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http://www.planetary.org/news/2006/0...Mars_Mars.html
Nobody was happier than Dan McCleese, the Mars chief scientist at JPL, and the principal investigator of the Mars Climate Sounder, a weather satellite and one of the six science instruments onboard MRO. "It feels great!" exclaimed McCleese. The lessons learned from past failures, said McCleese, is that cheap doesn't work. "With Mars Observer and Mars Climate Orbiter -- the two examples where we failed -- we tried to do it as cheaply as we could; therefore the people standing behind the people who are watching the people doing the work weren't there. Here we had checks and rechecks, redundant systems, testing that we had not done previously, and we were in the hands of very capable people. The future exploration of the planet, in my view, is that it pays to spend the time and money to do it right." |
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![]() "Victor" wrote in message ... http://www.planetary.org/news/2006/0...Mars_Mars.html Nobody was happier than Dan McCleese, the Mars chief scientist at JPL, and the principal investigator of the Mars Climate Sounder, a weather satellite and one of the six science instruments onboard MRO. "It feels great!" exclaimed McCleese. The lessons learned from past failures, said McCleese, is that cheap doesn't work. "With Mars Observer and Mars Climate Orbiter -- the two examples where we failed -- we tried to do it as cheaply as we could; therefore the people standing behind the people who are watching the people doing the work weren't there. Here we had checks and rechecks, redundant systems, testing that we had not done previously, and we were in the hands of very capable people. The future exploration of the planet, in my view, is that it pays to spend the time and money to do it right." Stupidity doesn't work. Some engineer programmed imperial data not the MKS system and lost in the 90's. |
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On Sat, 11 Mar 2006 20:39:40 +0200, Victor wrote:
http://www.planetary.org/news/2006/0...Mars_Mars.html Nobody was happier than Dan McCleese, the Mars chief scientist at JPL, and the principal investigator of the Mars Climate Sounder, a weather satellite and one of the six science instruments onboard MRO. "It feels great!" exclaimed McCleese. The lessons learned from past failures, said McCleese, is that cheap doesn't work. "With Mars Observer and Mars Climate Orbiter -- the two examples where we failed -- we tried to do it as cheaply as we could; therefore the people standing behind the people who are watching the people doing the work weren't there. Here we had checks and rechecks, redundant systems, testing that we had not done previously, and we were in the hands of very capable people. The future exploration of the planet, in my view, is that it pays to spend the time and money to do it right." Thats ok. The person who pushed this concept is now where he belongs, working as Hollywood producer. |
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Rich wrote:
On Sat, 11 Mar 2006 20:39:40 +0200, Victor wrote: http://www.planetary.org/news/2006/0...Mars_Mars.html Nobody was happier than Dan McCleese, the Mars chief scientist at JPL, and the principal investigator of the Mars Climate Sounder, a weather satellite and one of the six science instruments onboard MRO. "It feels great!" exclaimed McCleese. The lessons learned from past failures, said McCleese, is that cheap doesn't work. "With Mars Observer and Mars Climate Orbiter -- the two examples where we failed -- we tried to do it as cheaply as we could; therefore the people standing behind the people who are watching the people doing the work weren't there. Here we had checks and rechecks, redundant systems, testing that we had not done previously, and we were in the hands of very capable people. The future exploration of the planet, in my view, is that it pays to spend the time and money to do it right." Thats ok. The person who pushed this concept is now where he belongs, working as Hollywood producer. Really? And who would that be? Phil |
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"Mike Thomas" wrote in message news:dbHQf.26336$Ui.145@edtnps84...
"Victor" wrote in message ... http://www.planetary.org/news/2006/0...Mars_Mars.html The lessons learned from past failures, said McCleese, is that cheap doesn't work. "With Mars Observer and Mars Climate Orbiter -- the two examples where we failed -- we tried to do it as cheaply as we could; Stupidity doesn't work. Some engineer programmed imperial data not the MKS system and lost in the 90's. And that particular Mars mission was on the high end costwise. -- Hilton Evans --------------------------------------------------------------- Lon -71° 04' 35.3" Lat +42° 11' 06.7" --------------------------------------------------------------- Webcam Astroimaging http://mysite.verizon.net/hiltonevan...troimaging.htm --------------------------------------------------------------- ChemPen Chemical Structure Software http://www.chempensoftware.com |
#6
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Steven Spielberg.
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