Jeff Foust has a report at today’s issue of The Space Review.
Category Archives: Technology and Society
The Future Of Commercial Space
An interview with Michael Lopez-Alegria.
As I note in comments there, NASA is not the only orbital customer. Bigelow has long expressed an interest in purchasing flights when they’re available at an affordable price.
The “Selling Space” Debate
Jeff Foust has six takeaways.
Falcon Heavy
SpaceX has it on their flight schedule for this year.
Faster, please.
British Accents
…of yore.
I’ve always wondered how anyone can think they know what an accent from before Edison would have sounded like. How do we know that Romans would have spoken the Latin of the modern Church?
[Update a few minutes later]
That second video on the how Shakespeare would have been performed in the day is quite interesting.
Aircraft Cockpits
Can they be too secure?
They can be, and are.
Our lessons from 911 and approaches to aircraft security have been wrong headed for over 12.5 years. @PopMech
— Rand Simberg (@Rand_Simberg) March 20, 2014
The STEM Shortage
It’s a myth.
I agree. The problem isn’t a shortage of workers in that field. But innumeracy and scientific illiteracy is a big problem in our society, particularly among the voters. And that includes the illiteracy of those who mindlessly accept a lot of bogus nutrition and climate “science.”
The New Crowdfunding Rules
The SEC is about to release them.
Microbes And Metabolites
An interesting new approach to understanding and curing aging.
Faster, please.
Commercial Supersonic Flight
What NASA’s up to:
“There are three barriers particular to civil supersonic flight; sonic boom, high altitude emissions and airport noise. Of the three, boom is the most significant problem,” said Peter Coen, manager of NASA’s High Speed Project with the agency’s Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate’s Fundamental Aeronautics Program.
There’s a fourth barrier not mentioned: the low L/D, which restricts range and makes for high fuel costs. If that problem doesn’t get solved, it will never become a huge market, and will mostly be restricted to business jets.