Mir Lives 153
hyperstation writes "An article at abcnews.com says that Mir will stay up, thanks to a $27 million donation (that's 750 megarubles) from Russia. Look's like they're not broke after all." *sigh* Someone wake me up when Mir finally falls to the planet.
Mir Is Boring (Score:1)
At least we don't have to worry about splashdown.. (Score:1)
Mathematically, there's about a 3 in 10 chance a falling MIR station would hit land.
Then again, I'm happy. I'm trying out for Destination: MIR.
Talk about the potential for a real Geek In Space
Great. (Score:2)
If they run out of cash, it falls out of the sky. Period. Every time they run out, they say it's gonna fall. Every time someone gives them money, it stays in orbit longer.
That about sums it up.
Mir and it's usefulness and Russia (Score:1)
Also isn't Russia the same country that can't even pay it's citizens and massive food shortages and lack of adequate housing? What is their possible motivation?
Mir = Televangelist? (Score:1)
Someone gave Roberts his money, and so did Mir. Personally, it seems everyone is waiting for to see if God really will call Mir home.
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1,2,3,4 Moderation has to Go!
Theres a fungus among us. (Score:1)
Rename it: (Score:5)
"The Amazing Space Yo-Yo!"...
Its up, its down... (Score:1)
Someone needs to make up their mind. This is a government project! It shouldn't hit the news until everything is final. This is crazy!
Seriously, they need to bring it down. Its outlived its time, and the ISS will take its place. Out with the old, in with the new. She had her time, and now its over.
-- Don't you hate it when people comment on other people's
Re:Great. (Score:2)
With the recent addition of
Guess I'm leaving, last one out turn off the light lock the door.
Get it away! (Score:1)
This sucks (Score:2)
How can Russia donate money to keep up the Mir? (Score:2)
oh boy... (Score:1)
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It's becoming quite the soap opera (Score:1)
Wrong, Russia is still broke. (Score:1)
Not quite. Russia's military only gets the equivalent of $3 billion in funding, whereas the U.S. military gets over $600 billion. This bailout for the Mir is only worth about three fighter planes; pretty stingy by our government's standards.
Keep it around (Score:1)
Maybe they should just turf it.
Why not? (Score:1)
why? (Score:1)
I don't see why they saved MIR, call me a troll, but i personally think that that money could have done more help to the International Space Station, albeit, it is only $27 million dollars, but that could at least help pay for some of it.
Re:At least we don't have to worry about splashdow (Score:1)
oh please (Score:1)
Re:Get it away! (Score:2)
Mir will stay up... until February... (Score:1)
mir cashing? (Score:1)
now could we collect enough money from slashdot collective, buy the thing and then crash it? da?
Run, Human! (Score:2)
Russia has no money, but many assets (Score:1)
Is there a point to keeping Mir alive? (Score:4)
(I ain't saying, I'm asking.)
Re:Keep it around (Score:2)
//rdj
Something doesn't add up here.... (Score:3)
Mir Will Fall It's Just A Question Of When (Score:1)
Space tether (Score:1)
What about Mars? (Score:2)
Honestly though, I don't like the idea of space fungus crashing into the ocean. You think oil spills are bad, how about bacteria that didn't even originate on this planet. Which sounds more harmful to the environment?
Re:How can Russia donate money to keep up the Mir? (Score:1)
You mean a diving bell (Score:1)
Re:At least we don't have to worry about splashdow (Score:1)
Re:At least we don't have to worry about splashdow (Score:1)
Don't know why I'm asking (Score:1)
the remains of it... (Score:1)
Die in peace (or is it pieces?
This isn't new... (Score:2)
-- Don't you hate it when people comment on other people's
Typical chick remark (Score:1)
Hey Taco, did you ever consider renaming this to soapdot.org, maybe get a tie in with all the soaps, add some sections on Titans and Passions.
Maybe we can broaden the demographics here, and get some more chicks posting.
Ghod knows I have enough chicks in my life, but I feel for the less fortunate geeks that are making do with Rosie their palm pilot.
Why hasn't Mir gone to the pr0n industry? (Score:2)
i'm pretty sure (Score:1)
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Peace,
Lord Omlette
ICQ# 77863057
and when someone transitions (Score:1)
let's not...
--
Peace,
Lord Omlette
ICQ# 77863057
The Russian Mafia is not broke... (Score:1)
It _lives_? (Score:1)
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Re:At least we don't have to worry about splashdow (Score:1)
Thats funny, I always had the impression that they were all 'jocks' - eg ex-air force, gung-ho all-American heroes. Am I completely wrong? Very probably.
Ugh. Prepare the ICBMs. (Score:1)
It's up again? (Score:1)
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Re:This isn't new... (Score:1)
This comes from a CNN.com article [cnn.com] that the yahoo article (mentioned above) came from.
And here/A&g t; is the slashdot article mentioned above. [slashdot.org]
-- Don't you hate it when people comment on other people's
Re:Is there a point to keeping Mir alive? (Score:3)
Sure, parts are only a small part of the total cost, but the Russian space program (while on hard times of late) is still doing well with existing technology and at quite reasonable prices. A manned soyuz is about $3.5 million, +$0.2million for propellant, +$5million for mission control/year, +$0.6 for launch is well under $10million. Add on the cost of parts/repair, and it's still a steal.
Actually nothing has changed... (Score:1)
dock it.. (Score:1)
at the moment it looks like they will let it again 10 Years in space :)
*bang*
Mir Logic (Score:1)
while (){
live;
announce_death;
}
die "Screaming heap";
Mir is important, even if it's worse off than an A (Score:3)
Wouldn't it have sucked for the first Mars mission people to find this out, oh, halfway across?
NASA's philosophy is to be as certain as possible that everything must be perfectly planned before the first countdown. Baikonur's philosophy is "we'll jump off that bridge when we get to it." Guess what: the Mars mission will need a mix of both philosophies.
Every new Mir disaster is another data point, another caveat, for the Mars mission. Let's
give some praise for the Russians for putting up with these disasters (and the American haughtiness they inevitably provoke). We need it.
(Next Mir story: Mir held hostage by mutant fungus. Neo-organism demands net connection and account on
ya ya ya (Score:1)
NEWS: cloning, genome, privacy, surveillance, and more! [silicongod.com]
what costs money? (Score:1)
"You'll die up there son, just like I did!" - Abe Simpson
Re:Mir Logic (Score:1)
while (<investor>) {
should have been the line.
Bummer! (Score:2)
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What about the body? (Score:3)
I thought some rich dude, who was funding Carl Sagan's sisters' SETI research, died up there or something.
The Russian Space agency could start a TV show. (Score:1)
The first episode would be on how to repair solar panels and navigate a Progress freighter into the Mir docking port.
Next week: Scrubbing that furry space fungus off of the control panels!
Mir... the first I.S.S. fixer-up-er? (Score:2)
Usually the biggest hurdle in space exploration is simply getting out of the gravity well of Earth. MIR is already up there. Isn't there a way that it could be used to some benifit for ISS (even if it is only stripped for spare parts)? (or as a last line of evacuation if all else fails?)
Their boobs would look funny, or explode (Score:1)
Most space stations run at an atmospheric pressure at about half sea level, though the oxygen partial pressure is of course normal.
So, if you can imagine what would happen to a highly pressurized bag of silicone or saline at lower pressures, pop!
Though I'm not very familiar with much porn (though I did really like Net Dreams, did anyone see that? It even had a plot, a cheesy midget and a fistfight, it rooled), does Vivid use normal breasted women or the pneumatic ones?
Getting metaphysical about Mir.... (Score:2)
Re:Something doesn't add up here.... (Score:1)
"I shall gladly pay you Tuesday for a MirBurger to-day."
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Re:Mir = Televangelist? (Score:1)
As I understand it, lots of people in Russia are rather wistful for the old communist days, when everyone feared Russia and it was a global power. They are depressed and unconvinced by the virtues of capitalism.Therefore, anything that can help them hold their heads up high is good for Russia. Hell, Mir might even contribute to keeping the communists at bay just now - when your army hasn't been payed for 6 months and your fighting a pointless demoralising war (Chechnia) you've always got to be worried about revolution. So, for this reason, Mir may actually serve a useful purpose, in that it may help Joseph Bloggsov stay proud of 'Mother Russia'.Never underestimate the power of symbols.
Re:Actually nothing has changed... (Score:1)
it's been up longer than it was supposed to, it's a money sink, and i think adding streaming video from outside the ISS is a better use of 27 mil. imnsho.
and definately guinness.... yummy.
Doesn't sound like a very good investment... (Score:1)
$293,478.26 Per Day
$12,228.26 Per Hour
$203.80 Per Minute
$3.40 Per Second
Re:Mir and it's usefulness and Russia (Score:3)
Second, Russia isn't doing nearly as badly right now, thanks to the threefold increase/barrel in the price of oil. They have incredible problems with infrastructure (especially with factories falling apart), but that's an argument in favor of continuing the program, not shutting it down.
Third, fundamental domestic problems have never stopped any other country from pursuing these high-profile feats of national pride (and maintaining MIR is a much different and cheaper proposition than building nuclear weapons like Pakistan and other countries are doing). Why should it stop Russia now?
Re:Don't know why I'm asking (Score:2)
Russian Bluff? (Score:1)
Cheapskates!
Re:Don't know why I'm asking (Score:2)
Re:dock it.. (Score:1)
Sigh (Score:2)
"When I was a little kid my mother told me not to stare into the sun...
The MIR Telethon (Score:3)
Ed: That's right Carol, this just in the Russian Government has pledged 750 - that's right 750 million Rubles to help keep MIR in orbit...
Carol: Wow!
Ed: Yes, but this will only help keep it going until February folks, so we can't stop now, our goal is 3 Billion Rubles....
Carol: Thanks Ed, a big show of thanks for the Russian Government for that tremendous pledge, wow [applause] now , ok, we challenge anybody out there, if you can match the Russian pledge we'll send you not only the CD BUT also this coffee table book "MIR Photography" so pick up that phone now, call 1-800-SAVE-MIR and make that pledge, is easy to do, operators are - yes, we have operators just waiting for your call, so do it now, we've only got another week and....
MIR: euthanasia? (Score:2)
It is an amazing achievment keeping a space station around for so long. It has taught cosmonaut's alot about living in space and it has contributed greatly to research science.
I say keep it going as long as possible. Just because it's not new doesn't mean it can't contribute. I mean it's already built and running. Nothing to shoot up into space just repair it and keep going, Maybe build onto it.
Why not scrape that overpriced ISS and spend the money on expanding and improving Mir?
Could it be American arogance? Just because the US did not build it does not mean it's not worthwhile.
While boring it is still neat (Score:1)
Mir will eventually fall when. . . (Score:2)
Improving Aim (Score:1)
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....until feburary (Score:2)
The first line if the article.
Wasn't this the plan last week when you posted a very similar article?
Mir will crash and burn soon.
A message from the fungus above (Score:1)
No human had donated money to keep our space craft up here. We have deliberately hacked one of your servers and emailed a message to the Russian government that we are sending money to them. We needed some extra time so that we can complete the boosters we have been building. By the time you are reading this, we should pass by Mars. It has been a memorable 10 years with you. Thank you for your space craft.
Kronos
Leader of the Space Fungus race
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Note before you reply: I can't remember if it was 10 years anymore... it's been waaaaay to long.
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article title (Score:2)
I see a sequel of a sequel here.
Re:house? (Score:1)
After all, the guy found it interesting enough to post it, yet he acts like he's completely bored with it. Um, hello, tap*tap*tap, is this thing on.
Sigh (Score:1)
A) Let it die and spend the money on food
b) Bring it down safely so someone in Singapore doesn't have it fall on his house.
c) Spend the money to prevent your aging nuclear arsenel from blowing up in your face.
d) Spend enough money to buy each citizen a loaf of bread on keeping it alive.
Btzzz, wrong. The answer is D.
Nationality can make some nations that can't afford to feed it's own citizens do some really stupid things.
Space Fungus (Score:2)
Wow! It sounds like you really want a close encounter with the space fungus. Don't be depressed! It'll fall back to earth eventually!
Re:Mir and it's usefulness and Russia (Score:1)
Besides, the space program is an important part of international diplomacy and is necessary for that reason alone.
How does it effect the balance of power to have an operational space station? Seems slighly hollow.
ISS+Mir (Score:2)
This would give Mir it's supply link and orbital stability, and instantly give ISS a larger work area and array of instruments.
Admitedly, Mir's instruments are old and it's living quarters not exactly to Hilton standards. it also has it's fongus problems and other issues. but being grafted onto ISS could make Mir an adequate backup solution for both instrumental issues and life support.
Karma karma karma karma karmeleon: it comes and goes, it comes and goes.
Re:At least we don't have to worry about splashdow (Score:1)
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Re:The MIR Telethon (Score:1)
Govt. to private corporation (Score:1)
AFAIK, Mir is now "privately" run by the RSC Energia corporation, which used to be the Soviet space agency.
So if the Russian government has given RSC Energia a load of cash, the situation is analogous to Congress allocating funds to NASA for the International Space Station. Or, to use your own analogy, it's like your mom allocating lunch money to you :)
Re:Is there a point to keeping Mir alive? (Score:3)
Quite apart from any of the justifications you'll hear (of which, let's be honest, politics & prestige are the only 2 that count), from a pushing-the-bounds-of-human-knowledge viewpoint the single best reason to keep Mir up there is that, yes indeed it's absolutely vital we understand what goes wrong on long-duration space facilities and how we deal with it.
Think of all that was learned in Mir's fire, and the crash. Ignore the *causes* of those disasters for a moment, and think of what was learnt:
Now think about what's been learnt about maintenance, repair techniques, re-supply, logistics, human psychology in crisis situations... The damn thing is an extremely valuable resource and there's *no way* it should be allowed to re-enter. It would even be worthwhile abandoning-in-place and *attempting* to revisit in 10 years time - even if the attempt fails (I'm thinking of the troubles re-visiting the abandoned Salut 7 here), you'd learn a lot about what's needed just in making the attempt.
Of course they need to keep it flying... (Score:2)
How else will NBC get to broadcast "Destination Mir"?
Maybe RSC Energia should hit up NBC for some buck$!
When Corruption Works (Score:2)
Sardonica enabled: Isn't it just terrible the way IMF, World Bank and internal Russian money slated for Russian needs ends up in the Gibralter bank accounts of the oligarchs, as, of course, it should -- but when the time comes for the space bureaucracy to be given a little money so they can go through the charade of an international space station with NASA, they don't just turn the money they've been given over to NASA the way they should -- they keep that awful, dirty, creaky, smelly, garbage-heap of a "space station" MIR alive and victimize the one true and only international space station?
Sardonica disabled: NASA, even more than most other bureaucracies, abhors competition. The last thing NASA can tolerate is a major political embarrassment. The worst political embarrassment imaginable is some other, more poorly-funded organization obviously outperforming NASA. Another Shuttle disaster is more politically tolerable than that because NASA can always say, "You just didn't give us enough money so we were forced to cut corners." the way they can do with anything just but only to the extent that it is unique, no matter how wasteful or stupid it is.
So, the uniqueness of the space station is absolutely essential to NASA's politics. Any alternate space station means NASA will continually have to be thinking about what the competition might be doing that could prove embarrassing.
NASA is the true heir of Soviet central planning.
Mir International Historic Site (Score:2)
This also would be a good platform for studying the deterioration of materials in space, (never mind the fungi on board).
Re:Is there a point to keeping Mir alive? (Score:2)
I understand what you're saying, but it seems to me that you describe what we have learned from Mir. What I'm wondering is whether it's really worth it to keep it up there. IANARS (I Am Not A Rocket Scientist), but I don't think it really can be "abandoned-in-place" without ongoing maintenance funding, of the sort that keeps getting scraped up at the last minute.
It seems people missed the point. (Score:2)
Right here people has talked more and more on bringing it down without question.
Yeah it may live theoretically five years more. But do the risks cost it? The station is really old. Everything there is overaged. Even the main structures. Cosmic radiation does not forget about them also... So upon a certain moment such things turns from national pride to a useless weight and a dnagerous headache. I believe that, if the station was not so battered by lack of funds then it could have lived some years more. No one cared and the station got not only older but also beaten... Right now I consider that it is a risk to hold it up there, as future glitches may be too serious to be controlled. Besides if the real wrong thing happens, then it will be a serious financial burden to the Federation. And a blow in prestige.
Frankly, if I was the decisionmaker I would not send the station into sea. No, I would send it to the Moon. This stuff is somehow a museum. Maybe we cannot bring it down in one piece. But today we can send it only in little pieces today. But future generations would manage to do this in a much better way and save this monument of Mankind.
Why bother with space exploration. (Score:2)
Re:Mir and it's usefulness and Russia (Score:2)
Re:At least we don't have to worry about splashdow (Score:2)
~luge
Re:house? (Score:2)
As I said elsewhere, crack addicted means you have your head shoved so far up your ass that you cannot smell anything but your own crack.
This seems to be a pre-requisit for moderation anymore. What a fuck-hole!
Or as Homer would say ... (Score:2)
Mir Power Plays (Score:2)
The Russian Space Agency is much less in charge of their space program than are the two main contractors (which became private companies after the breakup of the USSR), Energia and Krunichev. These companies can see the writing on the wall: the vaunted Russian space program is no more. They're not sitting around, though. They know that they need to generate business outside of Russia. Energia formed MirCorp as a Western company to attract investment dollars, yes, but also as a base for networking with the European and American aerospace industries.
Some of the constant tug-of-war over ISS and Mir is Energia and Krunichev competing cold-bloodedly for scarce aerospace dollars. Another part of it is these companies singly or jointly playing chicken with the Russian government over the operation of Mir. By forming MirCorp, then holding out their empty pockets, they perform a neat hat trick of appearing to make every effort to attract Western dollars, of appearing to make every effort to become fully privatized and self-sustaining Westernized companies, and of increasing their power to pull the rug out from under the Russian government -- which after all still technically runs the space program and can't bear to see it shut down.
The realistic prospects for MirCorp as a permanent source of funding for Mir were always extremely dubious. Even if you assume that everything in Russia costs less, US$50M is still a ludicrously low figure for the cost of a single Soyuz mission. The true cost to the government of Russia must be several times that. It follows that MirCorp is essentially a way to get hard Western currency directly into the pockets of the Russian space industry, rather than the just-barely-not-worthless Russian government scrip.
If you see another report that Mir is coming down, read it carefully. It's probably a calculated political maneuver, more than hard-and-fast news about the station's fate.
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