India Joins Galileo Consortium 67
ghoul writes "Yahoo! is reporting that both India and China have joined the Galileo Consortium as part of an effort at building a Multipolar world.
Of note is the fact while China is giving money (200 Million Euros) India is giving 350 million Euros(almost half a billion dollars) in parts and services as Indian satellite makers are considered world class. Makes you think with all the outsourcing and stuff maybe America's century is coming to an end and this century will belong to India or China. After all one of them is 1/6th of the world and the other 1/5th."
Good news (Score:1)
Indiana Jones Galileo Consortium (Score:2, Funny)
Re:ONLY AN AMERICAN WOULD WONDER (Score:1)
It's not how much you spend... (Score:5, Insightful)
As a citizen of the USofA I face facts about the huge wastes of money we endure every day, such as:
Getting back to space, it no longer surprises me that the price of several Apollo projects has not taken humans beyond LEO in 3 decades nor given us a real space station, while a few tens of millions in SDIO gave us an SSTO technology demonstrator and one aerospace engineer was able to construct a scenario for a full manned mission to Mars for a fraction of the Shuttle budget. It disgusts me, but it is not surprising... it's all money politics, and the future is sold down the river because it has no constituency while the past chows down at the trough. Kind of like the pandering to old people with "free" drugs while the children whose future is going to be largely determined in classrooms over the next 10 years are ignored beyond mandates on top of mandates which all go unfunded.
Re:It's not how much you spend... (Score:1, Insightful)
Yeah, why not just shoot them. I mean, you clearly don't care in the slightest about the old, who have passed their productive best and so won't produce any tax money, so just line them up and shoot them. But remember to save a bullet for yourself as soon as you get old and useless. Which you will.
And yes, just in case anyone is being really thick, I am being sarcastic.
Re:It's not how much you spend... (Score:2, Interesting)
Keep in mind that it's the old people who have all the money in this country. Of course, some of them have a lot more money than others. You can address this by "redistribution of wealth"... taxing richer and/or younger tax payers to cover the drugs and other medical expenses of the old.
There are no easy answers here... redistribution is unfair, but NOT redistributing causes problems too.
Once concern with providing medical care for the old is that t
Re:It's not how much you spend... (Score:2)
I should have been clearer for overseas audiences (Score:3, Insightful)
As you are not a US resident, you probably don't appreciate the true nature of these programs. I'll list them for you, with my complaints:
Re:It's not how much you spend... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:It's not how much you spend... (Score:3, Informative)
Take a look at these three US Budget plots [bumba.net] http://hairball.bumba
Four items far outweigh all of the others combined: SSA, Healthcare, Treasury (interest on national debt), and Defense. Everything else (including those items you mentioned) add up to diddly. SSA and Healthcare also show no signs of slowing down, and the baby boomers are just starting to retire.
I'm kind of surprised the Howard Dean campaign has't harped more on
Why Agriculture bugs me (Score:2)
My nit with ag subsidies and whatnot isn't necessarily their size, it's their corrupting influence. The amount of money spent is secondary to the damage it does, which can be all out of proportion.
Re:ONLY AN AMERICAN WOULD WONDER (Score:1)
The budget for ISRO (Indian Space Reseaerch Organization) is $ 1 billion.
But ISRO looks like covering a larger scope of work compared to GM R&D.
Direct figures 0.5 Bn and 400 billions do not represent the real proportions of projects. However no denying that there is lot of catching up to be done for people who want to compete USA
Re:ONLY AN AMERICAN WOULD WONDER (Score:2)
Its all that stuff (Score:2, Funny)
Not sure about the outsourcing but you're bang on about the "stuff". It'll bring down any civilization.
Wrong "Galileo" link. (Score:5, Informative)
The European satellite navigation project Galileo is at http://europa.eu.int/comm/dgs/energy_transport/gal ileo/index_en.htm [eu.int].
That's what India and China are getting involved with. Airlines, not nations, get involved with Galileo.com.
Heh (Score:5, Funny)
I haven't had enough sleep today. I read that as "Indiana Jones and the Galileo Consortium." I just had this image of Harrison Ford saying with that ever so famous smile on his face "The old fool was right, the Earth does orbit the sun."
Re:Heh (Score:2)
Same here, except I read it as "Indiana Jones in the Galileo Coliseum." I had the image of Harrison Ford fighting off lions with his whip as the Emperor gave the thumbs-down.
As it slowly dawned on my very fuzzy brain that there was something very wrong with this image, I had the added bonus of "watching" the Roman Emperor morph into Emperor Palpatine with Darth Vader by his side.
No, I haven't been toking on the w
India & China (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't think so. Both of these countries have political issues that interfere with their reaching their economic potential.
Both countries have severe educational, economic and political problems. India has a deeply entrenched bureaucracy and strong Marxist political elements. India has an illiteracy rate about 70%.
China has similar problems, perhaps even worse in
Re:India & China (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:India & China (Score:1)
Re:India & China (Score:2)
Re:India & China (Score:5, Informative)
Erm, that hasn't been true since around 1970.
Indian Literacy Rates:
1951 - 18.33%
1961 - 28.31%
1971 - 34.45%
1981 - 43.56%
1991 - 52.21%
2001 - 65.38%
Assuming another 13% Jump in literacy, India will be at western standards in less than twenty years. It might even be faster than that, because between 1991 and 2001, there was greater change in India as a whole in terms of economic reforms than the whole fifty years since Indian independence before that. In any case, there is already more literate people in India than in the US.
Re:India & China (Score:2)
You are extrapolating in a linear fashion based on the highest growth rate recorded this century. That is VERY unlikely to be valid. It is much more likely that the rate of change will decrease as literacy increases due to the difficulty of inclusion of all groups.
My guess would be something like:
2011 - 74%
2021 - 81%
2031 - 86%
2041 - 89%
2051 - 92%
2061 - 94%
2071 - 95%
Western Europe and the US have literacy rates circa 95%. Some relatively homog
Re:India & China (Score:3, Informative)
No, as I started, there was a large amount of economic and social reforms put in place after 1991 (when the Rao government took power, and instituted massive reforms in not only education, but the economy-- moving from post-Gandhist "lets leave most Indians as farmers", to a different post Cold War reality. Much like China did in 1978, but in a perhaps more accelerated manner)
> Western Europe and the U
Re:India & China (Score:1)
My mom worked in the social sevice dept. of Maharashtra state in India. Part of the Depts duty is to help increase literacy.
Eager officials will add anyone who can draw something resembling signatures to the literacy list. Or simply say "X district (county) added 1000 people to the literate list".. whos to verify ? They conduct literacy campaigns for adults in the same fashion... in 15 days taech them to draw signatures.
This is not a
Re:India & China (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:India & China (Score:1)
What sort of objective statement is this...????
"You know, that guy has had some real trouble passing the exam. Lets give credit to that guy that has passed the exam on his own, and has written some very good answers."
Re:India & China (Score:1)
Re:India & China (Score:2)
Re:India & China (Score:1)
Re:India & China (Score:1)
Article has some misleading numbers (Score:5, Informative)
What the hell are they talking about? With off-the-shelf equipment and a clear sky, you can easily get under 10-foot accuracy (I do on a very regular basis). With averaging and/or fancy equipment you can easily exceed that, too.
If they're talking about accuracy while the military has implemented that signal degredation stuff, it's misleading not to mention that fact. But either way, the military would still be able to do a hell of a lot better than 71-foot accuracy... that's ridiculous.
yeah... i wondered that too (Score:1)
Re:Article has some misleading numbers (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/gps/selective_availab ility.htm
Re:Article has some misleading numbers (Score:1)
A Question about GPS? (Score:1)
A friend of mine had a GPS Unit in Chile, and he said it didn't work the entire time he was there, but in the United States it worked fine. This was several years ago.
Is there less coverage in the Southern Hemisphere?
Re:A Question about GPS? (Score:1)
Additionally, most GPS units come with a basemap for only one continent. In particular, most sold in the US only have a north american basemap. If you too
Re:For a second... (Score:1)
Or is it the Indians? I read today that there was some ceremony regarding the deification of Sakakejewa in Washington? Is that what this is about?
nothing is forever (Score:2)
more articles (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.spacetoday.net/Summary/2003
http://
http://www.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/artic
http://www.dw-world.de/english/0,3367,47
http://english.peopledaily.com
that should quench your thirst!
Re: more articles (Score:1)
http://www.spacetoday.net/Summary/2003 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=%2 F news%2F2003%2F10%2F31%2Fwspace31.xml http://www.spacedaily.com/2003/031030141843.79tqo7 1o.html http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/293 953.cms http://www.dw-world.de/english/0,3367,4789-184676_ W_1017248,00.html http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/200310/28/eng200 31028_126977.shtml
Someone has to say it (Score:2)
*texan voice*So what? we have the other 19/30 of the world dont we?
Re:Someone has to say it (Score:2)
You're assuming he could do the math to figure that out.
USA is pretty damn big its own-self (Score:2)
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/pr i nt
"about half the size of Russia; about three-tenths the size of Africa; about half the size of South America (or slightly larger than Brazil); slightly larger than China; about two and a half times the size of Western Europe"
"world's third-largest country by size (after Russia and Canada) and by population (after China and India); Mt. McKinley is highest point in North America and
Re:USA is pretty damn big its own-self (Score:4, Insightful)
Till now Indias population was that while it had the population the population was not skilled which made it a liability instead of a resource but now the trickle down effect of the nuclear and space programs is being felt in higher levels of education and competency at all levels
Re:USA is pretty damn big its own-self (Score:2)
My comment stands and to clarify I will state that USA may be the next 'sleeping giant' but it still has the best overall infrastructure and political climate for massive economic growth... if we'd all just get off our collective ass (or else we'll end up the way China has been for the last century or two, remembering the golden days).
The recent generations and several following simply
Re:USA is pretty damn big its own-self (Score:1)
So what? In my newly independant country of backyardia, Mount Mccompostheap is the highest point and The Big Ditch the lowest.
what the (Score:1, Informative)
* Throwing out the world "Multipolar". It's also capitalized for extra emphasis.
* Referencing the money values in euros, even though the world standard is dollars. (Even the Yahoo article did it right. But the article writer decided to switch them around).
* Of course, the final sentence that says "perhaps America's day is past" stuff
Of course, when I saw this biased piece of crap article, I immediately knew it was m
Re:what the (Score:2)
* Throwing out the world "Multipolar".
Before Gallileo, the US was the sole provider of a GPS system. Now there'll be another player. I don't see how the term "multipolar" is inappropriate. About the capital M... come on now, how many posts on slashdot are spelled correctly?
* Referencing the money values in euros, even though the
world company loses half world market (Score:1, Offtopic)
The world is sick of hearing the same old song: "We will save your behinds for your own sake".
No one is dupe to the fact that US military behavoir is only market expansion
so that multi-nationals can do business without risking their own behinds.
US military presence is the private police force of US big business.
But India and China are to big to be intimidated by US military presence.
See TIBET and CASHMIRE.
Re:world company loses half world market (Score:1)
wow!!! that's the best westernisation of anything that I have seen in my life
Re:world company loses half world market (Score:1)
to bet and cash mire
The world company is the US Incorporated
logo
"We wipe out who says no, and we exploit who says yes"
Don't tell that to these guys (Score:2, Informative)