of information out of JPL has been slower than it should be, and they occasionally do seem to be afraid of their own shadows. I think they are so stunned at going 2 for 2, they can't think clearly about what to do next. They are just standing back and rubbing their chins in disbelief. Don't worry, it'll wear off soon. Lets put this in a reasonable context. These rovers represent only the 4th and 5th times human scientists have landed a fully working spacecraft on Mars and these guys did it twice in three weeks -- this alone will go down as a signal achievement in the annals of science -- we are already talking first class honours in the Bill Nye hall of fame here. The science up to now is mostly engineering and telecommunications, not geological but it is excellent, unparalleled science nonetheless. Proving something can be done opens up a lot of doors. And besides, just like ketchup, isn't it all about anticipation? Fact is, anything and everything these beasts find will be new to us so there should be loads of excitement ahead. Mark |
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![]() "mlm" wrote in message ... "Mike Morris" wrote in news:bvddin$5ur$1 @titan.btinternet.com: While I am totally onside with the idea of exploring mars and the rest of our solar system; I am starting to wonder whether we have been sold a pup with these MER rovers. I agree that the pace of information out of JPL has been slower than it should be, and they occasionally do seem to be afraid of their own shadows. I think they are so stunned at going 2 for 2, they can't think clearly about what to do next. They are just standing back and rubbing their chins in disbelief. Don't worry, it'll wear off soon. Lets put this in a reasonable context. These rovers represent only the 4th and 5th times human scientists have landed a fully working spacecraft on Mars and these guys did it twice in three weeks -- this alone will go down as a signal achievement in the annals of science -- we are already talking first class honours in the Bill Nye hall of fame here. The science up to now is mostly engineering and telecommunications, not geological but it is excellent, unparalleled science nonetheless. Proving something can be done opens up a lot of doors. And besides, just like ketchup, isn't it all about anticipation? Fact is, anything and everything these beasts find will be new to us so there should be loads of excitement ahead. Yes, I hope you're right. Apparenty the MiniTES reading on that rock outcrop at Meridiani, has some interesting results......but they are keeping us waiting :-) |
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mlm writes:
I agree that the pace of information out of JPL has been slower than it should be, and they occasionally do seem to be afraid of their own shadows. I think they are so stunned at going 2 for 2, they can't think clearly about what to do next. They are just standing back and rubbing their chins in disbelief. Don't worry, it'll wear off soon. Or they're too busy trying to get MER-1 back up and running and too busy getting MER-2 started to worry about press releases every 15 minutes. Lets put this in a reasonable context. These rovers represent only the 4th and 5th times human scientists have landed a fully working spacecraft on Mars and these guys did it twice in three weeks -- this alone will go down as a signal achievement in the annals of science -- we are already talking first class honours in the Bill Nye hall of fame here. The science up to now is mostly engineering and telecommunications, not geological but it is excellent, unparalleled science nonetheless. Proving something can be done opens up a lot of doors. MER-1 is starting to do more than just engineering and telecommunications. Last I heard, they'll back to science this weekend. And besides, just like ketchup, isn't it all about anticipation? Fact is, anything and everything these beasts find will be new to us so there should be loads of excitement ahead. Hopefully science too. ;-) Jeff -- Remove "no" and "spam" from email address to reply. If it says "This is not spam!", it's surely a lie. |
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On Fri, 30 Jan 2004 11:01:43 +0000 (UTC), "Mike Morris"
wrote: While I am totally onside with the idea of exploring mars and the rest of our solar system; I am starting to wonder whether we have been sold a pup with these MER rovers. I have to say that so far I'm not too impressed with the science that has come from the Mer rovers. Wow! And you've given Opportunity a whole six days to prove itself. Remember, Spirit conked out right when it was about to first drill into a rock for analysis. Brian |
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