Recommended Posts

Just going to leave this here.....

 

NASA program to launch astronauts to space station facing delays but 2019 still on target

 

Quote

WASHINGTON – NASA Administrator James Bridenstine said he still expects astronauts will fly from U.S. soil to the International Space Station by the end of next year even though an uncrewed test flight scheduled for Jan. 7 now could slip into the spring.

 

Bridenstine's acknowledgment that January is a "very low probability" window is the first time the agency has publicly cast doubt on the timing of the scheduled launch from Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The test flight of the SpaceX rocket and capsule is a key step in NASA's efforts to resume U.S. transport to Earth's orbit nearly a decade after the space shuttle was mothballed.

 

The administrator attributed the delay to challenges with several components, including landing parachutes. Some of those systems could be tested without flying them on the initial flight.

 

It's a matter of determining "what configuration are we willing to accept as an agency and are we willing to waive certain items (and) how do we test those items," Bridenstine told reporters at NASA headquarters.

 

But he said the test flight "will certainly be in the first half of 2019," a schedule that still would accommodate a crewed flight by the end of the year.

 

Earlier this year, Bridenstine said that "without question," such launches would resume in 2019.

more at the link...

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/11/29/nasa-program-send-astronauts-space-station-facing-more-delays/2143813002/

 

One of those days that "if you were Elon", you would tell NASA to call back when they are serious about flying as  SpaceX has bigger things on the go at the moment...

Uuuuuuuugh ..... :angry:

 

NASA (under Bridenstine) are stalling, stonewalling, and doing everything they can to ensure that ULA flies first simply for mindshare purposes. They don't want SpaceX to succeed. It's VERY clear now.

 

Ready to fly -- been ready to fly -- but NASA can't get their [snip] together because they're serving other masters.

 

Insert expletives and colorful metaphors here. In abundance. Get creative.

 

This [bleeping] sucks. 

I gave Bridenstine the benefit of the doubt...initially.

 

His consistent  and  relentless promotional backing of SLS has shown his political bias.

 

His appearance and off topic rants during the Insight event were, in my opinion, embarrassing.

 

now this...

 

 

The article is here...

NASA Administrator on Elon Musk: ‘That Was Not Appropriate Behavior’

 

Bridenstine needs to "go somewhere" quickly...the next election isn't fast enough...

 

 

 

Bridenstine does not want to play "hold my beer" with Elon....

Edited by Draggendrop
  • Like 1
On 11/30/2018 at 2:50 AM, Draggendrop said:

One of those days that "if you were Elon", you would tell NASA to call back when they are serious about flying as  SpaceX has bigger things on the go at the moment...

Elon should do exactly that; might even shake a few things loose at NASA.  Meantime, whilst they're twiddling their thumbs, Elon gets on with putting his own people on Mars and to hell with NASA and their trillions of regulations and delays.

  • Like 1
6 hours ago, FloatingFatMan said:

Elon should do exactly that; might even shake a few things loose at NASA. 

 

Not likely because while Admin. Bridenstein is taking the hit for the "review" what's  happening comes from Congress, mostly Sen. Shelby and other SLS supporters (both partys) upset over Super Heavy, Starship and to a lesser can degree New Glenn. They're pulling NASA's strings & writing the script...for now. 

  • Like 1

NASA has done a great job with planetary exploration but as of late, they can't manage a program if they tried. JWST, SLS and Orion to name a few. The latest incident is just the political icing for me to totally ignore all launcher and Human space flight "bull cookies" coming out of NASA. Dragon cargo one has a few missions left and after that, cargo dragon 2. The CC will only be good for at most 2 flights a year, of which a Dragon is tied up for 6 months at a shot. I am sure that SpaceX could fill 7 seats for a couple of laps around the planet...and make a profit...and do this a number of times.

 

I am at the point that IF they are not allowed to launch in January for NASA, I say launch for themselves, using the guise of testing results needed now, not 6 months or more later. Get that out of the way..then ask NASA if they want a ride now..if not, it will be filled. "Hold my Beer" or let's play "Bull cookie poker". I am fine with that.

 

Would be a ton of regulatory stuff to get through regardless of what happens, and ultimately OldSpace would be the ones who come out of this scenario smelling like roses.

 

This whole mess is more of the "dirty tricks, shenanigans and more" that my former Professor spoke about. Anything and everything ULA and their masters could and would do in order to keep SpaceX (and anyone else) from "winning the race". We're seeing it.

 

"If we aren't the ones doing it then it shouldn't be done". That whole mindset of OldSpace and Mil/Gov Contracting is quite like a dysfunctional parent who refuses to let someone else take over the grilling at a family reunion -- even when they're undercooking the hot dogs. It has to be done, but they refuse to listen. When they finally do listen, they instead throw the food away and tell everyone to go home. Everyone else at said reunion decides to get more food, let someone else cook who actually knows what the hell they're doing. That idiot family member does everything they can to hold up the show, trip things up and otherwise cause problems ... then once everything is almost finished (finally), that dysfunctional family member from before says "Nope, that's all wrong. Nobody eat that or there will be consequences.".

 

That's what we have here. A once-great but now completely deranged, dysfunctional, delusional, and outright self-centered uncle who's off their meds and needs to retire. THAT is what I equate OldSpace and their political interests to.

16 hours ago, Unobscured Vision said:

Would be a ton of regulatory stuff to get through regardless of what happens, and ultimately OldSpace would be the ones who come out of this scenario smelling like roses.

 

This whole mess is more of the "dirty tricks, shenanigans and more" that my former Professor spoke about. Anything and everything ULA and their masters could and would do in order to keep SpaceX (and anyone else) from "winning the race". We're seeing it.

 

"If we aren't the ones doing it then it shouldn't be done". That whole mindset of OldSpace and Mil/Gov Contracting is quite like a dysfunctional parent who refuses to let someone else take over the grilling at a family reunion -- even when they're undercooking the hot dogs. It has to be done, but they refuse to listen. When they finally do listen, they instead throw the food away and tell everyone to go home. Everyone else at said reunion decides to get more food, let someone else cook who actually knows what the hell they're doing. That idiot family member does everything they can to hold up the show, trip things up and otherwise cause problems ... then once everything is almost finished (finally), that dysfunctional family member from before says "Nope, that's all wrong. Nobody eat that or there will be consequences.".

 

That's what we have here. A once-great but now completely deranged, dysfunctional, delusional, and outright self-centered uncle who's off their meds and needs to retire. THAT is what I equate OldSpace and their political interests to.

Actually...only for NASA as they have followed this silliness.

 

This has been covered in many forums, many times and the end result is always...Informed consent...done.

 

A verified launcher and capsule, such as SpaceX has in their possession will be a no brainer.  NASA makes things difficult...the real world can be reasonable.

 

Informed consent is all that matters for SpaceX for a human launch...the vehicles already have a pass and a test of DM-1 will pass it as well.

During CRS-16 presser...

 

 

 

 

SpaceX has their equipment there, integration is proceeding with the "range date".

 

If there is going to be a delay...it will be put squarely on NASA...as it should.

December 6 Commercial Crew progress report slides.

 

Boeing has the OK to fix their abort propulsion system plumbing, but hasn't begun shock testing on their docking adapter.

 

https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/atoms/files/nac_ccp_status_dec_6_2018_non-sbu.pdf

So Boeing will be using Spacecraft 2 as their Crewed flight, and Spacecraft 3 as their uncrewed test?

 

Spacex will user Demo 1 for uncrewed, demo 2 as crewed, then Crew 1 as their first mission?

 

Demo 1 has been at "launch site processing" for 6 months already.

SpaceX needs to keep this in the limelight...any changes and we will know who based on why.

 

As many have stated..it's a test flight...fly the damn thing to test it....what don't others understand about this concept?

  • Like 2

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Ignoring the fact that this "colony" kicked the empire of King George's arse during those early years... You are confusing the First Industrial Revolution (which was pulled out of some butt-hurt Brit historian's arse) with the Second Industrial Revolution (aka the Technological Revolution), which transitioned the world from the UK sailing Empire to the USA as a superpower. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_Revolution
    • OpenAI announces GPT‑5.6 Sol, its next-generation flagship model beating Claude Mythos 5 by Pradeep Viswanathan Credit: OpenAI OpenAI today announced a limited preview of its new GPT-5.6 model series, which includes the Sol, Terra, and Luna models targeting different price points. GPT-5.6 Sol is the flagship model targeted at demanding reasoning and agentic workloads. GPT-5.6 Terra is positioned as a balanced model for everyday work, featuring performance competitive with GPT-5.5 while being half the cost. GPT-5.6 Luna is the fastest and most affordable model, delivering strong capability at a lower price point. Unlike previous model releases from OpenAI, GPT-5.6 is starting with a limited preview for a small group of trusted partners due to U.S. government restrictions. As expected, OpenAI previewed its plans and the models' capabilities to the U.S. government ahead of launch, and the government asked OpenAI to limit the first wave of access to select partners. OpenAI also mentioned in the official announcement blog post that it does not believe this type of government access process should become the long-term default. OpenAI highlighted that GPT-5.6 Sol comes with a robust safety stack featuring improved protections for higher-risk activity, sensitive cyber requests, and repeated misuse. The company also spent several weeks pressure-testing the system and hardening it against real-world attacks. On the capability side, as expected, GPT-5.6 Sol is OpenAI’s strongest model yet. It delivers better results in agentic performance across coding, biology, and cybersecurity. On the Terminal-Bench 2.1 benchmark, which tests command-line workflows requiring planning, iteration, and tool coordination, GPT-5.6 Sol sets a new record with a score of 91.9%, beating Anthropic's Claude Mythos 5. Additionally, GPT-5.6 introduces a new "max" reasoning effort for even deeper reasoning. The new "ultra" mode uses subagents to accelerate complex work beyond what a single agent can handle. Pricing starts at $5 per million input tokens and $30 per million output tokens for Sol. Terra costs $2.50 for input and $15 for output, while Luna costs $1 for input and $6 for output. GPT-5.6 comes with more predictable prompt caching, including support for explicit cache breakpoints and a 30-minute minimum cache life. Sol will also launch on Cerebras in July at speeds up to 750 tokens per second for select customers. OpenAI plans to make GPT-5.6 Sol, Terra, and Luna broadly available in ChatGPT, Codex, and the API in the coming weeks.
    • I'm not sure if you are trolling because I saw people saying this with the straight face, but there were no United States of America when industrial revolution started, just United Colonies 🤣 p.s. I'm not British, so I'm not offended.
    • Glad I uninstalled this incredibly buggy browser. Looking at that changelog, they clearly don't test their updates at all.
    • UniGetUI 2026.2.2 by Razvan Serea UniGetUI is an application whose main goal is to create an intuitive GUI for the most common CLI package managers for Windows 10 and Windows 11, such as Winget, Scoop and Chocolatey. With UniGetUI, you'll be able to download, install, update and uninstall any software that's published on the supported package managers — and so much more. UniGetUI features Install, update and remove software from your system easily at one click: UniGetUI combines the packages from the most used package managers for windows: WinGet, Chocolatey, Scoop, Pip, Npm and .NET Tool. Discover new packages and filter them to easily find the package you want. View detailed metadata about any package before installing it. Get the direct download URL or the name of the publisher, as well as the size of the download. Easily bulk-install, update or uninstall multiple packages at once selecting multiple packages before performing an operation Automatically update packages, or be notified when updates become available. Skip versions or completely ignore updates in a per-package basis. Manage your available updates at the touch of a button from the Widgets pane or from Dev Home pane with UniGetUI Widgets. The system tray icon will also show the available updates and installed package, to efficiently update a program or remove a package from your system. Easily customize how and where packages are installed. Select different installation options and switches for each package. Install an older version or force to install a 32bit architecture. [But don't worry, those options will be saved for future updates for this package] Share packages with your friends to show them off that program you found. Here is an example: Hey @friend, Check out this program! Export custom lists of packages to then import them to another machine and install those packages with previously-specified, custom installation parameters. Setting up machines or configuring a specific software setup has never been easier. Backup your packages to a local file to easily recover your setup in a matter of seconds when migrating to a new machine Devolutions UniGetUI 2026.2.2 changelog: This release marks the completion of UniGetUI's migration from WinUI to Avalonia. With the remaining WinUI components and dependencies now removed, UniGetUI is fully powered by Avalonia. This update also brings Windows 11 Snap Layouts support, refined styling throughout the application, improved log viewing, new illustrations, and significantly smaller release packages. Highlights Further refined the Avalonia user interface to better match WinUI styling and behavior across package lists, navigation elements, dialogs, and controls. Added support for Windows 11 Snap Layouts when hovering the maximize button, matching the behavior of native Windows applications. Added illustrations for empty and loading package list states, improving visual feedback throughout the application. Improved the operation log window so automatic scrolling no longer interrupts users when reviewing previous log entries. Reduced installer and application package sizes, resulting in smaller downloads and a significantly leaner Windows distribution. User Interface Improvements Improved package list styling, column headers, backgrounds, hover states, and selection indicators for a more polished and consistent experience. Refined sidebar navigation and segmented controls to better align with modern Windows design patterns. Improved package tag badges and icon presentation throughout the application. Updated several labels, placeholders, and interface elements for improved clarity and consistency. Removed the remaining WinUI-specific styling dependencies, further consolidating the application around Avalonia. Windows Improvements Added native Windows 11 Snap Layouts integration for the maximize button. Improved maximize button hover and pressed visual states to more closely match native Windows behavior. Performance & Reliability Reduced the size of Windows release packages by removing unnecessary runtime dependencies and optimizing published builds. Reduced installer size through improved compression settings. Simplified application dependencies and reduced overall maintenance complexity. Fixes Fixed log output auto-scrolling behavior when manually reviewing previous entries. Resolved various UI inconsistencies and styling issues across the Avalonia interface. Addressed several minor issues and edge cases throughout the application. Other Changes Dependency cleanup and project maintenance. Internal code refactoring and infrastructure improvements. Additional test coverage and build pipeline optimizations. Download: UniGetUI 64-bit | Portable | ~90.0 MB (Open Source) Download: UniGetUI ARM64 | Portable Links: UniGetUI Home Page | GitHub | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      tuben earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • First Post
      OffsetAbs earned a badge
      First Post
    • Reacting Well
      OffsetAbs earned a badge
      Reacting Well
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      441
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      196
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      154
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      71
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!