Nooblord
Senior Member
Close enough to everybody. Obviously it's an exaggeration since blind people exist, and people without access to televisions exist.
You don't need to have a huge marketing budget if you're continuously giving updates that get people talking. A "whoop-dee-do" moon landing? Really? That moon landing is what got so many influential scientist excited and interested in space exploration. And it was a major feat at that time, especially with the technology we had back then. Like I said before, of course the chances of habitable planets being somewhere out in an infinite universe is highly probable. So I wouldn't call that a scientific achievement. What now? Keep throwing out more artist renditions of what they may look like, like in the link you posted? They didn't have actual telescope footage of the planets, at least give us that.
I already told you some of the easiest things they can do. Get people involved. Live stream projects, have a live discussion board where people can ask questions, learn the processes and the game plans of current and upcoming missions. The only live stream they have is of the ISS and every now and then astronauts playing with water in zero gravity or eating food out of a tube. With the resources we have on the moon and what we could gather from astroids not everything would have to come from earth, and it would take less propulsion power to get off of the moon than it takes getting out of the earths atmosphere and gravitational pull, just the practice of mining in space and building in space would be a great start.
And one of this things I would most like to see is some domestic competition for NASA. Not necessarily government-funded multibillion dollar space programs, but researchers who can compete in finding new and better ways to explore space.
Progress in aerospace is so slow, and it has trickled down to a crawl.
You don't need to have a huge marketing budget if you're continuously giving updates that get people talking. A "whoop-dee-do" moon landing? Really? That moon landing is what got so many influential scientist excited and interested in space exploration. And it was a major feat at that time, especially with the technology we had back then. Like I said before, of course the chances of habitable planets being somewhere out in an infinite universe is highly probable. So I wouldn't call that a scientific achievement. What now? Keep throwing out more artist renditions of what they may look like, like in the link you posted? They didn't have actual telescope footage of the planets, at least give us that.
I already told you some of the easiest things they can do. Get people involved. Live stream projects, have a live discussion board where people can ask questions, learn the processes and the game plans of current and upcoming missions. The only live stream they have is of the ISS and every now and then astronauts playing with water in zero gravity or eating food out of a tube. With the resources we have on the moon and what we could gather from astroids not everything would have to come from earth, and it would take less propulsion power to get off of the moon than it takes getting out of the earths atmosphere and gravitational pull, just the practice of mining in space and building in space would be a great start.
And one of this things I would most like to see is some domestic competition for NASA. Not necessarily government-funded multibillion dollar space programs, but researchers who can compete in finding new and better ways to explore space.
Progress in aerospace is so slow, and it has trickled down to a crawl.
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