Checking In

I’m still alive. We’re staying down at the Kona Waipolua Hilton, and I had to fly over to Honolulu today to talk about Hawaiian spaceports. And it looks like the Tigers are going to continue to blow their once-promising season.

Checking In

OK, I said we were going to Kona, and we did fly into there. But we are actually staying (at least this weekend) in a house in Honoka’a, on a hillside overlooking the ocean. The Kona side was hot and muggy. I wasn’t impressed. It seemed like Florida, except much more scenic. But as we drove through Waimea, the landscape turned from lava desert to lush green hillsides, and it drizzled and cooled. So far, despite the clouds and rain, I like the northeast side of the island much better. We’ll probably go down the coast to Hilo today, and perhaps up Mauna Kea. We won’t be able to do that after we dive, so we’ll probably get the high-altitude stuff out of the way.

Oh, and to the commenter in the other post who recommended Poncho and Lefties?

Why? I read a review in a guidebook that consisted pretty much of the phrase “If you don’t have anything good to say, don’t say anything at all.” What’s the appeal?

Heading To Hawaii

We’re going to Kona for a few days (back a week from Monday). Hopefully the Atlantic won’t act up while we’re gone. It’s been a surprisingly quiet season, so it figures that some storm will probably brew up in the Bahamas at the last minute next week, and we won’t be here to shutter.

Anyway, I’ll be checking in occasionally, but I suspect that posting may be lighter than usual.

[Update at 6 PM PDT]

Arrived in LA. We fly to the big island tomorrow morning.

The Suborbital Experience

Alan Boyle has an interesting “compare and contrast” of the current planned providers:

The feedback from would-be fliers has been that “the overall nature of the experience is primarily about the view, and feeling the forces,” Lauer said. Thus, both companies are trying to optimize the view of a curving Earth, spread out beneath the black sky of space. But they’re doing it using different methods.

SpaceShipTwo will offer as many portholes as it can, placed strategically around the side walls of the passenger cabin. Rocketplane, in contrast, plans to make the most of the forward view. “The best views are really out the front window, just as they are with any airplane. … When you’re in the back seats, it’s surprising how much of the forward view you do get,” Lauer said.

Back-seat passengers will each get two of their own windows as well, currently planned for placement at shoulder height and above their heads, he said.

The SpaceShipTwo concept gives you dials to watch, showing G-forces, altitude and other statistics, plus a larger cabin display. Rocketplane promises to provide a customizable video display for each passenger. And both spacecraft will be fairly bristling with video cameras to record the highlights of your out-of-this-world flight.

Good News

Bad news for the likes of Hot Air America, though. Billionaire moonbat George Soros is giving up on politics.

Guess he decided that he’s pissed away enough millions on a losing cause that deserved to lose. Too bad he can’t come up with something useful to do with his money. I could have funded some interesting space ventures with what he wasted on Kerry and company.

Biting Commentary about Infinity…and Beyond!