NASA Announces Space Apps Challenge 42
coondoggie writes with an article in Network World about a development challenge put forth by NASA. From the article: "NASA said it would host an open source-based application competition that it hopes will deliver a new generation of software that can address space, weather, and economic issues. NASA said it will coordinate with other interested space agencies around the world on an International Space Apps Challenge that will encourage scientists and concerned citizens from all seven continents — and in space — to create, build, and invent new applications that can address world-class issues."
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So, farmville? (Score:1)
I can see it now, a Moon Farmville that can address issues in growing things on social networks outside of earth's atmosphere! I'll be rich!
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SBD without the D (Score:1)
Nobody wants to fart in space in a closed capsule, it taxes the air scrubbers too much. So, best give them beano and give them a fart app to enjoy the "comforts of home."
Penguins...In...Space...! (Score:1)
;D
NASA (Score:1, Flamebait)
R ember back in the good ole days, when NASA was actually about sending people into space?
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Indeed, we should never ever venture anywhere that isn't perfectly hospitable to us. It's just too dangerous and too scary.
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The only thing you'd really need humans in space for is d
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Sailing West to get to the East: a risky proposition, but with a potentially huge and practically realizable commercial payoff. The discovery of a New World was the result of a lack of knowledge about what was really out that way.
Putting humans into space: a risky proposition, with no current model for commercial payoff. Sufficient knowledge of what's out there, and our ability to get further knowledge sans manned spaceflight, reduce or even eliminate the need to get people out there until some aspect of th
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If they had robots that could be sent out for a fraction of the cost to scout for new worlds before sending people, I'm sure they would have preferred that option.
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Much as I adore the idea of colonizing the entire Universe, putting humans on each and every planet and surrounding stars with Dyson spheres and filling them and eventually using advanced nuclear technology to transform nearly all of the mass that isn't actually in stars into human flesh in the form of exponentially more babies, it really isn't fa
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Reliable, improved and more-efficient space tech and the technology created to solve those problems could go a long way in helping with our more earthly problems.
That's why I've entered my "cold fusion" app. As long as you keep your phone plugged in you get a flashlight that never runs out.
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No, NASA has never been about just "sending people to space". They accomplished their original goal of winning the space race and now their official mision statement is "pioneer the future in space exploration, scientific discovery and aeronautics research".
I'd say that this is exactly the kind of stuff NASA should be doing, they are saving time and money by not doing all this research themselves and at the same time (hopefully) promoting collaboration between scientists and space enthusiasts all over the w
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Mission-creep (Score:2)
Economics? So now an agency that can't manage its budget is getting into the economics modeling biz? This is like the CDC deciding that they are authoritative and credible to make social policy on the Second Amendment.
License (Score:2)
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Details? (Score:1)
I've Got a Couple of App Ideas (Score:2)
2. Retrieve a Comet, and place it on the Moon.
3. (Optional) Rewrite Angry Birds, use likenesses of @$$hole$ that get in the way of man going into space; it's for the children.
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This costs almost nothing. I'd guess they're doing a super-low-cost project *because* they're underfunded.
Lost in Space (Score:2)
I think it needs to be said that any "space app" should not be based on a microtransaction model.
And for god's sake, it had better be open source.
I'm confused... (Score:2)
What does NASA have to do with space?
I thought they officially gave up in that area, and now it's just a jobs program for contractors.