The only problem with that solution though is the capsule is perfectly fine.... what's plaguing Starliner is the service module itselfMaybe they could load Starliner with trash and let it burn up in the atmosphere, so that the capsule still would be useful for something after docking![]()
The only problem with that solution though is the capsule is perfectly fine.... what's plaguing Starliner is the service module itself
Sad news: NASA's Race Against Time — 19 days left to rescue astronaut Sunita Williams from space
I think NASA might be able to rescue both Williams and Wilmore using Crew-9. But how the original Crew-9 astronauts will come back to Earth? The Crew-9 cosmonaut can come back using Soyuz, though.
Yeah, media these days, you know....That sounds like they will die in 19 days. And the situation is FAR away from that.
Yeah, media these days, you know....![]()
"Rescue" just sells better than a plain "return", especially regarding a topic that usually bores the shit out of most people.Yeah, media these days, you know....![]()
Yeah. There is also a huge difference, for example, when watching a modern documentary or stuff that was produced in the 60s or 70s. The narrator back then always was calm and at least sounded like he actually had a clue, explaining and presenting stuff almost like a professional. It seems to me that what you get today is made by ADHD patients that present a very fast picture sequence with a very nervous cinematography and superficial Wikipedia knowledge by a dramatic sounding narrator, which almost triggers an epileptic shock while watching. The least I get is a headache.Yeah, I miss the good old times when journalism was a profession and not a waste product of news aggregators.
Yeah. There is also a huge difference, for example, when watching a modern documentary or stuff that was produced in the 60s or 70s. The narrator back then always was calm and at least sounded like he actually had a clue, explaining and presenting stuff almost like a professional. It seems to me that what you get today is made by ADHD patients that present a very fast picture sequence with a very nervous cinematography and superficial Wikipedia knowledge by a dramatic sounding narrator, which almost triggers an epileptic shock while watching. The least I get is a headache.
On news websites it's the headlines and the content which is simply crap in most cases, depending on the website.
In the old days journalism was actually about i n f o r m a t i o n rather than about dramatic eye candy pictures and scenes or stupid headlines.
OT:I will not celebrate the "good" old days to much, because the mechanisms that annoy us today already applied there. Just remember that a certain highly celebrated middle-east reporter rarely visited the middle-east and produced his TV broadcast from "onboard a ship on the contested Suez canal" inside the basement of the Lerchenberg TV station for getting attention and fame. Some people still cite his books, despite them being mostly fantasy. His best buddy was still sitting in talk shows around 2015 and lecture Germans about the evil primitive nature of Muslims, despite him actually having invented most of it and never actually researched anything in place.
On the other side, his former "apprentice" was vilified for interviewing Saddam Hussein in Bagdad (in fact, he was the only western journalist that got the statement from Hussein, that he will not retreat from Kuwait) and that actually reporting from the place is not objective enough...
The difference is: Today with the internet, any crazy dude in the basement can have his own media empire. He does no longer rely on investors and institutions to give him the audience, either by pleasing them with bootlicking or by simply doing a great trustful job to gain the trust of the Audience. And we act like we don't know it.
On the other hand, there are very nice "homemade" space flight documentaries by Youtubers, way better and more educational than stuff from journalists on TV.
PS: I have no clue who that "highly celebrated middle-east reporter" isBut it's likely because I'm not that much a fan of the Middle-East
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Given that Suni and Butch love their jobs, I don't think it's a dramatic news for them. It likely might be the last mission of their career anyway, due to their ages I guess, so I imagine they actually enjoy their bonus stay on the ISS already now. And it's not that they were not aware of the possibility to become "stranded" on the ISS.The short test-flight that might turn into an ISS expedition:
In any case, this test flight is one for the booksAnd it really proves the point of expanding commercial space flight: redundancy. Never put all your eggs in one basket.
I didn't know Konzelmann at allAbout the people I mean, in the order of appearance:
A https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerhard_Konzelmann
B https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Scholl-Latour
C https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulrich_Kienzle
I didn't know Konzelmann at allAs for the other two guys, yeah, my impression always was that they were a little bit overbearing and arrogant, like they knew it all. As if the Arabic world would give a god damn thing about two old reporter dudes from Germany. But it's OT anyway
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