2001: A Space Laptop 226
Phrogman writes: "SpaceRef has posted an exclusive and detailed article concerning NASA's use of laptops in space including information on the LAN configuration aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis (with full-color diagrams); lists of software run on the Shuttle laptop computers (with screenshots like this); laptop specs; descriptions of the LAN to be installed on the Space Station; and a lot of other related official NASA materials and links." It's a neat primer on Taking Your Computer to Space, too -- it addresses things like the available power sources, the need for velcro, and quirks of operating in zero G.
Hrm... (Score:2)
"Dammit, I just got fragged by another Earth-bound runt again..."
I wonder if a Napster server in space could get sued?
storm (Score:1)
Maybe not but, (Score:2)
Running Windows? (Score:1)
Duct Tape In Space! (Score:5)
The PGSC, and everything else inside the Shuttle, needs to be able to be attached to a stable surface to keep it from floating away. Next to duct tape (also known as "gray tape" at NASA), one of the standard means of attaching one thing to another in space is the use of Velcro.
Heh. Duct tape and velcro are holding our space program together? Seems somehow appropriate. Maybe they can swing over to MIR and patch up some of THEIR problems. Apparently, those stupid russians have been using ordinary masking tape.
-The Reverend
Nice list of programs (Score:1)
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dd if=/dev/random of=~/.ssh/authorized_keys bs=1 count=1024
Re:Running Windows? (Score:1)
ESA uses Linux in their satellites though...
Where'd the pretty pictures go? (Score:1)
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Where can the word be found, where can the word resound? Not here, there is not enough silence.
Re:storm (Score:2)
The article does mention that they also use Linux and MacOS systems in space as well. Hopefully we will see a follow up article on the use of Linux as well.
Interesting (Score:1)
When, when, when... (Score:1)
Personally, I'd be much more interested in hearing when we would be able to visit space (as normal people) rather than 'how to use our laptop'.
Here's hoping they actually do build a space elevator before I'm gone. Instead of another vacation to Colorado, I could take a vacation to the ISS and actually do something 'new and exciting'.
Re:Nice list of programs (Score:1)
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dd if=/dev/random of=~/.ssh/authorized_keys bs=1 count=1024
Oh, no... (Score:3)
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I don't want to see the Russki's power supply (Score:5)
All I can envision is wrapping wire around your penis and sticking it in and out of a magnet.
To save you all some time reading... (Score:2)
Network security and Space Internet (Score:2)
Why dont they just do what most Top Secret military facilities do and have seperate "public" and "private" network terminals? No access to the public internet for mission critical systems, but have a few public terminals that can be used for communications both ways
I bet... (Score:1)
take mine! (Score:1)
Re:Hrm... (Score:1)
Cooling (Score:1)
I suppose that means that they won't be sending up any overclocked laptops anytime soon.
After The Slashdot Cruiser (Score:5)
We all recognize the phenomenal success of Slashdot/Andover/VALinux/OSDN/Plymouth/Whoever-th
I think the time has come for Slashdot to think big. I mean bigger than the Slashdot Cruiser. With that in mind, I would like to make a modest proposal:
Paint the Slashdot logo on the Space Shuttle
It could work: Thanks to 8 years of post-Cold War Democratic cutbacks, NASA is hard up for money. Heck, it's a wonder the Shuttle doesn't already look like something out of the NASCAR Winston Cup series.
Why not corporate sponsorship of the Space Shuttle? And who better to provide that sponsorship than the site bringing us "News for Nerds. Stuff that matters?"
Picture it: The Space Shuttle -- painted Slashdot-Green with the
We could even go a step further. We could the entire Shuttle fleet! Instead of "Enterprise", "Endeavor", "Columbia", we could have "CmdrTaco", "JonKatz", and "Hemos".
Imagine hearing a newscaster saying, "The Space Shuttle JonKatz lifted off this morning. It will remain in orbit for three weeks." Doesn't that make you feel a little funny inside?
Is the idea of an open-source space program just a dream? Won't you share the dream with me?
ShuttleOS Story in Fast Company (Score:3)
-Waldo
Re:Maybe not but, (Score:1)
Anyone know? I dunno, I've always been more of a software kinda guy (no pun intended =P), but I've taken enoough hardware classes to build a computer from scratch.
Re:Hrm... (Score:1)
Re:Hrm... (Score:1)
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All generalizations are false.
Re:Maybe not but, (Score:1)
Perhaps the astronauts are the first to try the 3D movement of the mouse!
But then again it's a laptop, so it's gonna be a pad, or whatever they call it.
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dd if=/dev/random of=~/.ssh/authorized_keys bs=1 count=1024
Re:Cooling (Score:1)
Also, I imagine that disk ejection systems and CD drives need to be reconfigured so you don't have spinning discs floating all over the place.
Makes you wonder what frisbee would be like in 0 G...
Kierthos
Not according to this study... (Score:1)
Re:When, when, when... (Score:1)
Actually, there was an article here last week about just this topic. A space elevator isn't possible today, right now. But in approximately fifty years we could very well have the materials and the ability to build a space elevator.
good advice... (Score:2)
This is cool to see... I've often seen them using rather archane things, and now I really do know a little bit more of what seperates me from an astronaut.
Anyone think they could do better tho? heheh
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Re:Cooling (Pentium 4) (Score:1)
Why they run Windows... (Score:1)
hey no more tripping over cords! (Score:1)
Re:My Question (Score:2)
Now, yes, you can use fans to move air about. But how do the fans work in 0 G? (Well, microgravity, but pretty much the same thing...) I imagine that the fans have to be reconfigured as well.
I also imagine that the boards have to be reinforced to withstand the forces during takeoff, as well as the screen... the mouse is simple; use the same little pad you normally do with laptops.
Kierthos
Re: Using a Mouse in Space (Score:2)
I'm not sure what, if anything, would forbid you from using a trackball, but it seems like a trackball (with a "velcro-modified" base
-The Reverend
Re:Maybe not but, (Score:1)
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Where can the word be found, where can the word resound? Not here, there is not enough silence.
Pistol grip tool ! (Score:1)
Not to mention that if a neighbour has it, and if it works via any type of hackable radio communication, one would be able to reprogram their torque/speed settings on the fly.
Watch those bolts fly
Re:After The Slashdot Cruiser (Score:1)
You can never have too much velcro (Score:4)
Plus, the lack of air motion is very critical - you want a laptop with good heat dissipation and good fans, plus you need to be sure the fan motors can take varying G forces. Overclocking is a big no-no. Extra RAM is highly recommended.
Then there's the CD. Remember, no gravity pulling down makes these very difficult to use. Best to have it in firmware or cartridge form. Spin effects can be very hard to clock right in low or zero-G, and it needs to survive the boost.
Now, when will we see a smart company like Transmeta donate some laptops with low power consumption to NASA, both to sell the chip and to make them hot geek items? Heck, I can see the ads now "As Used By NASA In Zero-G", "The Laptop That Went To Space".
What happens if you get the Blue Screen of Death - do you die?
Re:Maybe not but, (Score:1)
Re:good advice... (Score:1)
We're much more likely to see space elevators on Mars before they show up on Earth. Too much chance of lawsuits and terrorists. Just ask Stan Robinson, he's written some interesting stuff on that.
Re:Oh, no... (Score:2)
The comma after "Informative" should go inside the quotation marks; also don't forget your closing punctuation.
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Re:Maybe not but, (Score:1)
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dd if=/dev/random of=~/.ssh/authorized_keys bs=1 count=1024
Re:I don't want to see the Russki's power supply (Score:1)
I think that you (and others) are thinking about a wiener (not weiner) powered laptop. Besides, they're Russians not Germans. They would be more likely to use a potato powered laptop.
Overclocking (Score:1)
Re:Running Windows? (Score:2)
Does NASA trust there computers with Windows?
They use Windows on the laptops they carry up with them. It's not like they'll be running anything mission critical on them. They probably just want to get in a few rounds of Diablo II in between spacewalks.
Re:My Question (Score:2)
Burn out? Naw, it'd just shimmer a bit and then disappear...
--K
(Sorry, had to.
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Re:Nice list of programs (Score:1)
No wonder my computer crashes all the time...
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dd if=/dev/random of=~/.ssh/authorized_keys bs=1 count=1024
Re:Oh, no... (Score:1)
'Rules' for things like quoting have changed in the last few decades - I think it's explained in the Jargon File.
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Computer Positioning (Score:2)
Approved Software! (Score:1)
What, no Solitaire?
Comment removed (Score:3)
Did you spot the euler-quaternion converter (Score:4)
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Re:After The Slashdot Cruiser (Score:1)
Hmm.... the museum piece "Enterprise" being renamed "CmdrTaco"... are you trying to say something here?
Re:Oh, no... (Score:1)
And, yeah, the rules for quoting have been slipping (sadly) over the years, but the exceptions that are allowable have to do with changing the meaning of an actual quotation. In this case, quotation marks are being used to set off a word as interesting, not as an indicator of something someone actually said. So, the punctuation-inside rule should hold here.
I can't believe I'm still paying attention to this non-thread... (*grin)
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Linux on the Shuttle (Score:1)
There have been articles published in the past about Linux being used to operate experiments on the Space Shuttle. Some of the experiments have self contained computer systems for managment and data collection. Linux was ideal here.
Now, I'd like to see a Linux/Apache web server in orbit. Even if it feeds nothing but text telemetry data, it would be impressive. Hmm, is there a TLD for LEO yet?
Re:Duct Tape In Space! (Troll?) (Score:1)
Mir is a masterpiece of budget engineering, it has outlived it's expected lifespan by years. Could any other nation produce anything so successful? Not on current evidence.
Your comment was uninformed, unfunny and - to some - flamebait.
Consider yourself lucky to still be at 2.
Re:Maybe not but, (Score:1)
Anybody who remembers more of Physics I than I do have an answer?
Re:Maybe not but, (Score:1)
I'm pretty sure the Shuttle uses IBM ThinkPads. I'm very sure the ISS does. This probably means that the track point on the keyboard is the preferred method of control. Of course, the astronaut would have to be strapped down or they would drift away every time they touch the keyboard.
Re:Oh god, i now fear for my life (Score:2)
Re:Running Windows? (Score:2)
Re:Hrm... (Score:1)
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Re:Running Windows? (Score:1)
Why'd you ask?
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dd if=/dev/random of=~/.ssh/authorized_keys bs=1 count=1024
or segfaults (Score:1)
Wiener Power!! (Score:1)
Mission Critical Computers and the GRiD (Score:1)
That said, there have been a number of portables flown in space. In particular, does anyone remember a time when a GRiD was the machine to have in space. Now that was a laptop. It seemed to be space-worthy right out of the box. Too bad it went away before I had the money to acquire one.
Re:storm (Score:1)
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Re:Maybe not but, (Score:1)
Re:Maybe not but, (Score:2)
Resume (Score:2)
Re:Why they run Windows... (Score:1)
Y'all may be too young to remember this, but (Score:4)
We all had a good laugh when the 16lb. beast became the first truly weightless laptop.
Well, considering the shuttle is mid-70's tech... (Score:1)
Anyway, it was just a thought...
Capt. Ron
Re:After The Slashdot Cruiser (Score:2)
http://www.nasawatch.com/humor/shut tle.ads.html [nasawatch.com]
Re:To save you all some time whining... (Score:1)
And looks like they use Visual Basic too... (Score:2)
Ew.
What? No DOOM? (Score:2)
Re:Duct Tape In Space! (Score:2)
Remember Apollo 13? Duct tape was essential for assembling that temporary CO2 filter that helped keep the astronauts from choking to death.
Don't you keep a roll of duct tape around your house "just in case?" The astronauts sure do - they can't just run out to the hardware store for some when they're in Earth orbit...
Eric
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Re:After The Slashdot Cruiser (Score:4)
Not nearly long enough. Send JonKatz to check out Europa, then maybe we'll be free of FUD for a while.
Steven
Re:I don't want to see the Russki's power supply (Score:3)
How could anyone not picture an earnest little space dachshund [umanitoba.ca], plodding away on a treadmill?
Re: Using a Mouse in Space (Score:2)
- - - - - - - -
"Never apply a Star Trek solution to a Babylon 5 problem."
Sigh. (Score:2)
I might expect such a comment from a five-digit-account-number poster like yourself. Slashdot isn't what it used to be. Far Side pics? On Slashdot? How frivolous! I remember back when the only acceptable allusions on Slashdot were to man pages, Linus quotes, and kernel source. What a soft lot we've become...
Besides, any real geek would have thought up a Monty Python reference.
--Lenny, who owns a dachshund
Re:Sigh. (Score:3)
Geez, you over 2000-account-number guys are touchy, aren't you? Why, back in my day...
Re:Network security and Space Internet (Score:2)
You mean like how it was for Wen Ho Lee? Yeah, perfect security - at least until the lusers come along.
Re:Overclocking (Score:2)
There wouold approximately 0 heat dissipation due to convection.
Your chip would cook itself almost immediately.
Re:Overclocking (Score:2)
Even if I were in a vacuum right now, I would still be comfortable in terms of temperature because I would be radiating heat away approximately fast as I was absorbing it. Besides, if space is so warm, why do the astronauts have heating devices in the suits they wear for EVMs?
Yes, space is as warm as I think, at least when the sun is shining upon you. When you are in sunlight, the radiant heat which you absorb is quite enormous, quite a good deal more than you radiate away, even if you have good thermal transfer between your "light" side and your "dark" side. The amount of heat which you radiate away is fairly constant, no matter how much radiant heat you are absorbing at a given time.
If you were in a vacuum, and you weren't in space, you could be correct, however, in space, in the presence of a heat radiating body, such as the sun, will increase your temperature enormously, in the absence of such a thing, you eventually radiate all your heat away, save what little heat is transferred to you by collisions with the few molecules that are present in interplanetary space.
IIRC, they're not heaters, but more "temperature regulators." Basically they either absorb heat or generate heat as necessary to keep the intrepid spacewalker from burning up at 400 degrees if he's in sunlight, or pretty much freezing to death in the event that he's in shade. However, most particles that one finds in space tend to be highly energetic, since they tend to move at a good fraction of the speed of light. However, there are very few of them per unit volume, and so one's trusty thermometer becomes decidedly un-trusty, and registers a temperature reading somewhere below -200F, unless, of course, the probe is in direct sunlight, in which case, depending on the design, the matter which makes up the probe gets nice and hot and registers quite a warm temperature.
In the end, the "temperature" in space doesn't really apply anyway, since temperature is a measure of the energy level of a molecule, and space has no molecules. The only reason Earth has a temperature is of course because all of the molecules have a temperature, and the density of those molecules is such that they tend to bang into the temperature sensing device quite a lot.
Hope that clears it up, -Nathan
Care about freedom?
Re:Sigh. (Score:3)
Blue Screen? (Score:2)
Re:After The Slashdot Cruiser (Score:2)
Can you imagine the furious flame backlash if I had said "Let's paint the shuttle with a Microsoft icon?" :)
Re:Blue Screen? (Score:2)
Remember, it doesn't *MATTER* what the OS is capable of, only that the apps they need to run run with acceptable reliability.
These aren't flight control computers with realtime acquisition and feedback.. those are custom built.
They are PC's, for general purpose stuff.
Velcro on the pad (Score:2)
Remember Apollo 13?
Remember Apollo 1? Velcro in a high-pressure, high-oxygen environment is what turned a small spark into a fire that killed three astronauts.
Fine, how about... (Score:3)
Although inhabitants of nearby planets might catch a brief flash...
A conventional mouse wouldn't work.. (Score:2)
If you need proof, try this:
Turn your mouse upside down (or on its' side, any orientation that's not normal), and place a book over the bottom, then move the book around.. you'll notice that the screen pointer doesn't move..
Ball point pens don't work in zero G either, for similar reasons.
Optical mice would be a different story
Re:Y'all may be too young to remember this, but (Score:2)
"APPLE EYES ONLY Information section - Apple Need-To-Know Confidential"
Re:overclocking in the vaccuum of space (Score:2)
Not much, cooling devices for CPUs rely on conductive and convective methods of transferring heat away from the CPU. In the vacuum, which I imagine is what you meant by the 'coldness of space' the only available method of heat transfer is radiative. And for a running CPU this isn't much.
Re:My Question (Score:2)
Re:Running Windows? (Score:2)
No system is "mission critical" until the mission relies on it.
History has shown that it can come down the the number of plastic bags on board. If these systems are "unimportant" to the mission then why are they on board?
So they're somewhere between "useless mass" and "mission critical." Sooner or later, a mission's success may hinge on the operation of some or all of the computers onboard, perhaps to a purpose that was not forseen in the mission planning phases.
Think different (Score:2)
Laptops? I would have imagined thinks like that personal assistant floating ball that Slashdot said NASA found in Star Wars.
Imagine computers around you, portables, projection screens, holograms, keyboards on your trousers, shaped as a ball, a tube, wahtever, but no laptops.
__
Re:A conventional mouse wouldn't work.. (Score:2)
Some have lots of room within the ball compartment, so if gravity isn't pulling the ball to the hole, the ball falls (or floats) away. Other designs have a tight ball compartment, so they're not affected.
(Hope this message isn't filtered as pr0n, with all this talk of tight balls)
Re:Velcro on the pad (Score:3)
The Offical findings [nasa.gov] include
The only mention I can find of velcro in the whole report is when velcro straps burn, but this is some 15 seconds after the start of the fire, so they're obviously not the cause.