Mars-On-Earth Webcams Online 34
mkasei writes: "High in the arctic polar desert sits the Mars Society's Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station. Its first year of operations started about 5 weeks ago. There have been numerous technical difficualties but everything seems to be working now. Today they turned on 2 of 3 webcams so people can spy in on them. The habitat as it is called has two decks. There is a webcam on each deck. A third is to be placed outside facing the hab as "astronauts" egress out of the hab for EVA's in simulated space suits. They are working in collaboration with NASA's Haughton-Mars Project and other organizations to learn what it will be like to live and work on Mars. In the next few weeks they plan on testing out several small rovers and a prototype Mars suit."
Snowball cam? (Score:1)
Most cams with a reasonable amount of viewers seems to have the following.
1) Diary.
2) Screenshots of "moments"
3) The possibility of nudity.
We'll see hpw it goes.
// yendor
--
It could be coffe.... or it could just be some warm brown liquid containing lots of caffeen.
Gee... (Score:1)
That looks more like a geek's computer room than a simulated mars habitat.
http://www.spaceref.com/focuson/marsonearth/marsc
Again, looking more like a geek kitchen than a mars habitat.
Perhaps this is a sinister plot to see how Geeks In Space would survive.. creepy, no?
---
So am I the only one.... (Score:1)
Space suit striptease (Score:1)
Then again, Sigourney herself is getting on a bit...
Re:Did u notice... DUCT Tape (Score:1)
If it moves and shouldn't use duct tape. If it doesn't move and should, use WD-40."
Looks like a Slashdot booth... (Score:1)
(FWIW, I think what they are doing is decent science)
Re:Saturn 5? Was Re:Scientific American article (Score:1)
Re:Saturn 5? Was Re:Scientific American article (Score:1)
Re:Saturn 5? Was Re:Scientific American article (Score:1)
the kitchen units... (Score:1)
The IKEA kitchen units really do it for me (see the photo section)...
(nah seriously folks, why not, a good way to try out technologies and the group dynamic issues, go for it)
Re:Reality TV! (Score:1)
(score -1, offtopic)
Just One Thing. (Score:1)
Polar caps melting... (Score:1)
Whip it good (Score:1)
Re:Great way to bring up kids (Score:1)
What a bachelor on Slashdot. I don't bealieve it.
Re:Expectations... (Score:1)
Re:Great way to bring up kids (Score:1)
What a great way to bring up kids. Send them out to play in their spacesuits. Kids being kids will probably fall over and crack their visors all the time. "Oops, Billy just fell over and killed himself Honey. That is the second child this month!"
As a bachelor I must ask "And the problem is?"
NASA finally has found (Score:1)
All the luxuries... (Score:1)
Re:Cams online... (Score:1)
Cams online... (Score:2)
Re:Saturn 5? Was Re:Scientific American article (Score:2)
NASA designs for a Shuttle-C (basically a regular Shuttle stack with a cargo pod instead of the Shuttle) would also be very near the payload requirements.
Energiya would also work...provided we can figure out how to make them stop exploding.
Saying that it's impossible to build a 100 ton payload rocket is absolutely ludicrous. We did fine thirty years ago, and engineers have gotten smarter since then (by virtue of learning from the mistakes of others.)
Re:So am I the only one.... (Score:2)
Rocks. Maybe some water.
What's on Mars?
Water. Maybe life.
Which is more interesting?
Once you're out of Earth's gravity well, you're halfway to anywhere. We HAVE put up a space station. What we're going to do with it, heaven only knows. If you're really interested in an in-depth exploration of why Mars is radically more useful scientifically than other space endeavors, I recommend "The Case for Mars", by Mars Society's Dr. Robert Zubrin. You can buy the book on their site. It's absolutely superb reading...it explains in detail how to get to Mars, how much it will cost, and why we ought to go.
Great way to bring up kids (Score:2)
Even though there is probably nothing else to do on Mars other than work on having babies, I doubt any woman could churn them out faster than they would manage to kill themselves. There are biological limits here...
Re:Pretty smart marketing idea... (Score:2)
Re:Pretty smart marketing idea... (Score:2)
http://www.marssociety.org
Here's to private enterprise providing the balls to get some work done towards sending humans to Mars. If they have their way, and NASA doesn't scoot its butt into gear, they intend to try to get the funding to go to Mars without Nasa. Join up, some em some funds, take part.
Derek
Pretty smart marketing idea... (Score:2)
I figure they pay a few ladies in skimpy underwear to strip out of spacesuits once in a while and their viewership will skyrocket - then they can reel the suckers in as they do their serious work - when it comes time to spend the billions of dollars a manned mission woul dtake, they'll have better support me thinks because people are de-sensitized to the idea.
Or not - its 6AM, blame father time for my post :0
Re:Reality TV! (Score:2)
Scientific American article (Score:2)
http://www.sciam.com/2000/0300issue/0300zubrin.htm l [sciam.com]
new webcam idea! (Score:2)
|---------------|
Saturn 5? Was Re:Scientific American article (Score:3)
Expectations... (Score:3)
Reality TV! (Score:4)
And how does the system of voting people out work? I couldn't find anything on the site about it.
In Other News: Crushing Defeat After Just 5 Weeks (Score:5)
Thousands of users watched the crew's last agonized struggles over two of the three newly-operational web cams [spaceref.com]. Again, a prosperous project has been killed by the mindless hacking activities of a group of anonymous cowards.