NASA Looking for Bandwidth Sponsorship 178
Neil Halelamien writes "A news release and MSNBC's Cosmic Log report that NASA has a web sponsorship opportunity for companies in return for providing bandwidth support for the two upcoming Space Shuttle missions of Discovery and Atlantis. The missions, scheduled for this summer, are expected to cause 20 to 30 million web site visits each and up to a half million streaming video feeds. The alternative is for NASA to cap the number of visitors. Sponsorship proposals are being accepted through April 13."
Why so many? (Score:4, Funny)
Why? Are they supposed to blow up too?
Re:Why so many? (Score:5, Informative)
Honestly, it's amazing that these craft ever survive.
Re:Why so many? (Score:4, Insightful)
Agreed, but shouldn't NASA also acknowledge that fact and let the people know about it? Case in point, recent "crack" which was discussed on slashdot. Yesterday, I read an article, which states that NASA is downplaying it. May be it is nothing but shouldn't their attitude be more realistic?
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
So NASA has to translate 1% failure into "this is totally safe - will _never_ fail!" for them in order to get any funding.
T
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
Yucca Mountain might reduce costs somewhat, since the plant owners would only pay one-time transportation costs instead of long-term on-site storage.
Re:Why so many? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Why so many? (Score:5, Insightful)
Two shuttle disasters, numerous rocket failures and a HUGE hit movie whose only focus was a botched space mission have helped drive the point home.
But I could be wrong. I doubt it though, and I plan to ask a few people in passing conversation about the subject. Maybe I give people more credit than they deserve.
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
Yup.
Most people, if you were to ask them if it were dangerous would rightly say yes. However in their day to day thoughts think of it as glamerous, not dangerous.
-nB
Re:Why so many? (Score:4, Funny)
> helped drive the point home.
Now, I enjoyed Space Camp as much as the next guy, but was it really a HUGE hit?
Re:Why so many? (Score:3, Insightful)
Do you think you are a fucking rocket scientist!?! Most of them are... you are not smarter than the lowest 5% of people at NASA... why don't you people quit thinking you know everything and leave the worrying up to the
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
While many there are rocket scientists, the people doing the downplaying are PR people A.K.A. politicians by a different name.
-nB
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
Duh? And they speak on behalf of whom?
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
-nB
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
NASA engineers are smart, but that doesn't mean they, or NASA as a whole, aren't capable of huge errors.
Go read the Columbia Accident Investigation Board Report [www.caib.us], especially the bit where it discusses how exactly the institutional arrogance
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
And more so amongst reusable space shuttles it has the best failure rate in the history of mankind. In fact it could be said to set the standard for reusable space shuttle safety.
Well, wait lets see the only other manned program hasn't had a loss of life since 1971... so in a field of two, the s
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
Furthermore, casualties o
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
Although there's been some hairraising moments, that there hasn't been a Soyuz crew death since 1971, indicates a mature spacecraft design whose reliability
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
There hasn't been a *public* Soyuz crew death since 1971, although the USSR was known to have covered up a number of cosmonaut deaths (including one who died
Re:Why so many? (Score:2)
Re:2% is shameful (Score:4, Insightful)
As to destroying stuff, I'd like to see you (even with a bigger budget than NASA) design from scratch a space program as advanced and have fewer failures. Bleeding edge science nearly requires some ammount of failures. The earlier the failure is found the cheaper (in all costs $$ / Time / Human) it is to fix. While it is sad that we've lost people (and equipment), it would be sadder if we lost Kevlar, PyroCeram, and other space program derivitives because we were afraid to do the research. If you were interested PyroCeram plates are awesome! Just don't put them in a microwave oven.
Oh, and on another note: I was one of those kids (6th grade) rooting for the first teacher in space. I (and my class, teachers, and parents) saw it blow up. . . live. My teacher started crying, as did most of us. It was a tough day, but as a result my class did a lot of research and learned a great deal. Something else that would have likely not happened if this desaster did not befall.
-nB
Gotta check those links... (Score:4, Informative)
The link entitled "MSNBC's Cosmic Log" actually points to a story about the coverage of the upcoming solar eclipse from Panama...certainly newsworthy in its own right, but somewhat offtopic here..
In the interest of promoting more discussion, a lot of good info regarding the NASA bandwidth sponsorship can be found here [comspacewatch.com].
Scroll down. (Score:2)
How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandwidt (Score:5, Interesting)
Probably the best qualified to help 'em out would be the p0rn sites ... somehow, I doubt NASA will accept those
offers in exchange for a banner ad on Nasa.Gov ... ;-)
P.S. I noticed Slashdot is offered a Free One Day Pass [slashdot.org] (sponsored by ThinkGeek) - new revenue generator for 'em? Ironically, if you click thru on the article after getting your free one day pass, it says "Posting will only be possible in The Mysterious Future!" - a minor, but funny, typo.
Re:How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandw (Score:2)
Re:How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandw (Score:2)
Re:How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandw (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandw (Score:2)
Cassini [nasa.gov]
Mars rovers [nasa.gov].
Sorry about that.
Re:How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandw (Score:2)
Re:How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandw (Score:2)
Re:How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandw (Score:2)
Re:How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandw (Score:2)
Mmmmm, Space ships AND Hot nekkid chicks....brilliant. Can I award Hulkster the congressional medal of Honor for the suggestion?
Seriously though, perhaps this would be a good time to point out that P2P apps like bit torrent are perfect for this sort of thing, and that perhaps the mpaa and the riaa should just shut the fuck up, because there are some very legitimate uses for P2P.
Re:How do NASA's needs compare to other high bandw (Score:2)
Hulk says save the Medal of Honor for the real hero's. ... ;-)
Hulk happy/content with chocolate chip cookies
NASA needs this (Score:3, Insightful)
Only on a subdomain, but it still shouldn't be possible.
Re:NASA needs this (Score:4, Informative)
If www.nasa.gov went down, I'd be concerned, but let's be reasonable...
-Erwos
Re:NASA needs this (Score:2)
I wasn't blaiming them.
To paraphrase... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:To paraphrase... (Score:4, Informative)
Corporations don't 'get' money (in the way that NASA does), they have to do something in exchange for it (like, sell something) or talk investors into delivering it. NASA, on the other hand, works on tax dollars, which means that everybody in the country (at least, the part of the country that pays taxes, anyway) funds their programs. I think they should have a much bigger budget, but a lot of people don't.
Personally, I think it makes a lot of sense to avoid a potentially more bruising budget fight in front of the administration and congress when some donors (who will very carefully think about who the audience is for these events, and will only provide resources if it makes sense for their business model) are willing to take up some of the slack. Episodic events (like shuttle launches) are ideal for this sort of sponsorship because the need for that overhead is fleeting, and can be tied to a date on a calendar. That works well for people in the PR/marketing side of things, and allows NASA to focus more on actually safely hurling people and equipment into space [slashdot.org] and have to worry less about which project to extend [slashdot.org] or kill [slashdot.org].
Re:To paraphrase... (Score:2)
Re:To paraphrase... (Score:3, Insightful)
And really, saying that corporations get all the money they want is completely absurd. They get all the money that the public wants to give them, which is quite a big difference.
Re:To paraphrase... (Score:2)
Glad to stimulate discussion though...
Re:To paraphrase... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:To paraphrase. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:To paraphrase. (Score:2, Informative)
Here's the spreadsheet I always use when citing government budget figures.
http://www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/fy06/sheets/25_1 2.xls [gpoaccess.gov]
And here's a bunch of other stuff...
http://www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/ [gpoaccess.gov]
Re:To paraphrase. (Score:2)
Oh, and I hesitate to trust even Uncle Sam when it comes to opening word docs and spreadsheets. Infosec audits for him-- um-mm, not so safe.
Re:To paraphrase. (Score:2)
Open Office in Linux is probably as much infocondom as you need to deal with that.
Re:To paraphrase. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:To paraphrase. (Score:2)
But having to scroll through pages and pages on a nonroot document... I think that's worthy of saying PITA and buried to describe the circumstance. I went to OMB and CBO looking for this info, for example.
And if I handed this report to my boss, he'd ask for a summary paragraph at the head that said "by category, we're spending $X on X, $Y on Y,". The summary paragraph for this? Well, from OMB/budget/fy2005, you get collections of topics. Picking a likely one (budg
social security? (Score:2)
Re:social security? (Score:2)
IF the government taxes my income and gives it to other people then it's spending money. Hell, it's the closest thing to a flat tax we have 16% of all money earned by people makeing less than ~80k and 16% of ~80k for everyone else...
And you thought we had a progressive tax system. Hell, the only reason why it's failing is the net income of people making less than 80k is going DOWN.
Re:To paraphrase. (Score:2)
For a non-specific example, if the military awarded a $10 million grant to DARPA, but demanded that they spend $5 million on contracts only with Lockheed Martin, then the DARPA budget would look like it got a $10 million increase while, in practice, it got much less of an increase.
Take an
I agree... (Score:2)
Re:To paraphrase... (Score:2)
Not even close to half, actually. NASA, at the peak of Apollo, got around 4.5% of the federal budget. Now, it gets around 0.75%.
One word: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:One word: (Score:4, Funny)
Are we helping their problems? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Are we helping their problems? (Score:2)
It's worse than that. (Score:2)
These days, they do video broadcasts using higher-resolution point-to-point protocols.
And they wonder why they don't have any bandwidth???
I do have one question for them, though. If they can't afford to do Internet-based television, what makes them th
Re:It's worse than that. (Score:2)
Perhaps because they think that instead of spending loads of money on improving their bandwidth infrastructure for an unusually large two-time spike, it'd be better to spend that money on science and exploration?
BitTorrent (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:BitTorrent (Score:2)
Re:BitTorrent (Score:2)
Re:BitTorrent (Score:5, Informative)
Re:BitTorrent (Score:2)
Dijjer - mod parent up (Score:2)
Re:BitTorrent (Score:2)
Re:BitTorrent (Score:2)
Hmm....on second thought, in-order delivery might be more important than I first thought.
MBone (Score:3, Insightful)
it does just work (Score:2)
Re:it does just work (Score:2)
Nice shuttle roll-out pics (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Nice shuttle roll-out pics (Score:2)
I was there on opening day and the whole museum is pretty impressive in terms of old aircraft. SR-71, Enola Gay, a Concorde, and oodles more aircraft. All fully assembled (save the shuttle since the wings came off to test after the Columbia disaster).
Re:Nice shuttle roll-out pics (Score:2)
While it does look a little bit perspective skewed, only two people sit in the cockpit proper - the pilot and commander. The rest of the crew either sits in chairs behind the cockpit on the flight deck, or in chairs on the mid-deck below.
Here's how the seating on STS-10
Hello Google?..... (Score:2)
Half a million viewers? I think not... (Score:4, Interesting)
Even at a modest 64kbps stream this would consume 32Gbps of bandwidth - that's THREE OC192's or, although the figures vary quite widely (Here's one [ziplink.net]), approximately the entire capacity of the "Internet" as it currently stands.
There are technologies that can handle this using a mere 64kbps in total (e.g. multicast) but they're not widely adopted/available (side note - why??)
You'd think an agency that can put someone on the Moon and vehicles on Mars would have the tech savvy to know off the top of their heads that they're dreaming!
Re:Half a million viewers? I think not... (Score:2)
Someone like an Akamai may be in a position to accomplish the job.
Re:Half a million viewers? I think not... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Half a million viewers? I think not... (Score:2)
First, because only one service can really be using a single multicast address at a time. And there are a limited number of them. Second, you have to get everyone in the path to allow that multicast address. This involves the internet backbone providers (mainly those telecoms like SBC everyone keeps complaining about) and all the internet companies allowi
Re:Half a million viewers? I think not... (Score:2)
Get Comcast to do this in a few major cities and you've made a serious dent in the problem. Comcast would save big money by decreasing traffic on their backbones, and NASA would obviously save a lot too. Now the only question is how to make streaming media proxy-cache friendly.
Hmm, apparently it has been done [wisc.edu]. I wonder if the big ISPs do this?
I wonder (Score:3, Funny)
Multicast feeds of NASA TV (Score:5, Informative)
They could save a TON of bandwidth from multicast enabled users clicking on unicast streaming servers...if only they would POST that it's available!
Re:Multicast feeds of NASA TV (Score:2)
Dear NASA, (Score:5, Funny)
Funding? (Score:2, Funny)
ESM (Score:3, Interesting)
First... (Score:2, Funny)
Manifest Destiny in Space (Score:3, Funny)
Suggestion... (Score:3, Funny)
That'll buy some bandwidth.
Sponsorship is a mistake (Score:2, Interesting)
space porn (Score:4, Insightful)
(Please don't tell me that "we as a society decided to give money to NASA to do it" unless you believe that every government decision represents societal concensus. Consider this: if U.S. tax return forms had a checkbox for NASA, reading something like "Yes, I'd like to direct a dollar of this tax money or contribute an additional [dollar amount, please fill in] ______, enclosed, to NASA," then *that* would be voluntary -- and a good idea, to boot, sez me. It would sure knock down the whole argument I made in the first graf here
Militarily, there's reason for NASA: among other things, they help launch satellites. Defense is a natural imperative, so I'll assert, not just concede, that part. To a lesser extent, though I think it's mostly a budget- and political carrot rather than near-term reality (Hey, what happened to the Bush plan to put folks again on the moon?), NASA research on practical matters of human life in space is somewhat justifiable.
What about abstract knowledge part of NASA? While I realize this makes me an anti-science troglodyte who hates any advance in human knowledge, I don't think that tax dollars should be paying for edge-of-galaxy explorer probes, or satellite telescopes looking outward at the various nebulae -- fascinating and good as those things are! (Golf carts on Mars is easier to swallow, wrt the Life in Space loophole, and so are satellite views of Earth, which show, among other things, how humans affect the planet.)
Note: I'm not saying no one should be interested in or study abstract, non-practical, just-for-insatiable-curiosity things about space -- far from it. I'm only raising the issue of how they're paid for and justified. The government doesn't spend our money very well, and frequently act with it in ways that decrease the national well-being; my biggest gripe about the way NASA money is spent is that it amounts to a tax subsidy, year after year, for a handful of entrenched companies that are technically private but mostly exist because of their (to mix a metaphor) pole position at the public teat.
Ahem.
timothy
advertising? (Score:2)
Ronald McDonald holding up a big mac airbrushed on the shuttle's underside during takeoff?
I have a stupid question. (Score:2)
i'm a sponsor (Score:2, Insightful)
P2P (Score:2)
Instead of supporting this peer to peer technology they have to go begging for help like some homeless hippie. That's sad.
I suggest they get with the times and start promoting technology that could save us all some money. Imagine if every web browser had some efficient P2P software integrated/standard. Without encryption or obfiscation it could be very efficient and legal content, like this, co
Space Inc. (Score:2)
Re:Contact info. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Ask Yahoo! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It's all about priorities (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, let's see now. "Smart Bomb" covers a lot of territory, but take for example the one that we used the most of during the Gulf war. That would be the 500lb GBU-12 Laser-Guided Bomb. It's actually gotten a lot less expensive to produce those, but at the time, they cost about $9,000.
$9,000 isn't even going to but a dent in NASA's desire to run thousands of concurrent
Re:It's all about priorities (Score:3, Informative)
OK, I'll see your $10k and raise you another $10k, just to cover inflation for this year. Doesn't matter unless we're off by a couple of decimal points. That still doesn't even come close to supporting the concurrent traffic that NASA would like to be able to support during a launch. Sure, over a given month that would be nice for typical traffic - that much bandwidth would help them out a lot with visiting school kids and whatnot. B
Re:What's so bad about ad sponsorship? (Score:2)
I'm pretty happy to see them do it. If the popularity of space programs can go to support future space programs, isn't