Manos: The Hans of Fate
Banned
~2 Billion I believe.
$2,6 billion
That would have been bad.
~2 Billion I believe.
$2,6 billion
$2,6 billion
That is like only 0.4% of the us military budget.
That is like only 0.4% of the us military budget.
It's aerospace. 67 billion dollars got us a 150 million dollar plane that can't fly in the rain, has to spend a ton of time in maintenance for every hour in the air, and randomly kills its pilots by hypoxia. The F-35 has been about $400 billion to develop and will cost another $800 billion to operate, and what we know about it is that the software still doesn't work, the fuel dump can cause it to catch fire, the hud doesn't work, using the afterburner damages the aircraft, it may not survive lightning strikes, and the airframe doesn't meet spec.
For ~2.6 billion we're lucky the camera even works.
That is like only 0.4% of the us military budget.
Heh, I love this one quote from Something Awful about the cost of the mission (in comparison to the increasingly failing F-35 program):
Heh, I love this one quote from Something Awful about the cost of the mission (in comparison to the increasingly failing F-35 program):
And it's money very well spent. In an ideal world NASA would have enough money to send a mission like that to another planet every week.
I can't believe so much of the last 40 years was wasted in arms races and wars.
Humans should have been actually landing on Mars now instead of how much money was wasted fighting each other.
Either way I wish there was more excitement from this landing. I hope they make some fantastic new discoveries pushing humanity to want to continue space exploration.
Nope.
One could argue that it would have taken us a lot longer to put a man on the moon if it hadn't been for the Cold War, but I agree with you that money could have been spent on much better endeavors.
http://www.microcosmologist.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/microcosmologist.com-SETI-infographic.jpg[/QUOTE]
Holy shit that is depressing.
http://www.microcosmologist.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/microcosmologist.com-SETI-infographic.jpg[IMG][/QUOTE]Sometimes I wonder what humanity could achieve if every endeavor were focused on a singular goal like finding intelligent alien life.
We would be a part of the Galactic Federation by now.
Instead, our singular focus is - and always will be - having sex, and preventing other people from having sex.
Considering what we've done on Earth....yeah no problem in the least.Personally, if we find life, I'm interested to see what the general consensus will be as to whether we can morally justify permanent human habitation on someone else's planet, even if they are billions of years removed from caring.
My god it's beautiful , fuck I'll pay high taxes, get us to Mars with humans!I have no words...
THIS MISSION WOULDN'T EVEN BE NOTICED ON THE MILITARY BUDGET. I mean seriously, if we spent the 2.5 billion not from NASA's budget but instead took it from a Military budget...THEY WOULD NEVER HAVE NOTICED. LOL
And our rovers don't even look as cool:We first landed on Mars 40 YEARS AGO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
And that was just 2 YEARS AFTER LANDING ON THE MOON!!!!!!!!!
And that was just 7 YEARS AFTER SAYING LET'S GO ON THE MOON!!!!!!!!!!!
So much wasted time since.
I was around for the first moon landing and did school reports on subsequent landings. We talked about what the first man on Mars mission would be like. Back then everybody was sure we'd see it soon.So much wasted time since.
I was around for the first moon landing and did school reports on subsequent landings. We talked about what the first man on Mars mission would be like. Back then everybody was sure we'd see it soon.
Not gonna happen in my lifetime. Might not happen in your lifetime.
So much wasted time indeed.
You know what would be cool? If we could guide a water comet to the surface of mars.
You might differentiate what you mean when you say singularity, since there are multiple uses, the most common being the beginning of the universe and the center of a black hole (see the space thread for discussions on how those might relate!).
I think you meant technological singularity and I know what you mean though.
Speaking of technological singularities, one of the more unsettling questions of the pursuit of alien civilizations is the assumption that eventually one of them would rely on self-replicating robots to prepare the way for their eventual migration and/or exploration. Now, I don't mean to hold our little mote of dust in the vast sea of the Milky Way in too-high regard, but ... why haven't we seen these robots yet? The galaxy is what, 4-5 billion years old? If they're out there, then either we've already seen them and didn't know it, we didn't see them, or they're not there. :\
4. They're already dead. Achieving singularity is always an mass extinction causing event. Unlikely but perfectly possible.
Well, its a classic question "Where are the aliens?".
1. Through random luck, we are the first civilization capable of reaching the technological singularity. Unlikely but perfectly possible.
2. Speed of light in uncrackable and alien civilizations are far enough away that we never meet, even if there are billions across the cosmos.
3. They have arrived and are like totally cool and avoid contacting us to let us develop on our own.
4. They're already dead. Achieving singularity is always an mass extinction causing event. Unlikely but perfectly possible.
Don't think this sunrise on Mars picture was posted.
Well, its a classic question "Where are the aliens?".
1. Through random luck, we are the first civilization capable of reaching the technological singularity. Unlikely but perfectly possible.
2. Speed of light in uncrackable and alien civilizations are far enough away that we never meet, even if there are billions across the cosmos.
3. They have arrived and are like totally cool and avoid contacting us to let us develop on our own.
4. They're already dead. Achieving singularity is always an mass extinction causing event. Unlikely but perfectly possible.
5. Civilizations destroy themselves / are wiped out by extinction level events before achieving the technological ability for interstellar travel, and the same thing will happen to us.
Well, its a classic question "Where are the aliens?".
1. Through random luck, we are the first civilization capable of reaching the technological singularity. Unlikely but perfectly possible.
2. Speed of light in uncrackable and alien civilizations are far enough away that we never meet, even if there are billions across the cosmos.
3. They have arrived and are like totally cool and avoid contacting us to let us develop on our own.
4. They're already dead. Achieving singularity is always an mass extinction causing event. Unlikely but perfectly possible.
Just thinking about this, and looking around me gives me this insane sense of scale, we're such a tiny blot in the universe's big picture. My mind cannot comprehend!5. Civilizations destroy themselves / are wiped out by extinction level events before achieving the technological ability for interstellar travel, and the same thing will happen to us.
Saturn eclipsing the Sun:
i never even thought of that. god that would of been so cool to listen to.Does Curiosity have any microphones? Would it be possible to record sound from Mars. Like the wind blowing? That would blow my mind.
This is still my wallpaper
Just thinking about this, and looking around me gives me this insane sense of scale, we're such a tiny blot in the universe's big picture. My mind cannot comprehend!
Just thinking about this, and looking around me gives me this insane sense of scale, we're such a tiny blot in the universe's big picture. My mind cannot comprehend!