Good stuff, clicking through the clips now.Interview
This is a good one where he very diplomatically describes corporate welfare lol.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VH63zFPYmiA
Good stuff, clicking through the clips now.Interview
Dang Elon Musk companies just ballin the past couple weeks.
how much money was saved by that successful landing?
Funny enough you got the crazies of society saying it's fake already lolIt's always so impressive to see how fast it goes just a few seconds before landing! Add the fact it lands vertically, my brain is looking for telltale signs of cgi.. The future is here!
LOL, if they manage to refire ten times without any issue it will refly on JUNE. AMAZING.
It's always so impressive to see how fast it goes just a few seconds before landing! Add the fact it lands vertically, my brain is looking for telltale signs of cgi.. The future is here!
how much money was saved by that successful landing?
SpaceX's PR game is on point. It's cool to see so many people excited about spaceflight, but I worry about the fandom that's brewing.
In any case, congrats to them on the success.
This time? $0
These are still experimental flights, they're not designed to save money but to gather data.
Eventually, consistently reusable F9 / FH stages will save tens of millions of dollars per launch.
Damn... Elon just said he basically ran out of money when they were trying to get Falcon 1 off the ground. 3 failures. They somehow got enough money for a 4th launch and it finally worked.
If that didn't work SpaceX might not exist today. Crazy.
If you read his bio it's insane how close both Tesla and SpaceX were to complete failure.
Just thinking about a world without SpaceX and Tesla is just depressing considering how far they are pushing tech right now.
My concern is more that "spaceflight" is becoming synonymous with "SpaceX".Those two statements don't work together. Its spaceflight and if it gets people excited then there is no issue. Its been a long time coming anyway. Any other matter I would understand to a degree but not this.
My concern is more that "spaceflight" is becoming synonymous with "SpaceX".
A few things that have come up recently:
All of this to me reeks of fanboyism.
- I was at a talk about an upcoming spacecraft launch and someone in the audience asked why they weren't launching with SpaceX.
- This happened a couple days ago and nobody cared.
- We're being corrected by people for calling it "a barge".
End of that press conference included mention of a city on Mars. That's a good press conference.
It amuses me so much.Nose cone:
My concern is more that "spaceflight" is becoming synonymous with "SpaceX".
A few things that have come up recently:
All of this to me reeks of fanboyism.
- I was at a talk about an upcoming spacecraft launch and someone in the audience asked why they weren't launching with SpaceX.
- This happened a couple days ago and nobody cared.
- We're being corrected by people for calling it "a barge".
My concern is more that "spaceflight" is becoming synonymous with "SpaceX".
A few things that have come up recently:
All of this to me reeks of fanboyism.
- I was at a talk about an upcoming spacecraft launch and someone in the audience asked why they weren't launching with SpaceX.
- This happened a couple days ago and nobody cared.
- We're being corrected by people for calling it "a barge".
I think Blue Origin is exciting and they are coming at the same end goal as SpaceX from a different direction. SpaceX are encouraging popluar engagement with live streams and presentation whereas the guys at Blue Origin are holding back from that sort of stuff. Fanboyism is happening with Musk but I am not worried that it is getting in the way of anything, this isnt a popularity contest.
SpaceX's PR game is on point. It's cool to see so many people excited about spaceflight, but I worry about the fandom that's brewing.
In any case, congrats to them on the success.
My concern is more that "spaceflight" is becoming synonymous with "SpaceX".
A few things that have come up recently:
All of this to me reeks of fanboyism.
- I was at a talk about an upcoming spacecraft launch and someone in the audience asked why they weren't launching with SpaceX.
- This happened a couple days ago and nobody cared.
- We're being corrected by people for calling it "a barge".
Sure there are some "Elon=savior" noise, but ultimately, I think your concern posts are kinda silly. Because the more people get excited about spaceflight, the more media coverage it will generate, and the more people will find out about what the OTHER players in space are doing.
And the other players ARE doing some really exciting stuff.
Don't sleep on Blue Origin. I wouldn't say "nobody cared" about BlueOrigin's launch, it's just that what they are doing now is so much more modest than SpaceX, who is actually delivering spacecraft to orbit. They are making crazy progress and producing slick spacecraft, and even though they're currently sub-orbital, they won't be forever. Like Dan Rasky said...they are building their spacecraft from the top-down, which has never been done before.
After fits and starts, Sierra Nevada's Dream Chaser is going forward. That's gonna be cool. And these newcomers are pushing the cultures of the big traditional players too, and all of them have plans for cool stuff.
The more people get excited about spaceflight, the more they will learn that it's not just SpaceX doing really interesting things.
Specific terms do have meaning. A launch vehicle is different than a spacecraft. A barge isn't a barge when it has engines and other things. It's a ship. So they correct the incorrect terminology. Bigelow's project isn't an "inflatable," even though it is inflated when it is deployed, as it has a structure not dependent on inflation. It's an "expandable." So Bigelow and NASA correct the incorrect language. It happens all the time, and it's no big deal.
Totally. Like I said, I'm very happy to see them succeed.Its going to be rough waters but the end goal is the primary mission.
This is what worries me, though. I'm seeing the increased coverage, but I'm not seeing people caring about what others are doing. In fact, I'm seeing more of an Us vs. Them attitude that is reminiscent of Android vs. iPhone or Sony vs. Microsoft or Twinkies vs. ... I dunno, do people give a shit about Twinkies competitors?Sure there are some "Elon=savior" noise, but ultimately, I think your concern posts are kinda silly. Because the more people get excited about spaceflight, the more media coverage it will generate, and the more people will find out about what the OTHER players in space are doing.
I agree! I also think it's very important in the professional sphere of spaceflight. However, I'm not in that professional sphere. I should be able to call it a barge among peers in casual conversation without people correcting me. I'm not really all that bothered by it, but it's just a sign ofagainfanboyism.Specific terms do have meaning.
I'm kind of regretting making that post now. To be clear, I don't really think this is that big of a deal and in the end, it's way, way better for spaceflight to be in the position that we're in now thanks to SpaceX.
Totally. Like I said, I'm very happy to see them succeed.
This is what worries me, though. I'm seeing the increased coverage, but I'm not seeing people caring about what others are doing. In fact, I'm seeing more of an Us vs. Them attitude that is reminiscent of Android vs. iPhone or Sony vs. Microsoft or Twinkies vs. ... I dunno, do people give a shit about Twinkies competitors?
Anyway, I just don't want to see other companies suffer as a result of a lack of public support. I don't think that's really all that likely, but it's just a brewing concern as time goes on.
I agree! I also think it's very important in the professional sphere of spaceflight. However, I'm not in that professional sphere. I should be able to call it a barge among peers in casual conversation without people correcting me. I'm not really all that bothered by it, but it's just a sign ofagainfanboyism.
I'm not really all that bothered by it, but it's just a sign of—again—fanboyism.
I see people nitpicking on behalf of a corporation in casual conversation as a sign of fanboyism. If we disagree on that, that's cool. To be clear though, I said specifically that it was discussion occurring outside the professional sphere. I think it's important to keep the media well-informed and to be precise in the terminology of spaceflight. Still, does it really matter if I just happen to call it a barge?You've said that over and over again, but I'm not seeing how using specific terms--which everyone in the industry, and in science tries to do when dealing with the less-informed media--has ANYTHING to do with "fanboyism." You're saying it's "fanboyism," without offering any real compelling evidence.
Musk wants the whole world driving electric cars. He also wants SpaceX to go to other planets, primarily Mars. And he wants solar panels to be used by every household.
Much work to be done.
https://twitter.com/SpaceX/status/718605741288894464SpaceX ‏@SpaceX
Onboard view of landing in high winds
My concern is more that "spaceflight" is becoming synonymous with "SpaceX".
A few things that have come up recently:
All of this to me reeks of fanboyism.
- I was at a talk about an upcoming spacecraft launch and someone in the audience asked why they weren't launching with SpaceX.
- This happened a couple days ago and nobody cared.
- We're being corrected by people for calling it "a barge".
I wasn't trying to imply that fanboyism was the only explanation. I'm also certainly not claiming that praising this achievement and ignoring Blue Origin makes you a fanboy.Your sentiment about the fanboyism is certainly on, but the aerodynamic and delta-v needs differ so much between the up and down payload delivery vs delivering a payload into orbit that needing fanboyism to explain why people don't care about the Blue Origin launch but care about this is a bit out there.
I see this is as momentous achievement in spaceflight history. I watched the thing live and might have cheered a little. I also know and understand that this is a much bigger deal than what Blue Origin is doing.People who aren't fanboys but understand the tyranny of the rocket equation and how cost-dependent spaceflight is see this as a momentous achievement in history. Thinking the same of Blue Origin's accomplishments (which are still notable) exposes a lack of understanding about rocketry and the big picture of space flight.
It's always so impressive to see how fast it goes just a few seconds before landing! Add the fact it lands vertically, my brain is looking for telltale signs of cgi.. The future is here!