Recommended Posts

I'm more interested in how many people support taking a chunk out of their own paychecks to build up the necessary hardware and infrastructure. Once it's in place, there is a lot to gain - it will expand markets and create plenty of new jobs. Still, it's stupidly easy to support funding something in the general sense, as long as it's funding "in some general sense" or someone else's money, as opposed to getting it done with your own.

I don't support it. There are too many issues here that need to be resolved, many require money. Not to mention we are already burying ourselves in debt... even if the amount is a pittance compared to the rest of our spending.

We could be funding programs to get people off the streets here, help establish safe/better farming practices for some African nations as well as better irrigation and wells for clean water... etc.

But even beyond that I don't think any of this should be the purview of the gov't... that private organizations like churches and other non-profit organizations should be finding ways to help the homeless, people who need re-education (for careers) and the other aforementioned issues.

Why don't we try to fix earth first before we spend more money on exploring far away planets

We still have heaps of people without even the most basic needs like food and fresh water.

Let's fix that and then look at going into space again

Spend money on Space when you could spend it at home and increase work for those lesser well off........I think we have lost the plot on this one

Ill just leave this here

I don't support it. There are too many issues here that need to be resolved, many require money. Not to mention we are already burying ourselves in debt... even if the amount is a pittance compared to the rest of our spending.

We could be funding programs to get people off the streets here, help establish safe/better farming practices for some African nations as well as better irrigation and wells for clean water... etc.

But even beyond that I don't think any of this should be the purview of the gov't... that private organizations like churches and other non-profit organizations should be finding ways to help the homeless, people who need re-education (for careers) and the other aforementioned issues.

Why don't we try to fix earth first before we spend more money on exploring far away planets

We still have heaps of people without even the most basic needs like food and fresh water.

Let's fix that and then look at going into space again

Spend money on Space when you could spend it at home and increase work for those lesser well off........I think we have lost the plot on this one

Ill just leave this here

Why don't we try to fix earth first before we spend more money on exploring far away planets

We still have heaps of people without even the most basic needs like food and fresh water.

Let's fix that and then look at going into space again

You are going to still have people that lack the most basic needs without even going to Mars. Here is a pro-tip for you, going to Mars can create jobs which means more people work for a living which means that they can feed their families.

You act like not going to Mars just magically fixes the world. You are being naive like some of the other friends of magical thinking in other threads I visit who I won't name.

Mars is great for Science and great for our country.

  • Like 3

So you count it as an investment. Still, I hold to the fact that I think we need to pare back gov't spending and their involvement in every little thing. Perhaps once they are under some modicum of control THEN this could be re-addressed.

That's basically the perfect example of the phrase "Penny wise, pound foolish".

Its very simple. Staying on Earth only makes about as much sense as never leaving the caves. Without expanding to other worlds we will stagnate, wither, and die. If we lack the ambition or wisdom to expand, then we deserve to die.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Google Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer is leaving for OpenAI by Pradeep Viswanathan Noam Shazeer is best known as one of the co-authors of the 2017 “Attention Is All You Need” paper, which introduced the Transformer architecture that now powers most large language models. He also worked on several major Google AI projects, including LaMDA, before leaving the company in 2021 to co-found Character.AI. He also authored the Sparsely-gated Mixture of Experts (2016) paper, which is popular among the AI community. After falling behind OpenAI and Anthropic a couple of years ago, Google brought Shazeer back in 2024 as part of a major deal with Character.AI. Through this deal, along with Noam, several other researchers returned to Google DeepMind. More recently, he was a vice president of engineering at Google and a technical co-lead for Gemini. Today, Noam Shazeer announced on X that he is leaving Google and joining OpenAI. In his post, Shazeer said it was a difficult decision to move on, adding that he was proud of the Google team and what it had built together. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman welcomed the move with a post of his own, saying Shazeer was one of the people he had most wanted to work with since OpenAI’s early days. Google has made strong progress with Gemini over the past year, closing the gap with OpenAI in several areas. But losing Noam Shazeer is a major talent setback for them, especially after bringing him back less than two years ago by spending a fortune. For OpenAI, the hire adds one of the industry’s most experienced language model researchers to a team that is already pushing ahead with ChatGPT, Codex, and its next generation of frontier models.
    • I'm lost too... what did you mean by your first comment then?
    • Couple years ago I got a brand new 4TB Samsung 990 Pro for $250 during Black Friday
    • Thanks
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      eurospharma62 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      With What earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Harris Gilbert earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Vincian earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      542
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      171
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      85
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      64
    5. 5
      neufuse
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!