Science 7 - LAND and SEA BREEZE and its Characteristics
2 networks dec_2010_v1.0
1. Emerging Technologies &
Strategies for Jobs, Education, and
Communities
How the future works today.
JIM BRAZELL
jim.brazell@radicalplatypus.com
2. General Bernard
Schriever
Feb. 19, 1957
Inaugural Air Force Office
of Scientific Research
Astronautics Symposium in
San Diego.
Commander of Western
Development Division
Headquarters
Charles Wilson
17. Dr. David Thornburg, Center for
Professional Development.
“Design and Arts,” adapted by Jim Brazell, 2008.
ARTS
TEAMS
18. October 30, 2010, Denton High School Automotive Technology Program
students set a new world record of a 1/8 mile in 9.93 seconds at the National
Electric Drag Racing Association’s class DR/H 72 volt Dragsters. The previous
record stood at 10.49 seconds in the 1/8 mile since 2002. --Denton Record
Chronicle
http://www.dentonrc.com/sharedcontent/utilities/clickedimage/index.html
20. Innovation is a function of moving
beyond the disciplines, solving real
world problems and integrating theory
and applied techniques to create new
knowledge, tools, processes, systems,
environments, etc.
In a word transdisciplinarity.
21. Activity #1
Write a haiku describing the
ideal for how community
colleges should organize
learning for innovation.
Bob Allen
ideasorlando.com
22. Haiku is a Japanese poem
composed of three unrhymed lines
of five, seven, and five syllables.
Haiku usually emphasizes a season,
intense emotion and vivid image
designed to lead to an enlightened
insight.
(5) The moment two are
(7) united they both vanish
(5) A lotus blooms here.
Murakami, Kijo. (1865-1938), Adapted by Brazell
http://www.toyomasu.com/haiku/#time
Haiku
the art of it all
Bob Allen
ideasorlando.com
23. Example
(5) Self determined child
(7) iPhone in hand all day long
(5) Educators scream
(5) All the venues merge
(7) Technology – arts – science
(5) Our future opens
(5) All instruction is
(7) Interdisciplinary
(5) Exceeding standards
Haiku
the art of it all
Bob Allen
ideasorlando.com
24. Haiku is a Japanese poem
composed of three unrhymed lines
of five, seven, and five syllables.
Haiku usually emphasizes a season,
intense emotion and vivid image
designed to lead to an enlightened
insight.
(5) The moment two are
(7) united they both vanish
(5) A lotus blooms here.
Murakami, Kijo. (1865-1938), Adapted by Brazell
http://www.toyomasu.com/haiku/#time
Haiku
the art of it all
Bob Allen
ideasorlando.com
25. STEM
The Bellwether Sounds - The Role of CTE in S.T.E.M. Education,
by Jim Brazell, Consulting Analyst, The Schriever Institute, August
2008, Volume 1, Issue 2
“The conversation we are not having about S.T.E.M. reform in K-12 education
today relates to the fact that science and mathematics have a place in the
American K-12 education system; however, engineering, technology, and the
arts are largely relegated to the nonessential (elective course curricula, few
requirements for these subjects in the core curriculum, and little connectivity
between these subjects and core academic subjects). The fundamental
difference between technology, engineering, and arts courses is that these
courses are applied in practice and not purely academic (theoretical). The
placement of technology, engineering, and arts courses in a second tier track
to academic learning represents a bias which inhibits American goals related
to innovation and our leadership in the emerging globally integrated economy.“
http://www.nsba.org/SecondaryMenu/TLN/UsefulInformation/STEMInformationandResources/JimBrazell.aspx
27. POLL
• Should secondary and post secondary
Career and Technical Education (CTE)
have a significant role in STEM education
and economic development initiatives?
• Yes
• No
• I am not sure
28. How can we understand where
technology is going?
What are the key requirements of
21st
century jobs?
What does educational innovation
look like?
31. “IDC said worldwide shipments this year of app-enabled
devices, which include smartphones and media tablets such as
the iPad, will reach 284 million. In 2011, makers will ship
377 million of these devices, and in 2012, the number will
reach 462 million shipments, exceeding PC shipments. One
shipment equals one device.
For PCs, IDC is forecasting 356 million PC shipments this
year and 402 million in 2011. In 2012, there will be 448MM
shipments.”
In historic shift, smartphones, tablets to overtake PCs
Perils ahead for vendors who can't adapt to market shift, IDC says
Computer World, Dec. 6, 2010
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9199918/In_historic_shift_smartphones_tablets_to_overtake_PCs
35. Through mixing
realities, research is
expanding the potential
of embedded training in
the field and in battle
labs to provide
integrated training
anytime, anywhere.
Advancements are
being transferred
across industries from
business prototypes to
hospitality training.
Integrated research in
tracking, registration,
rendering, display, and
scenario delivery are
expanding the
possibilities of
CONSTRUCTIVE
simulation as well as
after action review,
and command and
control visualizations.
37. POLL
• Given the pace of technological change, do
you believe that one can forecast the future
of technology 5-to-10 years in advance?
• Yes
• No
• I am not sure
38. “The path of technological innovation
is knowable at least several decades in
advance of the future. It is simply not true that
we can not determine the structure, path and
strategy of technology for planning and
operations. All we have to do is lift our eyes up
from the ground to look over the horizon.”
October 23, 2010
39. Nanotechnology Fuel Cells Homeland Security
ADM, Hybrid, MEMS,
Computer Forensics
Wireless: M2M Mechatronics
Home Technology
Integration
Biotechnology
Digital Games
Forecasting.TSTC.edu
41. Vienna University of Technology
Players operate track switches and
adjusting the speed of virtual trains to prevent virtual trains from
colliding. Researchers Daniel Wagner, Thomas Pintaric and Dieter
Schmalstieg
Brazell, NCWE, 10.21.2005
48. In 1994 a single
super computer
with the power
of an X-box did
not exist.
49. USC ISI and Tactical Language Training
(ITSEC 2005)
50. "While we tend to focus on simulators associated with our flying mission such as aircrew training,
air traffic control and aircraft maintenance ... the fact is simulators permeate every aspect of
qualification training in the United States Air Force, as well as the other military services,"
General Rice said.
An array of simulation systems supporting all of the military services, first responders, the
Department of Homeland Security and the health care industry were on display across some
220,000 square feet of floor space. The environments featured technologies to enhance
capabilities ranging from irregular warfare to casualty care and serious games.
53. 4th
generation computing is a class of
Information and Computing Technology
(ICT) that combines computer,
communication and power technologies to
enable remote human and machine
interaction with physical, chemical,
biological and neurological systems,
processes and environments.
--M2M: The Wireless Revolution, 2005
Emergence of a new class of computing
54. MIT Tech Review, 2005
Sensors
Physical
Chemical
Biological
http://www.rieti.go.jp/en/events/bbl/03102801.pdf , page 16
Actuators
Physical
Chemical
Biological
PhiloMetron™
61. “The cyber threat to the United States affects all aspects of society, business,
and government, but there is neither a broad cadre of cyber experts nor an
established cyber career field to build upon, particularly within the Federal
Government. [Using an] airplane analogy, we have a shortage of ‘pilots’ (and
‘ground crews’ to support them) for cyberspace.” (Center for Strategic and
International Studies, Report of the Commission on Cybersecurity for
the 44th Presidency, December 2008)
“I cannot get the technical security people I need.” (Gen. Charles Croome,
Commander, Joint Task Force Global Network Operations, in response‐
to a question from a CSIS Commissioner asking what is the most critical
problem he faces in meeting the growing cyber challenge. May 28, 2008)
“There are about 1,000 security people in the US who have the specialized
security skills to operate effectively in cyberspace. We need 10,000 to
30,000.” (Jim Gosler, Sandia Fellow, NSA Visiting Scientist, and the
founding Director of the CIA’s Clandestine Information Technology
Office, October 3, 2008.)
63. A living, breathing lung-on-a-chip has been
developed. As well as mimicking the cellular
structure of the lung, the chip copies its behavior too:
it can "breathe.“ About the size of a rubber eraser,
the device was developed by a team from the Wyss
Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at
Harvard University, Harvard Medical School and
Children's Hospital Boston.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn19085-lungonachip-points-to-
alternative-to-animal-tests.html
64. FIRST LEGO®
LEAGUE
Over 80,000 middle-
school students in
34 countries
participate in the
Nano Quest
Challenge.
2006 NANO QUEST CHALLENGE
72. POLL
• The integration of computers and/or
networks into work processes has had an
impact on virtually all workforce education
programs at my organization.
• True
• False
• I am not sure
76. Butler Community College
April 7 to 11, 2008
Spirit
AeroSystems
“1,000 workers a
year needed for
the aerospace
cluster… 2,000
plus when we are
on the up side.”
--Jeff Turner,
CEO
77. Butler Community College
April 7 to 11, 2008
D-J Engineering
Engineering Design
$50K - $180K
Machinists & Sheet Metal
$22K - $42K
--Razaul A. Chowdhury, President
79. “In this plant, in
the next three
years we will need
nine
Instrumentation
and Numerical
Control (INC)
technicians.”
Edward C. Trump
Plant Manager
Entergy
4/2007, TSTC Marshall
83. How CyberPatriot works
• Multi-round competition
– Qualifying rounds are virtual and teams
compete simultaneously
– Teams download VMware images and attempt
to secure them over a given period of time
– Teams connected to centralized scoring
platform
– Teams graded against known solution sets
• Finals held in Orlando and
Washington DC
Cyber Patriot
highschoolcdc.com
84. CyberPatriot III
• Virtual competitions start Nov 2010
• Service Championship in Orlando Feb, 2011
• National Championship in DC April, 2011
• Competitors must be at least 13 years old and in grades 9-
12 (or equivalent if home schooled/in a school that does
not make this distinction) as of September 2011
• Teams must have between 2 and 5 members
• Only 1 team per school per division
• Registration deadline Oct 8, 2010 (or 500 teams)
• $350 team fee for Open division
• 2009 participation: 170+ schools, over 1,000
www.highschoolcdc.com
94. Figure 1. The Wheel of Biological Understanding.
System biology strives to understand all aspects
of an organism and its environment through the
combination of a variety of scientific fields.
http://www.scq.ubc.ca/what-is-bioinformatics/
95. Texas Engineering
Mathematics
Target Texas 4x4 – 4th
Year of Math
Unify General Academics and CTE
Connect rigor and relevance
High motivation-TEAMS-Competition
Base for industry support in schools
Moving robotics from 10% penetration to 80% in 5 years
96. The appropriate mathematics to
analyze computing seems to be
systems approach with information
theory, which will provide a
unifying principle for physics,
chemistry, biology, and neuro
science. Brazell and Tanik, October
17, 2010
97. Learn more about the
transdisciplinary scientific and
engineering society – SDPS. SDPS
is seeking community college
partners for joint STEM grants.
Contact Jim Brazell.
http://www.sdpsnet.org/sdps/
98. How can we understand where
technology is going?
What are the key requirements of
21st
century jobs?
What does educational innovation
look like?
99. “There are kids on Maui
who have never been to
the top of the mountain or
to Hana much less have
they traveled off of the
island.”
http://www.flickr.com/photos/fotographis/528878003/sizes/o/
When I say Maui, do you
think science and
technology or
innovation?
101. “I do not think Maui is any
different than the
mainland…post
industrialization has
placed greater demands
on math and education.”
–Rose Yamada, elder
123. Indian River State
College Current and
Emerging Pattern
Languages
Entrepreneurship, Innovation & Leadership
Humanities-Law-Human Development
Engineering-Design-*C.S.
Medical-Bio-Life Sciences
Architecture, Media & Arts
Entrepreneurship, Innovation & Leadership
FLOW: A Pattern for Play,
Learning, Cooperation and
Invention
*C.S. - Computer science
Faculty
Students
World
Community
124.
125.
126.
127.
128.
129. TEAMS Model Schools
Systems of Systems
• High degree of faculty interaction across disciplines
and grades (systems)
• Integrating CTE, Arts and Academics (systems)
• Learning laboratories and worldly experience with
industry-standard tools, processes and problems
(systems)
• Emerging P-20 systems (P-20) -- Sequenced,
integrated and transferable courses HS to CTC to
University (systems)
• Transdisciplinary culture (systems) Context and
frame for learning is real world, purpose driven and
action oriented.
130. POLL
• How would you rate this program on a scale of 1-
to-5?
• 1, poor, not worth my time at all
• 2, fair, not worth my time
• 3, satisfactory, worth my time
• 4, good, worth my time and I am glad I attended
• 5, excellent, you should run this program again so
that I can tell colleagues
131. How can we understand where
technology is going?
What are the key requirements of
21st
century jobs?
What does educational innovation
look like?
132. The Bellwether Sounds - The Role
of CTE in S.T.E.M. Education, by
Jim Brazell, Consulting Analyst,
The Schriever Institute, August
2008, Volume 1, Issue 2
When our predecessors stood at the edge of the world and gazed at
Sputnik orbiting, they did not respond with a narrow focus on science
and mathematics. The vanguard of military strategy-education,
strategic weapons and technology forecasting-responded by
advocating the expansion of military training, education, and learning
to include unified classical and technical education.
Brigadier Gen. Robert F. McDermott, the founding dean of the U.S. Air
Force Academy was the first teacher to use a computer to teach
astronauts space physics. A student of classical education from the K-
12 Latin School in Boston-to-Harvard, McDermott built the U.S. Air
Force Academy programs on the integration of technical, scientific
and mathematical education with classical studies such as philosophy,
history, economics, and the arts.
Gen. Bernard A. Schriever, who gave the famous “space speech”
prior to the launch of the Sputnik, and Francis X. Kane of the U.S. Air
Force supported McDermott’s pursuits. The last survivor, Kane, who
is president of the Schriever Institute, continues to advocate the
importance of both technical and academic learning in his speeches
about Mars and the imperative for an American educational
renaissance to support human development necessary for the
mission.
This renaissance, according to Kane, focuses on the integration of
academic disciplines, the integration of thinking and doing in real
world contexts, the integration of vocational and academic practice,
and the integration of a global perspectives and languages into US
curricula. Kane points out that competition is important; however, if
there is to be hope for peace and prosperity-not to mention
colonization of Mars-global collaboration will work hand-in-hand with
technological innovation.
133. Emerging Technologies &
Strategies for Jobs, Education, and
Communities
How the future works today.
JIM BRAZELL
jim.brazell@radicalplatypus.com
Editor's Notes
Defense Secretary Charles Wilson
http://todayinspacehistory.wordpress.com/2007/10/04/october-4-1957-the-russians-launch-sputnik/
LG SPUT IMAGE
« October 3, 1962 - Sigma 7 launches into orbit, Mercury-Atlas 8
October 5, 1929 - Astronaut Richard Gordon, Jr., is born »
Ads by GoogleSputnik
Huge selection, great deals on
Sputnik items.
Yahoo.com3D Earth Screensaver
Watch Realistic Animated 3D Earth
On Your Desktop. Free Download!
www.CrawlerTools.com/3DEarth
The modern space age was birthed on October 4, 1957 when the Soviet’s launched the first man-made object to orbit the Earth, Sputnik.
Wikipedia says:
“Sputnik 1 was launched on October 4, 1957. The satellite was 58 cm (about 23 in) in diameter and weighed approximately 83.6 kg (about 183 lb). Each of its elliptical orbits around the Earth took about 96 minutes. Monitoring of the satellite was done by Amateur radio operators. The first long-range flight of the R-7 booster used to launch it had occurred on August 21 and was described in Aviation Week. Sputnik 1 was not visible from Earth but the casing of the R-7 booster, traveling behind it, was.”
Quotes:
“Both countries [Russia and the United States] knew that preeminence in space was a condition of their national security. That conviction gave both countries a powerful incentive to strive and compete. The Soviets accomplished many important firsts, and this gave us a great incentive to try harder.
The space program also accomplished another vital function in that it kept us out of a hot war. It gave us a way to compete technologically, compete as a matter of national will. It may have even prevented World War III, with all the conflict and fighting focused on getting to the moon first, instead of annihilating each other. There’s no evidence of that, but as eyewitness to those events, I think that’s what happened.”
- American astronaut Scott Carpenter quoted in Into that Silent Sea (p. 138).
___________________
www.globalsecurity.org/.../imint/u-2_tt.htm
U-2 Product
SS-6 / Sputnik Launch Pad, Baikonur
TOP of LAUNCH
IMAGE
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
However, another event that occurred in the Soviet Union in 1960 is generally recognized as the single greatest disaster in the history of rocketry. The event was not directly related to manned space flight, but to the development of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). In the early days of space flight, both the US and Soviet space programs were very much intertwined with the development of ICBMs. These vehicles were designed to launch nuclear warheads over great distances, leaving no part of the world safe from the threat of nuclear destruction. However, the technologies pioneered for these weapons of war served a secondary purpose of providing the first generation of rockets for space exploration.
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
In fact, the early flights of Sputnik and Yuri Gagarin in the USSR as well as those of Explorer I and John Glenn in the US were all conducted using modified ballistic missiles. The primary Soviet launch vehicle of the period was the R-7 rocket, modified versions of which are still used even today for most Russian space flights. The R-7 was originally developed as an ICBM under the direction of Sergei Korolev, the Soviet Union's pre-eminent rocket designer of the day. The R-7 successfully completed a number of test flights between 1957 and 1959, including launching the first two artificial satellites. While only four examples of the R-7 were ever deployed as ballistic missiles from 1960 to 1968, the same basic design has remained in use throughout the Russian space program. Modern variants of the R-7 continue to launch satellites as well as manned Soyuz flights, and the type had achieved a success rate of nearly 98% in over 1,600 launches by the year 2000.
_____________
Apollo 17
http://www.phys.ncku.edu.tw/~astrolab/mirrors/apod/ap031109.html
Apollo 17 _ 1
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/GPN-2000-001876.jpg
Apollo 17 _ 2
Apollo 17 launch, December 17, 1972:
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/junk162.htm
Mars
http://whyfiles.org/194spa_travel/images/mars.gif
Moon
http://www.rc-astro.com/php/phpthumb/cache/phpThumb_cache_rc-astro.com_srcfadbb9057f0dac8e921d1bffc3590ce0_par0ddf367c5f01d9ba090bf356b6761f52_dat1168633826.jpeg
Kennedy
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.gif
November 21, 1963
Dedication Ceremony of the New Facilities of the School of
Aerospace Medicine at Brooks Air Force Base, Texas
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.htm
SPACE TEAMS
MCD
KANE
Toursit
Russian
http://science.qj.net/Microsoft-billionaire-joins-ISS-bound-Russian-space-flight/pg/49/aid/88814
U.S. software mogul Charles Simonyi became the world's fifth space tourist - "space flight participant," as officials call them - to go into orbit. Simonyi, who helped developed Microsoft Word, paid US$ 25M for the opportunity to join the crew of the Russian spacecraft Soyuz TMA-10.
The 58-year-old Hungary-born billionaire is making a 12-day round trip to the International Space Station (ISS). Joining him on the trip were Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Oleg Kotov of the 15th ISS crew. The spacecraft Simonyi and the Russian cosmonauts lifted off from the Bainokur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 11:31 P.M. local time (1:31 P.M. EDT). They are due to dock with the ISS on Monday.
Simonyi will be treating the current occupants of the ISS to a gourmet meal three days after arriving at the space station. The meal will be held in honor of Cosmonauts' Day, the Russian holiday commemorating Yuri Gagarin's historic 1961 space flight. Everybody else mentioned who prepared the meal so we won't. Suffice to say, she's famous, knows her way around a house, and looked good in orange.
In this Associated Press photo: In this image made from NASA-TV, U.S. billionaire Charles Simonyi, front row right, flips upside down during a news conference after he, Fyodor Yurchikhin, left, and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, front center, docked at the international space station Monday, April 9, 2007. A Russian-built Soyuz capsule carrying the American billionaire who helped develop Microsoft Word docked at the international space station late Monday, to the earthbound applause of Martha Stewart and others at Mission Control. In the back row, Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria can be seen. (AP Photo/NASA TV)
___________
Tito
http://cache.viewimages.com/xc/1310822.jpg?v=1&c=ViewImages&k=2&d=17A4AD9FDB9CF1939057D9939C83F106174681002B4CEC415A5397277B4DC33E
MIR
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/people/images/inset-LucidS-5-large.jpg
http://csatweb.csatolna.hu/tagok/csa/mars/rover.jpg
RICHS TECHNOLOGY CAMERA - BODY
HAWKING
http://gozerog.com/images/Hawking_001.jpg
Public Domain. Suggested credit: NASA or National Aeronautics and Space Administration via pingnews.
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Noted physicist Stephen Hawking (center) enjoys zero gravity during a flight aboard a modified Boeing 727 aircraft owned by Zero Gravity Corp. (Zero G). Hawking, who suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig's disease) is being rotated in air by (right) Peter Diamandis, founder of the Zero G Corp., and (left) Byron Lichtenberg, former shuttle payload specialist and now president of Zero G. Kneeling below Hawking is Nicola O'Brien, a nurse practitioner who is Hawking's aide. At the celebration of his 65th birthday on January 8 this year, Hawking announced his plans for a zero-gravity flight to prepare for a sub-orbital space flight in 2009 on Virgin Galactic's space service. Additional information from source:
No copyright protection is asserted for this photograph. If a recognizable person appears in this photograph, use for commercial purposes may infringe a right of privacy or publicity. It may not be used to state or imply the endorsement by NASA employees of a commercial product, process or service, or used in any other manner that might mislead. Accordingly, it is requested that if this photograph is used in advertising and other commercial promotion, layout and copy be submitted to NASA prior to release.
Source Physicist Stephen Hawking in Zero Gravity (NASA)
Date April 27, 2007 at 22:11
Zero Gravity's price tag for the daylong tour is $2,950, which includes preflight training and a postflight party.
From the Go Zero G Website:
The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to fly like Superman can now be yours. Train with an expert coach, board our specially modified aircraft, G-FORCE ONE, and experience the unforgettable.
Experience zero gravity the only way possible without going to space. Parabolic flight is the same method NASA has used to train its astronauts for the last 45 years and the same way Tom Hanks floated in Apollo 13.
Book a seat on one of our regular flights conveniently based in Las Vegas, Nevada and at the Kennedy Space Center, near Orlando, Florida. The aircraft is also available for charter flights anywhere in the United States for groups, incentive trips, parties or team building.
http://todayinspacehistory.wordpress.com/2007/10/04/october-4-1957-the-russians-launch-sputnik/
LG SPUT IMAGE
« October 3, 1962 - Sigma 7 launches into orbit, Mercury-Atlas 8October 5, 1929 - Astronaut Richard Gordon, Jr., is born »October 4, 1957 - the Russian’s launch Sputnik
Ads by GoogleSputnik
Huge selection, great deals on
Sputnik items.
Yahoo.com3D Earth Screensaver
Watch Realistic Animated 3D Earth
On Your Desktop. Free Download!
www.CrawlerTools.com/3DEarth
The modern space age was birthed on October 4, 1957 when the Soviet’s launched the first man-made object to orbit the Earth, Sputnik.
Wikipedia says:
“Sputnik 1 was launched on October 4, 1957. The satellite was 58 cm (about 23 in) in diameter and weighed approximately 83.6 kg (about 183 lb). Each of its elliptical orbits around the Earth took about 96 minutes. Monitoring of the satellite was done by Amateur radio operators. The first long-range flight of the R-7 booster used to launch it had occurred on August 21 and was described in Aviation Week. Sputnik 1 was not visible from Earth but the casing of the R-7 booster, traveling behind it, was.”
Quotes:
“Both countries [Russia and the United States] knew that preeminence in space was a condition of their national security. That conviction gave both countries a powerful incentive to strive and compete. The Soviets accomplished many important firsts, and this gave us a great incentive to try harder.
The space program also accomplished another vital function in that it kept us out of a hot war. It gave us a way to compete technologically, compete as a matter of national will. It may have even prevented World War III, with all the conflict and fighting focused on getting to the moon first, instead of annihilating each other. There’s no evidence of that, but as eyewitness to those events, I think that’s what happened.”
- American astronaut Scott Carpenter quoted in Into that Silent Sea (p. 138).
___________________
www.globalsecurity.org/.../imint/u-2_tt.htm
U-2 Product
SS-6 / Sputnik Launch Pad, Baikonur
TOP of LAUNCH
IMAGE
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
However, another event that occurred in the Soviet Union in 1960 is generally recognized as the single greatest disaster in the history of rocketry. The event was not directly related to manned space flight, but to the development of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). In the early days of space flight, both the US and Soviet space programs were very much intertwined with the development of ICBMs. These vehicles were designed to launch nuclear warheads over great distances, leaving no part of the world safe from the threat of nuclear destruction. However, the technologies pioneered for these weapons of war served a secondary purpose of providing the first generation of rockets for space exploration.
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
In fact, the early flights of Sputnik and Yuri Gagarin in the USSR as well as those of Explorer I and John Glenn in the US were all conducted using modified ballistic missiles. The primary Soviet launch vehicle of the period was the R-7 rocket, modified versions of which are still used even today for most Russian space flights. The R-7 was originally developed as an ICBM under the direction of Sergei Korolev, the Soviet Union's pre-eminent rocket designer of the day. The R-7 successfully completed a number of test flights between 1957 and 1959, including launching the first two artificial satellites. While only four examples of the R-7 were ever deployed as ballistic missiles from 1960 to 1968, the same basic design has remained in use throughout the Russian space program. Modern variants of the R-7 continue to launch satellites as well as manned Soyuz flights, and the type had achieved a success rate of nearly 98% in over 1,600 launches by the year 2000.
_____________
Apollo 17
http://www.phys.ncku.edu.tw/~astrolab/mirrors/apod/ap031109.html
Apollo 17 _ 1
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/GPN-2000-001876.jpg
Apollo 17 _ 2
Apollo 17 launch, December 17, 1972:
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/junk162.htm
Mars
http://whyfiles.org/194spa_travel/images/mars.gif
Moon
http://www.rc-astro.com/php/phpthumb/cache/phpThumb_cache_rc-astro.com_srcfadbb9057f0dac8e921d1bffc3590ce0_par0ddf367c5f01d9ba090bf356b6761f52_dat1168633826.jpeg
Kennedy
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.gif
November 21, 1963
Dedication Ceremony of the New Facilities of the School of
Aerospace Medicine at Brooks Air Force Base, Texas
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.htm
SPACE TEAMS
MCD
KANE
Toursit
Russian
http://science.qj.net/Microsoft-billionaire-joins-ISS-bound-Russian-space-flight/pg/49/aid/88814
U.S. software mogul Charles Simonyi became the world's fifth space tourist - "space flight participant," as officials call them - to go into orbit. Simonyi, who helped developed Microsoft Word, paid US$ 25M for the opportunity to join the crew of the Russian spacecraft Soyuz TMA-10.
The 58-year-old Hungary-born billionaire is making a 12-day round trip to the International Space Station (ISS). Joining him on the trip were Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Oleg Kotov of the 15th ISS crew. The spacecraft Simonyi and the Russian cosmonauts lifted off from the Bainokur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 11:31 P.M. local time (1:31 P.M. EDT). They are due to dock with the ISS on Monday.
Simonyi will be treating the current occupants of the ISS to a gourmet meal three days after arriving at the space station. The meal will be held in honor of Cosmonauts' Day, the Russian holiday commemorating Yuri Gagarin's historic 1961 space flight. Everybody else mentioned who prepared the meal so we won't. Suffice to say, she's famous, knows her way around a house, and looked good in orange.
In this Associated Press photo: In this image made from NASA-TV, U.S. billionaire Charles Simonyi, front row right, flips upside down during a news conference after he, Fyodor Yurchikhin, left, and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, front center, docked at the international space station Monday, April 9, 2007. A Russian-built Soyuz capsule carrying the American billionaire who helped develop Microsoft Word docked at the international space station late Monday, to the earthbound applause of Martha Stewart and others at Mission Control. In the back row, Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria can be seen. (AP Photo/NASA TV)
___________
Tito
http://cache.viewimages.com/xc/1310822.jpg?v=1&c=ViewImages&k=2&d=17A4AD9FDB9CF1939057D9939C83F106174681002B4CEC415A5397277B4DC33E
MIR
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/people/images/inset-LucidS-5-large.jpg
http://csatweb.csatolna.hu/tagok/csa/mars/rover.jpg
RICHS TECHNOLOGY CAMERA - BODY
HAWKING
http://gozerog.com/images/Hawking_001.jpg
Public Domain. Suggested credit: NASA or National Aeronautics and Space Administration via pingnews.
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Noted physicist Stephen Hawking (center) enjoys zero gravity during a flight aboard a modified Boeing 727 aircraft owned by Zero Gravity Corp. (Zero G). Hawking, who suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig's disease) is being rotated in air by (right) Peter Diamandis, founder of the Zero G Corp., and (left) Byron Lichtenberg, former shuttle payload specialist and now president of Zero G. Kneeling below Hawking is Nicola O'Brien, a nurse practitioner who is Hawking's aide. At the celebration of his 65th birthday on January 8 this year, Hawking announced his plans for a zero-gravity flight to prepare for a sub-orbital space flight in 2009 on Virgin Galactic's space service. Additional information from source:
No copyright protection is asserted for this photograph. If a recognizable person appears in this photograph, use for commercial purposes may infringe a right of privacy or publicity. It may not be used to state or imply the endorsement by NASA employees of a commercial product, process or service, or used in any other manner that might mislead. Accordingly, it is requested that if this photograph is used in advertising and other commercial promotion, layout and copy be submitted to NASA prior to release.
Source Physicist Stephen Hawking in Zero Gravity (NASA)
Date April 27, 2007 at 22:11
Zero Gravity's price tag for the daylong tour is $2,950, which includes preflight training and a postflight party.
From the Go Zero G Website:
The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to fly like Superman can now be yours. Train with an expert coach, board our specially modified aircraft, G-FORCE ONE, and experience the unforgettable.
Experience zero gravity the only way possible without going to space. Parabolic flight is the same method NASA has used to train its astronauts for the last 45 years and the same way Tom Hanks floated in Apollo 13.
Book a seat on one of our regular flights conveniently based in Las Vegas, Nevada and at the Kennedy Space Center, near Orlando, Florida. The aircraft is also available for charter flights anywhere in the United States for groups, incentive trips, parties or team building.
http://todayinspacehistory.wordpress.com/2007/10/04/october-4-1957-the-russians-launch-sputnik/
LG SPUT IMAGE
« October 3, 1962 - Sigma 7 launches into orbit, Mercury-Atlas 8October 5, 1929 - Astronaut Richard Gordon, Jr., is born »October 4, 1957 - the Russian’s launch Sputnik
Ads by GoogleSputnik
Huge selection, great deals on
Sputnik items.
Yahoo.com3D Earth Screensaver
Watch Realistic Animated 3D Earth
On Your Desktop. Free Download!
www.CrawlerTools.com/3DEarth
The modern space age was birthed on October 4, 1957 when the Soviet’s launched the first man-made object to orbit the Earth, Sputnik.
Wikipedia says:
“Sputnik 1 was launched on October 4, 1957. The satellite was 58 cm (about 23 in) in diameter and weighed approximately 83.6 kg (about 183 lb). Each of its elliptical orbits around the Earth took about 96 minutes. Monitoring of the satellite was done by Amateur radio operators. The first long-range flight of the R-7 booster used to launch it had occurred on August 21 and was described in Aviation Week. Sputnik 1 was not visible from Earth but the casing of the R-7 booster, traveling behind it, was.”
Quotes:
“Both countries [Russia and the United States] knew that preeminence in space was a condition of their national security. That conviction gave both countries a powerful incentive to strive and compete. The Soviets accomplished many important firsts, and this gave us a great incentive to try harder.
The space program also accomplished another vital function in that it kept us out of a hot war. It gave us a way to compete technologically, compete as a matter of national will. It may have even prevented World War III, with all the conflict and fighting focused on getting to the moon first, instead of annihilating each other. There’s no evidence of that, but as eyewitness to those events, I think that’s what happened.”
- American astronaut Scott Carpenter quoted in Into that Silent Sea (p. 138).
___________________
www.globalsecurity.org/.../imint/u-2_tt.htm
U-2 Product
SS-6 / Sputnik Launch Pad, Baikonur
TOP of LAUNCH
IMAGE
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
However, another event that occurred in the Soviet Union in 1960 is generally recognized as the single greatest disaster in the history of rocketry. The event was not directly related to manned space flight, but to the development of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). In the early days of space flight, both the US and Soviet space programs were very much intertwined with the development of ICBMs. These vehicles were designed to launch nuclear warheads over great distances, leaving no part of the world safe from the threat of nuclear destruction. However, the technologies pioneered for these weapons of war served a secondary purpose of providing the first generation of rockets for space exploration.
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
In fact, the early flights of Sputnik and Yuri Gagarin in the USSR as well as those of Explorer I and John Glenn in the US were all conducted using modified ballistic missiles. The primary Soviet launch vehicle of the period was the R-7 rocket, modified versions of which are still used even today for most Russian space flights. The R-7 was originally developed as an ICBM under the direction of Sergei Korolev, the Soviet Union's pre-eminent rocket designer of the day. The R-7 successfully completed a number of test flights between 1957 and 1959, including launching the first two artificial satellites. While only four examples of the R-7 were ever deployed as ballistic missiles from 1960 to 1968, the same basic design has remained in use throughout the Russian space program. Modern variants of the R-7 continue to launch satellites as well as manned Soyuz flights, and the type had achieved a success rate of nearly 98% in over 1,600 launches by the year 2000.
_____________
Apollo 17
http://www.phys.ncku.edu.tw/~astrolab/mirrors/apod/ap031109.html
Apollo 17 _ 1
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/GPN-2000-001876.jpg
Apollo 17 _ 2
Apollo 17 launch, December 17, 1972:
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/junk162.htm
Mars
http://whyfiles.org/194spa_travel/images/mars.gif
Moon
http://www.rc-astro.com/php/phpthumb/cache/phpThumb_cache_rc-astro.com_srcfadbb9057f0dac8e921d1bffc3590ce0_par0ddf367c5f01d9ba090bf356b6761f52_dat1168633826.jpeg
Kennedy
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.gif
November 21, 1963
Dedication Ceremony of the New Facilities of the School of
Aerospace Medicine at Brooks Air Force Base, Texas
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.htm
SPACE TEAMS
MCD
KANE
Toursit
Russian
http://science.qj.net/Microsoft-billionaire-joins-ISS-bound-Russian-space-flight/pg/49/aid/88814
U.S. software mogul Charles Simonyi became the world's fifth space tourist - "space flight participant," as officials call them - to go into orbit. Simonyi, who helped developed Microsoft Word, paid US$ 25M for the opportunity to join the crew of the Russian spacecraft Soyuz TMA-10.
The 58-year-old Hungary-born billionaire is making a 12-day round trip to the International Space Station (ISS). Joining him on the trip were Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Oleg Kotov of the 15th ISS crew. The spacecraft Simonyi and the Russian cosmonauts lifted off from the Bainokur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 11:31 P.M. local time (1:31 P.M. EDT). They are due to dock with the ISS on Monday.
Simonyi will be treating the current occupants of the ISS to a gourmet meal three days after arriving at the space station. The meal will be held in honor of Cosmonauts' Day, the Russian holiday commemorating Yuri Gagarin's historic 1961 space flight. Everybody else mentioned who prepared the meal so we won't. Suffice to say, she's famous, knows her way around a house, and looked good in orange.
In this Associated Press photo: In this image made from NASA-TV, U.S. billionaire Charles Simonyi, front row right, flips upside down during a news conference after he, Fyodor Yurchikhin, left, and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, front center, docked at the international space station Monday, April 9, 2007. A Russian-built Soyuz capsule carrying the American billionaire who helped develop Microsoft Word docked at the international space station late Monday, to the earthbound applause of Martha Stewart and others at Mission Control. In the back row, Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria can be seen. (AP Photo/NASA TV)
___________
Tito
http://cache.viewimages.com/xc/1310822.jpg?v=1&c=ViewImages&k=2&d=17A4AD9FDB9CF1939057D9939C83F106174681002B4CEC415A5397277B4DC33E
MIR
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/people/images/inset-LucidS-5-large.jpg
http://csatweb.csatolna.hu/tagok/csa/mars/rover.jpg
RICHS TECHNOLOGY CAMERA - BODY
HAWKING
http://gozerog.com/images/Hawking_001.jpg
Public Domain. Suggested credit: NASA or National Aeronautics and Space Administration via pingnews.
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Noted physicist Stephen Hawking (center) enjoys zero gravity during a flight aboard a modified Boeing 727 aircraft owned by Zero Gravity Corp. (Zero G). Hawking, who suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig's disease) is being rotated in air by (right) Peter Diamandis, founder of the Zero G Corp., and (left) Byron Lichtenberg, former shuttle payload specialist and now president of Zero G. Kneeling below Hawking is Nicola O'Brien, a nurse practitioner who is Hawking's aide. At the celebration of his 65th birthday on January 8 this year, Hawking announced his plans for a zero-gravity flight to prepare for a sub-orbital space flight in 2009 on Virgin Galactic's space service. Additional information from source:
No copyright protection is asserted for this photograph. If a recognizable person appears in this photograph, use for commercial purposes may infringe a right of privacy or publicity. It may not be used to state or imply the endorsement by NASA employees of a commercial product, process or service, or used in any other manner that might mislead. Accordingly, it is requested that if this photograph is used in advertising and other commercial promotion, layout and copy be submitted to NASA prior to release.
Source Physicist Stephen Hawking in Zero Gravity (NASA)
Date April 27, 2007 at 22:11
Zero Gravity's price tag for the daylong tour is $2,950, which includes preflight training and a postflight party.
From the Go Zero G Website:
The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to fly like Superman can now be yours. Train with an expert coach, board our specially modified aircraft, G-FORCE ONE, and experience the unforgettable.
Experience zero gravity the only way possible without going to space. Parabolic flight is the same method NASA has used to train its astronauts for the last 45 years and the same way Tom Hanks floated in Apollo 13.
Book a seat on one of our regular flights conveniently based in Las Vegas, Nevada and at the Kennedy Space Center, near Orlando, Florida. The aircraft is also available for charter flights anywhere in the United States for groups, incentive trips, parties or team building.
http://todayinspacehistory.wordpress.com/2007/10/04/october-4-1957-the-russians-launch-sputnik/
LG SPUT IMAGE
« October 3, 1962 - Sigma 7 launches into orbit, Mercury-Atlas 8October 5, 1929 - Astronaut Richard Gordon, Jr., is born »October 4, 1957 - the Russian’s launch Sputnik
Ads by GoogleSputnik
Huge selection, great deals on
Sputnik items.
Yahoo.com3D Earth Screensaver
Watch Realistic Animated 3D Earth
On Your Desktop. Free Download!
www.CrawlerTools.com/3DEarth
The modern space age was birthed on October 4, 1957 when the Soviet’s launched the first man-made object to orbit the Earth, Sputnik.
Wikipedia says:
“Sputnik 1 was launched on October 4, 1957. The satellite was 58 cm (about 23 in) in diameter and weighed approximately 83.6 kg (about 183 lb). Each of its elliptical orbits around the Earth took about 96 minutes. Monitoring of the satellite was done by Amateur radio operators. The first long-range flight of the R-7 booster used to launch it had occurred on August 21 and was described in Aviation Week. Sputnik 1 was not visible from Earth but the casing of the R-7 booster, traveling behind it, was.”
Quotes:
“Both countries [Russia and the United States] knew that preeminence in space was a condition of their national security. That conviction gave both countries a powerful incentive to strive and compete. The Soviets accomplished many important firsts, and this gave us a great incentive to try harder.
The space program also accomplished another vital function in that it kept us out of a hot war. It gave us a way to compete technologically, compete as a matter of national will. It may have even prevented World War III, with all the conflict and fighting focused on getting to the moon first, instead of annihilating each other. There’s no evidence of that, but as eyewitness to those events, I think that’s what happened.”
- American astronaut Scott Carpenter quoted in Into that Silent Sea (p. 138).
___________________
www.globalsecurity.org/.../imint/u-2_tt.htm
U-2 Product
SS-6 / Sputnik Launch Pad, Baikonur
TOP of LAUNCH
IMAGE
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
However, another event that occurred in the Soviet Union in 1960 is generally recognized as the single greatest disaster in the history of rocketry. The event was not directly related to manned space flight, but to the development of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). In the early days of space flight, both the US and Soviet space programs were very much intertwined with the development of ICBMs. These vehicles were designed to launch nuclear warheads over great distances, leaving no part of the world safe from the threat of nuclear destruction. However, the technologies pioneered for these weapons of war served a secondary purpose of providing the first generation of rockets for space exploration.
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
In fact, the early flights of Sputnik and Yuri Gagarin in the USSR as well as those of Explorer I and John Glenn in the US were all conducted using modified ballistic missiles. The primary Soviet launch vehicle of the period was the R-7 rocket, modified versions of which are still used even today for most Russian space flights. The R-7 was originally developed as an ICBM under the direction of Sergei Korolev, the Soviet Union's pre-eminent rocket designer of the day. The R-7 successfully completed a number of test flights between 1957 and 1959, including launching the first two artificial satellites. While only four examples of the R-7 were ever deployed as ballistic missiles from 1960 to 1968, the same basic design has remained in use throughout the Russian space program. Modern variants of the R-7 continue to launch satellites as well as manned Soyuz flights, and the type had achieved a success rate of nearly 98% in over 1,600 launches by the year 2000.
_____________
Apollo 17
http://www.phys.ncku.edu.tw/~astrolab/mirrors/apod/ap031109.html
Apollo 17 _ 1
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/GPN-2000-001876.jpg
Apollo 17 _ 2
Apollo 17 launch, December 17, 1972:
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/junk162.htm
Mars
http://whyfiles.org/194spa_travel/images/mars.gif
Moon
http://www.rc-astro.com/php/phpthumb/cache/phpThumb_cache_rc-astro.com_srcfadbb9057f0dac8e921d1bffc3590ce0_par0ddf367c5f01d9ba090bf356b6761f52_dat1168633826.jpeg
Kennedy
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.gif
November 21, 1963
Dedication Ceremony of the New Facilities of the School of
Aerospace Medicine at Brooks Air Force Base, Texas
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.htm
SPACE TEAMS
MCD
KANE
Toursit
Russian
http://science.qj.net/Microsoft-billionaire-joins-ISS-bound-Russian-space-flight/pg/49/aid/88814
U.S. software mogul Charles Simonyi became the world's fifth space tourist - "space flight participant," as officials call them - to go into orbit. Simonyi, who helped developed Microsoft Word, paid US$ 25M for the opportunity to join the crew of the Russian spacecraft Soyuz TMA-10.
The 58-year-old Hungary-born billionaire is making a 12-day round trip to the International Space Station (ISS). Joining him on the trip were Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Oleg Kotov of the 15th ISS crew. The spacecraft Simonyi and the Russian cosmonauts lifted off from the Bainokur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 11:31 P.M. local time (1:31 P.M. EDT). They are due to dock with the ISS on Monday.
Simonyi will be treating the current occupants of the ISS to a gourmet meal three days after arriving at the space station. The meal will be held in honor of Cosmonauts' Day, the Russian holiday commemorating Yuri Gagarin's historic 1961 space flight. Everybody else mentioned who prepared the meal so we won't. Suffice to say, she's famous, knows her way around a house, and looked good in orange.
In this Associated Press photo: In this image made from NASA-TV, U.S. billionaire Charles Simonyi, front row right, flips upside down during a news conference after he, Fyodor Yurchikhin, left, and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, front center, docked at the international space station Monday, April 9, 2007. A Russian-built Soyuz capsule carrying the American billionaire who helped develop Microsoft Word docked at the international space station late Monday, to the earthbound applause of Martha Stewart and others at Mission Control. In the back row, Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria can be seen. (AP Photo/NASA TV)
___________
Tito
http://cache.viewimages.com/xc/1310822.jpg?v=1&c=ViewImages&k=2&d=17A4AD9FDB9CF1939057D9939C83F106174681002B4CEC415A5397277B4DC33E
MIR
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/people/images/inset-LucidS-5-large.jpg
http://csatweb.csatolna.hu/tagok/csa/mars/rover.jpg
RICHS TECHNOLOGY CAMERA - BODY
HAWKING
http://gozerog.com/images/Hawking_001.jpg
Public Domain. Suggested credit: NASA or National Aeronautics and Space Administration via pingnews.
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Noted physicist Stephen Hawking (center) enjoys zero gravity during a flight aboard a modified Boeing 727 aircraft owned by Zero Gravity Corp. (Zero G). Hawking, who suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig's disease) is being rotated in air by (right) Peter Diamandis, founder of the Zero G Corp., and (left) Byron Lichtenberg, former shuttle payload specialist and now president of Zero G. Kneeling below Hawking is Nicola O'Brien, a nurse practitioner who is Hawking's aide. At the celebration of his 65th birthday on January 8 this year, Hawking announced his plans for a zero-gravity flight to prepare for a sub-orbital space flight in 2009 on Virgin Galactic's space service. Additional information from source:
No copyright protection is asserted for this photograph. If a recognizable person appears in this photograph, use for commercial purposes may infringe a right of privacy or publicity. It may not be used to state or imply the endorsement by NASA employees of a commercial product, process or service, or used in any other manner that might mislead. Accordingly, it is requested that if this photograph is used in advertising and other commercial promotion, layout and copy be submitted to NASA prior to release.
Source Physicist Stephen Hawking in Zero Gravity (NASA)
Date April 27, 2007 at 22:11
Zero Gravity's price tag for the daylong tour is $2,950, which includes preflight training and a postflight party.
From the Go Zero G Website:
The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to fly like Superman can now be yours. Train with an expert coach, board our specially modified aircraft, G-FORCE ONE, and experience the unforgettable.
Experience zero gravity the only way possible without going to space. Parabolic flight is the same method NASA has used to train its astronauts for the last 45 years and the same way Tom Hanks floated in Apollo 13.
Book a seat on one of our regular flights conveniently based in Las Vegas, Nevada and at the Kennedy Space Center, near Orlando, Florida. The aircraft is also available for charter flights anywhere in the United States for groups, incentive trips, parties or team building.
http://todayinspacehistory.wordpress.com/2007/10/04/october-4-1957-the-russians-launch-sputnik/
LG SPUT IMAGE
« October 3, 1962 - Sigma 7 launches into orbit, Mercury-Atlas 8
October 5, 1929 - Astronaut Richard Gordon, Jr., is born »
Ads by GoogleSputnik
Huge selection, great deals on
Sputnik items.
Yahoo.com3D Earth Screensaver
Watch Realistic Animated 3D Earth
On Your Desktop. Free Download!
www.CrawlerTools.com/3DEarth
The modern space age was birthed on October 4, 1957 when the Soviet’s launched the first man-made object to orbit the Earth, Sputnik.
Wikipedia says:
“Sputnik 1 was launched on October 4, 1957. The satellite was 58 cm (about 23 in) in diameter and weighed approximately 83.6 kg (about 183 lb). Each of its elliptical orbits around the Earth took about 96 minutes. Monitoring of the satellite was done by Amateur radio operators. The first long-range flight of the R-7 booster used to launch it had occurred on August 21 and was described in Aviation Week. Sputnik 1 was not visible from Earth but the casing of the R-7 booster, traveling behind it, was.”
Quotes:
“Both countries [Russia and the United States] knew that preeminence in space was a condition of their national security. That conviction gave both countries a powerful incentive to strive and compete. The Soviets accomplished many important firsts, and this gave us a great incentive to try harder.
The space program also accomplished another vital function in that it kept us out of a hot war. It gave us a way to compete technologically, compete as a matter of national will. It may have even prevented World War III, with all the conflict and fighting focused on getting to the moon first, instead of annihilating each other. There’s no evidence of that, but as eyewitness to those events, I think that’s what happened.”
- American astronaut Scott Carpenter quoted in Into that Silent Sea (p. 138).
___________________
www.globalsecurity.org/.../imint/u-2_tt.htm
U-2 Product
SS-6 / Sputnik Launch Pad, Baikonur
TOP of LAUNCH
IMAGE
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
However, another event that occurred in the Soviet Union in 1960 is generally recognized as the single greatest disaster in the history of rocketry. The event was not directly related to manned space flight, but to the development of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). In the early days of space flight, both the US and Soviet space programs were very much intertwined with the development of ICBMs. These vehicles were designed to launch nuclear warheads over great distances, leaving no part of the world safe from the threat of nuclear destruction. However, the technologies pioneered for these weapons of war served a secondary purpose of providing the first generation of rockets for space exploration.
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
In fact, the early flights of Sputnik and Yuri Gagarin in the USSR as well as those of Explorer I and John Glenn in the US were all conducted using modified ballistic missiles. The primary Soviet launch vehicle of the period was the R-7 rocket, modified versions of which are still used even today for most Russian space flights. The R-7 was originally developed as an ICBM under the direction of Sergei Korolev, the Soviet Union's pre-eminent rocket designer of the day. The R-7 successfully completed a number of test flights between 1957 and 1959, including launching the first two artificial satellites. While only four examples of the R-7 were ever deployed as ballistic missiles from 1960 to 1968, the same basic design has remained in use throughout the Russian space program. Modern variants of the R-7 continue to launch satellites as well as manned Soyuz flights, and the type had achieved a success rate of nearly 98% in over 1,600 launches by the year 2000.
_____________
Apollo 17
http://www.phys.ncku.edu.tw/~astrolab/mirrors/apod/ap031109.html
Apollo 17 _ 1
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/GPN-2000-001876.jpg
Apollo 17 _ 2
Apollo 17 launch, December 17, 1972:
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/junk162.htm
Mars
http://whyfiles.org/194spa_travel/images/mars.gif
Moon
http://www.rc-astro.com/php/phpthumb/cache/phpThumb_cache_rc-astro.com_srcfadbb9057f0dac8e921d1bffc3590ce0_par0ddf367c5f01d9ba090bf356b6761f52_dat1168633826.jpeg
Kennedy
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.gif
November 21, 1963
Dedication Ceremony of the New Facilities of the School of
Aerospace Medicine at Brooks Air Force Base, Texas
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.htm
SPACE TEAMS
MCD
KANE
Toursit
Russian
http://science.qj.net/Microsoft-billionaire-joins-ISS-bound-Russian-space-flight/pg/49/aid/88814
U.S. software mogul Charles Simonyi became the world's fifth space tourist - "space flight participant," as officials call them - to go into orbit. Simonyi, who helped developed Microsoft Word, paid US$ 25M for the opportunity to join the crew of the Russian spacecraft Soyuz TMA-10.
The 58-year-old Hungary-born billionaire is making a 12-day round trip to the International Space Station (ISS). Joining him on the trip were Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Oleg Kotov of the 15th ISS crew. The spacecraft Simonyi and the Russian cosmonauts lifted off from the Bainokur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 11:31 P.M. local time (1:31 P.M. EDT). They are due to dock with the ISS on Monday.
Simonyi will be treating the current occupants of the ISS to a gourmet meal three days after arriving at the space station. The meal will be held in honor of Cosmonauts' Day, the Russian holiday commemorating Yuri Gagarin's historic 1961 space flight. Everybody else mentioned who prepared the meal so we won't. Suffice to say, she's famous, knows her way around a house, and looked good in orange.
In this Associated Press photo: In this image made from NASA-TV, U.S. billionaire Charles Simonyi, front row right, flips upside down during a news conference after he, Fyodor Yurchikhin, left, and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, front center, docked at the international space station Monday, April 9, 2007. A Russian-built Soyuz capsule carrying the American billionaire who helped develop Microsoft Word docked at the international space station late Monday, to the earthbound applause of Martha Stewart and others at Mission Control. In the back row, Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria can be seen. (AP Photo/NASA TV)
___________
Tito
http://cache.viewimages.com/xc/1310822.jpg?v=1&c=ViewImages&k=2&d=17A4AD9FDB9CF1939057D9939C83F106174681002B4CEC415A5397277B4DC33E
MIR
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/people/images/inset-LucidS-5-large.jpg
http://csatweb.csatolna.hu/tagok/csa/mars/rover.jpg
RICHS TECHNOLOGY CAMERA - BODY
HAWKING
http://gozerog.com/images/Hawking_001.jpg
Public Domain. Suggested credit: NASA or National Aeronautics and Space Administration via pingnews.
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Noted physicist Stephen Hawking (center) enjoys zero gravity during a flight aboard a modified Boeing 727 aircraft owned by Zero Gravity Corp. (Zero G). Hawking, who suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig's disease) is being rotated in air by (right) Peter Diamandis, founder of the Zero G Corp., and (left) Byron Lichtenberg, former shuttle payload specialist and now president of Zero G. Kneeling below Hawking is Nicola O'Brien, a nurse practitioner who is Hawking's aide. At the celebration of his 65th birthday on January 8 this year, Hawking announced his plans for a zero-gravity flight to prepare for a sub-orbital space flight in 2009 on Virgin Galactic's space service. Additional information from source:
No copyright protection is asserted for this photograph. If a recognizable person appears in this photograph, use for commercial purposes may infringe a right of privacy or publicity. It may not be used to state or imply the endorsement by NASA employees of a commercial product, process or service, or used in any other manner that might mislead. Accordingly, it is requested that if this photograph is used in advertising and other commercial promotion, layout and copy be submitted to NASA prior to release.
Source Physicist Stephen Hawking in Zero Gravity (NASA)
Date April 27, 2007 at 22:11
Zero Gravity's price tag for the daylong tour is $2,950, which includes preflight training and a postflight party.
From the Go Zero G Website:
The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to fly like Superman can now be yours. Train with an expert coach, board our specially modified aircraft, G-FORCE ONE, and experience the unforgettable.
Experience zero gravity the only way possible without going to space. Parabolic flight is the same method NASA has used to train its astronauts for the last 45 years and the same way Tom Hanks floated in Apollo 13.
Book a seat on one of our regular flights conveniently based in Las Vegas, Nevada and at the Kennedy Space Center, near Orlando, Florida. The aircraft is also available for charter flights anywhere in the United States for groups, incentive trips, parties or team building.
http://todayinspacehistory.wordpress.com/2007/10/04/october-4-1957-the-russians-launch-sputnik/
LG SPUT IMAGE
« October 3, 1962 - Sigma 7 launches into orbit, Mercury-Atlas 8October 5, 1929 - Astronaut Richard Gordon, Jr., is born »October 4, 1957 - the Russian’s launch Sputnik
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The modern space age was birthed on October 4, 1957 when the Soviet’s launched the first man-made object to orbit the Earth, Sputnik.
Wikipedia says:
“Sputnik 1 was launched on October 4, 1957. The satellite was 58 cm (about 23 in) in diameter and weighed approximately 83.6 kg (about 183 lb). Each of its elliptical orbits around the Earth took about 96 minutes. Monitoring of the satellite was done by Amateur radio operators. The first long-range flight of the R-7 booster used to launch it had occurred on August 21 and was described in Aviation Week. Sputnik 1 was not visible from Earth but the casing of the R-7 booster, traveling behind it, was.”
Quotes:
“Both countries [Russia and the United States] knew that preeminence in space was a condition of their national security. That conviction gave both countries a powerful incentive to strive and compete. The Soviets accomplished many important firsts, and this gave us a great incentive to try harder.
The space program also accomplished another vital function in that it kept us out of a hot war. It gave us a way to compete technologically, compete as a matter of national will. It may have even prevented World War III, with all the conflict and fighting focused on getting to the moon first, instead of annihilating each other. There’s no evidence of that, but as eyewitness to those events, I think that’s what happened.”
- American astronaut Scott Carpenter quoted in Into that Silent Sea (p. 138).
___________________
www.globalsecurity.org/.../imint/u-2_tt.htm
U-2 Product
SS-6 / Sputnik Launch Pad, Baikonur
TOP of LAUNCH
IMAGE
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
However, another event that occurred in the Soviet Union in 1960 is generally recognized as the single greatest disaster in the history of rocketry. The event was not directly related to manned space flight, but to the development of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM). In the early days of space flight, both the US and Soviet space programs were very much intertwined with the development of ICBMs. These vehicles were designed to launch nuclear warheads over great distances, leaving no part of the world safe from the threat of nuclear destruction. However, the technologies pioneered for these weapons of war served a secondary purpose of providing the first generation of rockets for space exploration.
Sputnik on the launch pad being prepared for liftoff
In fact, the early flights of Sputnik and Yuri Gagarin in the USSR as well as those of Explorer I and John Glenn in the US were all conducted using modified ballistic missiles. The primary Soviet launch vehicle of the period was the R-7 rocket, modified versions of which are still used even today for most Russian space flights. The R-7 was originally developed as an ICBM under the direction of Sergei Korolev, the Soviet Union's pre-eminent rocket designer of the day. The R-7 successfully completed a number of test flights between 1957 and 1959, including launching the first two artificial satellites. While only four examples of the R-7 were ever deployed as ballistic missiles from 1960 to 1968, the same basic design has remained in use throughout the Russian space program. Modern variants of the R-7 continue to launch satellites as well as manned Soyuz flights, and the type had achieved a success rate of nearly 98% in over 1,600 launches by the year 2000.
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Apollo 17
http://www.phys.ncku.edu.tw/~astrolab/mirrors/apod/ap031109.html
Apollo 17 _ 1
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/GPN-2000-001876.jpg
Apollo 17 _ 2
Apollo 17 launch, December 17, 1972:
http://xpda.com/junkmail/junk162/junk162.htm
Mars
http://whyfiles.org/194spa_travel/images/mars.gif
Moon
http://www.rc-astro.com/php/phpthumb/cache/phpThumb_cache_rc-astro.com_srcfadbb9057f0dac8e921d1bffc3590ce0_par0ddf367c5f01d9ba090bf356b6761f52_dat1168633826.jpeg
Kennedy
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.gif
November 21, 1963
Dedication Ceremony of the New Facilities of the School of
Aerospace Medicine at Brooks Air Force Base, Texas
http://www.historicaldocuments.com/JohnFKennedysLastSpeech.htm
SPACE TEAMS
MCD
KANE
Toursit
Russian
http://science.qj.net/Microsoft-billionaire-joins-ISS-bound-Russian-space-flight/pg/49/aid/88814
U.S. software mogul Charles Simonyi became the world's fifth space tourist - "space flight participant," as officials call them - to go into orbit. Simonyi, who helped developed Microsoft Word, paid US$ 25M for the opportunity to join the crew of the Russian spacecraft Soyuz TMA-10.
The 58-year-old Hungary-born billionaire is making a 12-day round trip to the International Space Station (ISS). Joining him on the trip were Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Oleg Kotov of the 15th ISS crew. The spacecraft Simonyi and the Russian cosmonauts lifted off from the Bainokur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 11:31 P.M. local time (1:31 P.M. EDT). They are due to dock with the ISS on Monday.
Simonyi will be treating the current occupants of the ISS to a gourmet meal three days after arriving at the space station. The meal will be held in honor of Cosmonauts' Day, the Russian holiday commemorating Yuri Gagarin's historic 1961 space flight. Everybody else mentioned who prepared the meal so we won't. Suffice to say, she's famous, knows her way around a house, and looked good in orange.
In this Associated Press photo: In this image made from NASA-TV, U.S. billionaire Charles Simonyi, front row right, flips upside down during a news conference after he, Fyodor Yurchikhin, left, and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kotov, front center, docked at the international space station Monday, April 9, 2007. A Russian-built Soyuz capsule carrying the American billionaire who helped develop Microsoft Word docked at the international space station late Monday, to the earthbound applause of Martha Stewart and others at Mission Control. In the back row, Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria can be seen. (AP Photo/NASA TV)
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Tito
http://cache.viewimages.com/xc/1310822.jpg?v=1&c=ViewImages&k=2&d=17A4AD9FDB9CF1939057D9939C83F106174681002B4CEC415A5397277B4DC33E
MIR
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/people/images/inset-LucidS-5-large.jpg
http://csatweb.csatolna.hu/tagok/csa/mars/rover.jpg
RICHS TECHNOLOGY CAMERA - BODY
HAWKING
http://gozerog.com/images/Hawking_001.jpg
Public Domain. Suggested credit: NASA or National Aeronautics and Space Administration via pingnews.
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- Noted physicist Stephen Hawking (center) enjoys zero gravity during a flight aboard a modified Boeing 727 aircraft owned by Zero Gravity Corp. (Zero G). Hawking, who suffers from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig's disease) is being rotated in air by (right) Peter Diamandis, founder of the Zero G Corp., and (left) Byron Lichtenberg, former shuttle payload specialist and now president of Zero G. Kneeling below Hawking is Nicola O'Brien, a nurse practitioner who is Hawking's aide. At the celebration of his 65th birthday on January 8 this year, Hawking announced his plans for a zero-gravity flight to prepare for a sub-orbital space flight in 2009 on Virgin Galactic's space service. Additional information from source:
No copyright protection is asserted for this photograph. If a recognizable person appears in this photograph, use for commercial purposes may infringe a right of privacy or publicity. It may not be used to state or imply the endorsement by NASA employees of a commercial product, process or service, or used in any other manner that might mislead. Accordingly, it is requested that if this photograph is used in advertising and other commercial promotion, layout and copy be submitted to NASA prior to release.
Source Physicist Stephen Hawking in Zero Gravity (NASA)
Date April 27, 2007 at 22:11
Zero Gravity's price tag for the daylong tour is $2,950, which includes preflight training and a postflight party.
From the Go Zero G Website:
The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to fly like Superman can now be yours. Train with an expert coach, board our specially modified aircraft, G-FORCE ONE, and experience the unforgettable.
Experience zero gravity the only way possible without going to space. Parabolic flight is the same method NASA has used to train its astronauts for the last 45 years and the same way Tom Hanks floated in Apollo 13.
Book a seat on one of our regular flights conveniently based in Las Vegas, Nevada and at the Kennedy Space Center, near Orlando, Florida. The aircraft is also available for charter flights anywhere in the United States for groups, incentive trips, parties or team building.
200 studenst involved
Design an architecture for the next generation of SES/SDPS and its relatinship to the world.“
How can SDPS/SES engage non-computer-software-engineering societies to “create” the “civilizing effect?” Ramamoorthy, Yeh, Weinberg, Tanik and Sadasivam
“What are the essential questions” SDPS/SES must ask related to concentration, creativity, visualization, immersion, formailization, compassion, transformative research and the civilizing effect in order to have a constructive impact in the world? Sadasivam
How can this SDPS/SES movement account for “relevant cultural and social value factors” in the next generation? Kozmetsky
What is the “learning[-life] experience” that characterizes transformative and transdisciplinary systems? Ramamoorthy
The Surprise: All science is wrong. There is no such thing as failure—only feedback. We believe in and value intuition. Interpretation of Piaget/Tanik
How will we achieve the “civilizing effect” grand vision while balancing the practical day-to-day expectation and constraints? Weinberg and Yeh
In ancient Japan the haiku poets used phonemes--rather than symbols--therefore the counts may be off a bit when you are reading these haiku as a reference.
The moment two bubbles
are united, they both vanish.
A lotus blooms.
Murakami, Kijo. (1865-1938), http://www.toyomasu.com/haiku/#time
(5) The moment two are
(7) united they both vanish, A
(5) lotus blooms here.
Murakami, Kijo. (1865-1938), Adapted by Brazell
http://www.toyomasu.com/haiku/#time
In ancient Japan the haiku poets used phonemes--rather than symbols--therefore the counts may be off a bit when you are reading these haiku as a reference.
The moment two bubbles
are united, they both vanish.
A lotus blooms.
Murakami, Kijo. (1865-1938), http://www.toyomasu.com/haiku/#time
(5) The moment two are
(7) united they both vanish, A
(5) lotus blooms here.
Murakami, Kijo. (1865-1938), Adapted by Brazell
http://www.toyomasu.com/haiku/#time
In ancient Japan the haiku poets used phonemes--rather than symbols--therefore the counts may be off a bit when you are reading these haiku as a reference.
The moment two bubbles
are united, they both vanish.
A lotus blooms.
Murakami, Kijo. (1865-1938), http://www.toyomasu.com/haiku/#time
(5) The moment two are
(7) united they both vanish, A
(5) lotus blooms here.
Murakami, Kijo. (1865-1938), Adapted by Brazell
http://www.toyomasu.com/haiku/#time
On (音) is a Japanese word corresponding to a sound; onji (音字) corresponds to "sound symbol".
On (or onji) are the phonetic units that are counted in Japanese haiku, and in linguistics are called morae. The word moji (文字, character symbol) is also sometimes used, as is haku (拍).
In counting the beats in haiku, on is often translated into the more familiar English word syllable, although an English syllable may in fact consist of more than one on.
In the essay "Stalking the Wild Onji", Richard Gilbert notes that although often used in English-language discussion of Japanese poetry, the word onji is an archaic term not commonly used in modern Japanese. He notes that the modern Japanese term would be hyōon moji (表音文字), "phonetic symbol
The Invisible Train
The Invisible Train is the first real multi-user Augmented Reality application for handheld devices (PDAs). Unlike other projects, in which wearable devices were merely used as thin-clients, while powerful (PC-based) servers performed a majority of the computations (such as graphics rendering), our software runs independently on off-the-shelf PDAs - eliminating the need for an expensive infractructure.
The Invisible Train is a mobile, collaborative multi-user Augmented Reality (AR) game, in which players control virtual trains on a real wooden miniature railroad track. These virtual trains are only visible to players through their PDA's video see-through display as they don't exist in the physical world. This type of user interface is commonly called the "magic lens metaphor".
Players can interact with the game environment by operating track switches and adjusting the speed of their virtual trains. The current state of the game is synchronized between all participants via wireless networking. The common goal of the game is to prevent the virtual trains from colliding.
The success of the Invisible Train installation illustrates the advantages of our Studierstube software framework, a component-based system architecture that has been designed to accelerate the task of developing and deploying collaborative Augmented Reality applications on handheld devices.
Why Handheld Augmented Reality?
Augmented Reality (AR) can naturally complement mobile computing on wearable devices by providing an intuitive interface to a three-dimensional information space embedded within physical reality. However, prior work on mobile Augmented Reality has almost exclusively been undertaken with traditional "backpack"-systems that consist of a notebook computer, an HMD, cameras and additional supporting hardware. Although these systems work well within a constrained laboratory environment, they fail to fulfill several usability criteria to be rapidly deployed to inexperienced users, as they are expensive, cumbersome and require high level of expertise.
Since the early experiments in Mobile Augmented Reality, a variety of highly portable consumer devices with versatile computing capabilities has emerged. We believe that handheld computers, mobile phones and personal digital assistants have the potential to introduce Augmented Reality to large audiences outside of a constrained laboratory environment. The relative affordability of devices that are capable of running our software framework opens up new possibilities for experimenting with massively multi-user application scenarios - thereby bringing us closer to the goal of "AR anytime, anywhere".
Eye Toy 2002
Whyville has its own system of self governance
Lung-on-a-chip points to alternative to animal tests
19:00 24 June 2010 by Duncan Graham-Rowe
A living, breathing lung-on-a-chip has been developed that can mimic the boundary between the lung's air sacs and its capillaries.
It's at this boundary that inhaled pathogens and potentially harmful nanoparticles pass into the bloodstream. Reproducing those processes on a chip could one day provide an alternative to animal testing for drug development and toxicity screening.
The coin-sized lung-on-a-chip consists of a simple network of microfluidic channels etched into a rubbery, transparent polymer called polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). The central channel contains two layers of human cells, separated by a porous membrane (see image).
In the upper layer the cells come from alveoli, the cavities deep inside the lung where gases pass between the lungs and the bloodstream. The lower layer contains endothelium cells from the capillaries that carry oxygen-rich blood away.
Breathe in…
As well as mimicking the cellular structure of the lung, the chip copies its behaviour too: it can "breathe". As air pressure in two channels flanking the main channel is periodically reduced and increased, the central membrane is widened, stretching the cells as it does to, before they contract once more as the pressure is increased, says Donald Ingber, director of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, and leader of the lung-on-a-chip team.
Because the device is transparent, it's possible to make real-time measurements of the inflammatory response that occurs when pathogens or silica nanoparticles are introduced into the airflow chamber. The measurements are made using high-resolution fluorescence microscopy. The extent to which these particles pass into the simulated bloodstream can also be recorded, Ingber says.
These measurements show that the "breathing" mechanism appears to encourage the uptake of silica nanoparticles – a result that the team found also occurs when they introduced the same nanoparticles into a mouse lung connected to a ventilator.
Lifelike response
The fact that the lung-on-a-chip behaves so much like the real mouse lung is an encouraging sign that ethically acceptable and cheaper alternatives to animal testing may be on the way. Cell-culture techniques, which are also being investigated as an option, cannot take into account important mechanical influences that help regulate the organs, such as the stretching of lung tissue caused by breathing. "This is something that has been missing from almost all in vitro models," Ingber says.
Anthony Holmes, of the UK National Centre for the Replacement, Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research in London, agrees. "There's lot of evidence that the normal functions of organs require certain physical stimulations," he says. The lungs are one example but it applies equally to bone, cartilage and other tissues. "It's a nice model and an interesting approach."
"It's wonderful that it breathes, and definitely a step in the right direction," says Kelly BéruBé, a cell biologist at Cardiff University, UK, who acts as scientific adviser to the UK's Safer Medicines Trust. But she warns that the immortalised cell lines used in the lung-on-a-chip tend not to have the same properties as "primary" cells taken from patients. "Unless they can get primary cells, they are not going to be able to replace animal tests."
Journal reference: Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1188302
On (音) is a Japanese word corresponding to a sound; onji (音字) corresponds to "sound symbol".
On (or onji) are the phonetic units that are counted in Japanese haiku, and in linguistics are called morae. The word moji (文字, character symbol) is also sometimes used, as is haku (拍).
In counting the beats in haiku, on is often translated into the more familiar English word syllable, although an English syllable may in fact consist of more than one on.
In the essay "Stalking the Wild Onji", Richard Gilbert notes that although often used in English-language discussion of Japanese poetry, the word onji is an archaic term not commonly used in modern Japanese. He notes that the modern Japanese term would be hyōon moji (表音文字), "phonetic symbol
While there are different ways of defining telematics, market research firm VDC estimates that consumption of automotive navigation and driver information systems was approximately $655 million in 2002 and forecasts this market to grow to $1.7 billion in 2006.” (VDC, n.d., p. 1).
Parks Associates estimates that the automobile telematics market will grow from $2.7 billion in 2001 to $10.7 billion in 2005, while Allied Business Intelligence estimates that the US telematics market for personal vehicles will grow to $13 billion in 2006” (GartnerG2, 2002, p. 1).
Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition
College level cyber competition
Sponsored by industry and academic partners
2010 participation: 86 schools, over 600 students
Multi-stage competition with finals in San Antonio
Defensive in nature
for more info
Cybernetics is a theory of the communication and control of regulatory feedback. The term cybernetics stems from the Greek kybernetes (meaning steersman, governor, pilot, or rudder). Cybernetics is the discipline that studies communication and control in living beings and in the machines built by humans.
A more philosophical definition, suggested in 1958 by Louis Couffignal, one of the pioneers of cybernetics in the 1930s, considers cybernetics as "the art of assuring efficiency of action" (see external links for reference).
On (音) is a Japanese word corresponding to a sound; onji (音字) corresponds to "sound symbol".
On (or onji) are the phonetic units that are counted in Japanese haiku, and in linguistics are called morae. The word moji (文字, character symbol) is also sometimes used, as is haku (拍).
In counting the beats in haiku, on is often translated into the more familiar English word syllable, although an English syllable may in fact consist of more than one on.
In the essay "Stalking the Wild Onji", Richard Gilbert notes that although often used in English-language discussion of Japanese poetry, the word onji is an archaic term not commonly used in modern Japanese. He notes that the modern Japanese term would be hyōon moji (表音文字), "phonetic symbol
., all integrated through the design process. The key to success in mechatronics is: modeling, analysis, experimentation & hardware-implementation skills.
On (音) is a Japanese word corresponding to a sound; onji (音字) corresponds to "sound symbol".
On (or onji) are the phonetic units that are counted in Japanese haiku, and in linguistics are called morae. The word moji (文字, character symbol) is also sometimes used, as is haku (拍).
In counting the beats in haiku, on is often translated into the more familiar English word syllable, although an English syllable may in fact consist of more than one on.
In the essay "Stalking the Wild Onji", Richard Gilbert notes that although often used in English-language discussion of Japanese poetry, the word onji is an archaic term not commonly used in modern Japanese. He notes that the modern Japanese term would be hyōon moji (表音文字), "phonetic symbol
On (音) is a Japanese word corresponding to a sound; onji (音字) corresponds to "sound symbol".
On (or onji) are the phonetic units that are counted in Japanese haiku, and in linguistics are called morae. The word moji (文字, character symbol) is also sometimes used, as is haku (拍).
In counting the beats in haiku, on is often translated into the more familiar English word syllable, although an English syllable may in fact consist of more than one on.
In the essay "Stalking the Wild Onji", Richard Gilbert notes that although often used in English-language discussion of Japanese poetry, the word onji is an archaic term not commonly used in modern Japanese. He notes that the modern Japanese term would be hyōon moji (表音文字), "phonetic symbol