That is, subsidizing cars that don’t, and probably won’t exist.
What a clown show these people are.
That is, subsidizing cars that don’t, and probably won’t exist.
What a clown show these people are.
Peter Beck explains the low flight rate of Electron.
There are many more small launchers than there is demand for them. And if my idea about equatorial LEO happens (and I think it’s inevitable), there will be no market for them at all.
[Tuesday-morning update]
I’m both fascinated and amused at the degree to which intelligent commenters are having difficulty wrapping their heads around the ELEO concept.
It seems unavoidable to me (and I’m pretty sure we’re already in one, despite the weirdness factors).
NEPA and unions have become a very expensive luxury. But California HSR was a terrible idea even without these problems.
Thoughts on the coming age. A first of two essays.
He would have been 110 years old today. And if he was still with us, he would be appalled at the depths of economic ignorance not only being propounded, but implemented.
Tell them what you really think, Stacy.
They can’t let it happen.
They used Covid as an excuse to get rid of menus, but I think it was just an excuse to save money on printing them, and make it easier to change prices.
For its part, Webb suffered repeated delays and cost overruns even before the COVID-19 pandemic slowed work on a number of projects in both the public and private sectors. Initially meant to launch in 2010 at a cost of $3 billion, Webb eventually launched last December at a final cost of more than $10 billion. Similarly, the enormous Space Launch System rocket has cost more and taken far longer to lift off from Kennedy Space Center than originally planned – though NASA now expects to finally launch the rocket that will take astronauts back to the Moon at the end of August or beginning of September.
All the same, criticisms focused on excessive delays and busted budgets tend to fall by the wayside when we see the results of America’s space exploration programs. That’s certainly been the case with Webb, whose first images have received a rapturous reception by the media and public alike. But few people would say that this sense of wonder and inspiration is the reason America invests as much of its national resources as it does in space exploration, and even fewer would say it’s worth the financial costs involved.
One of these things is not like the others. I’m confident that history will record that SLS/Orion played a trivial, if not non-existent role in actual space exploration. And (as always) I would reiterate that out exploration of space will be much more effective when it is rightly viewed as not an end, but a means to a grander goal: the development and settlement of a new frontier, and the expansion of life and consciousness into the universe.