Category Archives: Administrative

Off To The Cape

It looks like pretty good chances that the launch is on, and I don’t know how many more night launches there will be. We have to be in Orlando in the morning anyway, so we’re going up to Titusville tonight to see it. Probably no posting until tomorrow.

[Late evening update]

Most spectacular launch I’ve ever seen. Maybe pics tomorrow.

Unfortunately, the forty-five mile trip to Orlando was hell on wheels, taking three hours. Next time I’ll either stay in Titusville, or take the long way around (up toward Daytona and then back down) which would have been much quicker.

Linux Bleg

So I’ve been living with Fedora for over six weeks now, since my Windows 2000 machine died from a bad patch. One of the things that was good about Windows was that WinSCP allows one to securely edit a remote file without manually downloading and reuploading. It has an editor actually built in for this purpose, and when you do a save, it saves it to the remote directory.

Is there any software with a similar capability in Linux? I can use Nautilus to browse remote files, and I can even launch them with a local text editor (gedit), but it doesn’t seem to allow me to save for some reason. Or do I have to go back to an ssh session and vi or emacs to do remote editing?

[Update]

Thanks to smart commenters, problem solved, in a way beyond my wildest dreams. My web server is now functionally a (relatively slow) local file system, liberating me forever from ssh and scp (since that was the only remote server that I deal with regularly). Life in the 21st century…

Feel The Love

Why can’t I get fun emails like this one? I particularly liked the berating of the evil “CAPITOLISM.” I’m always a little surprised when I hear conservative bloggers talk about the vitriol in their email, because I just don’t see it.

I suppose that it’s partly, or largely because I have a comments section where unhappy customers can vent (and demand their money back). But even there, I rarely get this kind of stuff, other than from Elifritz.

Are We Serious About Space Policy?

Jeff Foust reports on a forum where that is the topic of discussion. The (unsurprising, or at least it should be to readers of this weblog) answer is, “no.”

Space, at least civil space, is not important, and has not been since the early 1960s. What is more dismaying, though, is that military space is not treated seriously, either, and that really should be considered important.

The panel also doesn’t think much of reviving the Space Council. I agree that the focal point should not be at OSTP, and that space does need a more serious advocate on the National Security Council.

I wonder why Jeff doesn’t quote anyone by name? Was he reporting under restrictions?

[Update in the afternoon]

Apparently, he was. He writes over at Space Politics:

Because of the ground rules of the discussion, none of the comments are attributed to any of the attendees.

I’d be curious to know at least who the attendees were, even if we can’t correlate specific statements with specific attendees. Is that a secret, too?

Also at The Space Review today, a good tutorial on how to tell a launch system from a ballistic missile.

I should note that one point not made here is that it’s actually easier to build a launch vehicle than an effective ballistic missile, if one defines “effective” as being able to hit a precise target, because the latter requires an entry vehicle. Getting into orbit, per se, does not require a precise injection, or heat shields, as long as the resulting trajectory doesn’t intercept the atmosphere.

Finally, Dwayne Day clears up (or at least attempts to clear up) media misconceptions about the Chinese space program.

[Mid-afternoon update]

Jeff provides the list of speakers, though it’s still not clear whether the quotes are from speakers or attendees.