I like how Elon's avatar is a picture of a stiff, fully erect Starship.
Amen to that.Blue Origin
Founded: September 8, 2000
Funding: $1 billion per year from Jeff Bezos
Employees: 3500
Achievements: impressively phallic rocket design, ambitious PowerPoint presentations
SpaceX
Founded: May 6, 2002
Achievements:
Yup, although I am still unsure him hosting SNL is going to work out for him.Dude is trolling on a level us plebes could never dream.
He's pretty much real life Iron Man at this point. Wouldn't be surprised if he starts showing up to events with a jetpack.
Amen to that.
The difference between the two companies is mind blowing when one considers that Blue Origins was founded two years earlier and has access to basically unlimited cashflow. It makes Musk's brilliance even more impressive.
Did you ever just look at the Amazon Prime supposed smile arrow? Yeaaah, about that stenciled underside crooked Bezos bone.Blue Origin
Founded: September 8, 2000
Funding: $1 billion per year from Jeff Bezos
Employees: 3500
Achievements: impressively phallic rocket design, ambitious PowerPoint presentations
SpaceX
Founded: May 6, 2002
Achievements:
Yup, although I am still unsure him hosting SNL is going to work out for him.
I’m going to go out of my way to watch it live which I haven’t done in a very long time. Brilliant marketing.Yup, although I am still unsure him hosting SNL is going to work out for him.
So if I'm understanding that tweet correctly blue origin is suing the US government because they didn't get the contract?
1 - Is that even possible? Because it sounds really stupid.
2 - Throwing a spurious lawsuit at the people who's good side you need to be on in order to get these contracts seems like a bad move.
Oh I see that now. I think I'm so used to everyone suing everyone else these days that I just assumed protest was just another word for some kind of lawsuit lolI don't think it's a lawsuit. More like Blue Origin stomping their feet and crying "it's not fair!"
Why'd he sell the bitcoin and pretend it wasn't to balance the books this quarter though?
Liquidity, my ass.
Bezos is definitely not projecting BDEDid you ever just look at the Amazon Prime supposed smile arrow? Yeaaah, about that stenciled underside crooked Bezos bone.
Funny how fat cats like Bezos love capitalism until they don'tI don't think it's a lawsuit. More like Blue Origin stomping their feet and crying "it's not fair!"
This is the trouble with Blue Origin. They appear to have decent spacecraft designs and engines, but they appear unwilling to launch anything other than the New Shepherd.Blue Origin
Founded: September 8, 2000
Funding: $1 billion per year from Jeff Bezos
Employees: 3500
Achievements: impressively phallic rocket design, ambitious PowerPoint presentations
SpaceX
Founded: May 6, 2002
Achievements:
Never knew Bezos did a space thing. Just took a skim of its Wiki. What a waste of money. On the plus side, at least Bezos is funding lots of it himself with Amazon stock sale.
It’s literally what he does whenever he doesn’t get picked.I don't think it's a lawsuit. More like Blue Origin stomping their feet and crying "it's not fair!"
I love Amazon as a service, but for the love of God Bezos is such a whiney bitch.It’s literally what he does whenever he doesn’t get picked.
Amazon cites 'unmistakable bias' in Microsoft's military cloud contract win
Amazon says that the drawn-out selection process had "clear deficiencies."www.cnbc.com
That gives a wrong impression. Here is the first 100km flight and landing of booster/crew bit:Achievements: impressively phallic rocket design, ambitious PowerPoint presentations
Flight No. | Date | Vehicle | Apogee | Outcome | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 5 March 2005 | Charon | 315 ft (96 m)[70] | Success | |
2 | 13 November 2006 | Goddard | 279 ft (85 m)[119] | Success | First rocket-powered test flight[120] |
3 | 22 March 2007 | Goddard ♺[121] | Success | ||
4 | 19 April 2007 | Goddard ♺[122] | Success | ||
5 | 6 May 2011 | PM2 (Propulsion Module)[123] | Success | [124] | |
6 | 24 August 2011 | PM2 (Propulsion Module) ♺ | Failure | [124] | |
7 | 19 October 2012 | New Shepard capsule | Success | Pad escape test flight,[81] | |
8 | 29 April 2015 | New Shepard 1 | 307,000 ft (93.5 km) | Partial success | Flight to altitude 93.5 km, capsule recovered, booster crashed on landing[125] |
9 | 23 November 2015 | New Shepard 2 | 329,839 ft (100.535 km)[84] | Success | Sub-orbital spaceflight and landing[126] |
10 | 22 January 2016 | New Shepard 2 ♺ | 333,582 ft (101.676 km)[citation needed] | Success | Sub-orbital spaceflight and landing of a reused booster[127] |
11 | 2 April 2016 | New Shepard 2 ♺ | 339,178 ft (103.381 km)[128] | Success | Sub-orbital spaceflight and landing of a reused booster[54] |
12 | 19 June 2016 | New Shepard 2 ♺ | 331,501 ft (101.042 km)[129] | Success | Sub-orbital spaceflight and landing of a reused booster: The fourth launch and landing of the same rocket. Blue Origin published a live webcast of the takeoff and landing.[129] |
13 | 5 October 2016 | New Shepard 2 ♺ | Booster: 307,458 ft (93.713 km) Capsule: 23,269 ft (7.092 km)[130] | Success | Sub-orbital spaceflight and landing of a reused booster. Successful test of the in-flight abort system. The fifth and final launch and landing of the same rocket (NS2).[111] |
14 | 12 December 2017 | New Shepard 3 | Booster: 322,032 ft (98.155 km) Capsule: 322,405 ft (98.269 km)[131] | Success | Flight to just under 100 km and landing. The first launch of NS3 and a new Crew Capsule 2.0.[132] |
15 | 29 April 2018 | New Shepard 3 ♺ | 351,000 ft (107 km)[133] | Success | Sub-orbital spaceflight and landing of a reused booster.[134] |
16 | 18 July 2018 | New Shepard 3 ♺ | 389,846 ft (118.825 km)[135] | Success | Sub-orbital spaceflight and landing of a reused booster, with the Crew Capsule 2.0-1 RSS H.G.Wells, carrying a mannequin. Successful test of the in-flight abort system at high altitude. Flight duration was 11 minutes.[135] |
17 | 23 January 2019 | New Shepard 3 ♺ | Approx. 351,000 ft (106.9 km)[citation needed] | Success | Sub-orbital flight, delayed from 18 December 2018. Eight NASA research and technology payloads were flown.[136][137] |
18 | 2 May 2019 | New Shepard 3 ♺ | Approx. 346,000 ft (105 km)[138] | Success | Sub-orbital flight. Max Ascent Velocity: 2,217 mph (3,568 km/h),[138] duration: 10 minutes, 10 seconds. Payload: 38 microgravity research payloads (nine sponsored by NASA). |
19 | 11 December 2019 | New Shepard 3 ♺ | Approx. 343,000 ft (104.5 km)[139] | Success | Sub-orbital flight, Payload: Multiple commercial, research (8 sponsored by NASA) and educational payloads, including postcards from Club for the Future.[140][141][139] |
20 | 13 October 2020 | New Shepard 3 ♺ | Approx. 346,000 ft (105.4 km) | Success | 7th flight of the same capsule/booster. Onboard 12 payloads include Space Lab Technologies, Southwest Research Institute, postcards and seeds for Club for the Future, and multiple payloads for NASA including SPLICE to test future lunar landing technologies in support of the Artemis program[142] |
21 | 14 January 2021 | New Shepard 4 | 350,858 ft (106 km) | Success | Uncrewed qualification flight for NS4 rocket and "RSS First Step" capsule and maiden flight for NS4.[143] |
22 | 14 April 2021 | New Shepard 4 | 348,753 ft (106 km) | Success | 2nd flight of NS4 with Astronaut Rehearsal. Gary Lai, Susan Knapp, Clay Mowry, and Audrey Powers, all Blue Origin personel, are “stand-in astronauts”. Lai and Powers briefly get in.[144] |
Blue Origin
Founded: September 8, 2000
Funding: $1 billion per year from Jeff Bezos
Employees: 3500
Achievements: impressively phallic rocket design, ambitious PowerPoint presentations
SpaceX
Founded: May 6, 2002
Achievements:
For as rich as he is, Musk really does come off as down to Earth especially compared to other Billionaires.in billionaires I trust Musk a hell of a lot more than Bezos
bezos just looks and feels slimey
I trust Musk a hell of a lot more than Bill Gates.in billionaires I trust Musk a hell of a lot more than Bezos
bezos just looks and feels slimey
This, but so much more. Bill has become, in his own eyes, a master of everything. Politics, education, medical, everything. I'm all for the work he is doing in the medical field in disadvantaged areas such as making malaria medications more available. In the US, however, his meddling comes with strings attached--strings connected to massive amounts baggage.I trust Musk a hell of a lot more than Bill Gates.
Elon has a god complex much like Gates but he sticks to his bread and butter in engineering. Gates is a computer tech guy acting as the medical authority of the world.
I trust Musk a hell of a lot more than Bill Gates.
Elon has a god complex much like Gates but he sticks to his bread and butter in engineering. Gates is a computer tech guy acting as the medical authority of the world.
Some biz are meant to run as a failure - with chronic annual losses - in order to be a tax deduction for the investor(s). Highly likely that this is the motive for Bezos and BO.Blue Origin
Founded: September 8, 2000
Funding: $1 billion per year from Jeff Bezos
Employees: 3500
Achievements: impressively phallic rocket design, ambitious PowerPoint presentations
SpaceX
Founded: May 6, 2002
Achievements:
I think they are genuinely trying to succeed, but they are running a last gen business. By the time they get New Shepherd running real missions, it’ll be essentially obsolete compared to SpaceX’s Falcon 9s and Heavies. With Starship already well into testing, New Glenn will be virtually obsolete before they can even really begin to test it.Some biz are meant to run as a failure - with chronic annual losses - in order to be a tax deduction for the investor(s). Highly likely that this is the motive for Bezos and BO.
This statement says a lot about our society, particularly because it's actually quite understandable, and that's really sad.Oh I see that now. I think I'm so used to everyone suing everyone else these days that I just assumed protest was just another word for some kind of lawsuit lol
If it wasn't for SpaceX Blue Origin would look almost revolutionary, in the same way Airbus was when it entered the fray on a field that was left stale by the lack of competition. The problem for them is that SpaceX is the ultimate lean 21st century company., with razon focus and modern agile methodology.I think they are genuinely trying to succeed, but they are running a last gen business. By the time they get New Shepherd running real missions, it’ll be essentially obsolete compared to SpaceX’s Falcon 9s and Heavies. With Starship already well into testing, New Glenn will be virtually obsolete before they can even really begin to test it.
Blue Origin’s business philosophy is stuck in the past and just isn’t up to competing against SpaceX’s much more aggressive philosophy right now.
For Blue Origin to succeed, they need to push for simultaneous testing of New Shepherd and New Glenn. They need to get the ball rolling now so as to ensure that both vehicles are ready as soon as possible.