Google And NASA To Collaborate On Technology 151
Mike Peel writes "The BBC reports that Google will be assisting NASA with new technology from a campus facility in the NASA Research Park at Moffett Field." From the article: "As part of the venture, Google will develop one million square feet of real estate at the Nasa Ames research centre. The centre, built in 1939, has been at the heart of the US space program for many years, conducting research into the Apollo moon missions between 1963 and 1972. Nasa recently unveiled plans to make another moon landing by 2020. Examples of areas of potential collaboration include the development of new types of remote sensors and improving analysis of engineering problems." More details available from the official press release and MSNBC.
One small step for man (Score:5, Funny)
Re:One small step for man (Score:4, Funny)
Re:One small step for man (Score:2)
Re:One small step for man (Score:2)
Old News. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Old News. (Score:1)
Chair upgrade! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Chair upgrade! (Score:1, Funny)
Google Moon (Score:2)
Re:Google Moon (Score:1)
Re:Google Moon (Score:2)
Re:Google Moon (Score:1)
Moffett (Score:5, Insightful)
It also might be of interest to note that Moffett is right next door to a former NIMA (NRO) facility and given Google's interest in mapping the surface of the Earth and other remote sensing activities, might be pretty convenient.
Re:Moffett (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Moffett (Score:2)
Perhaps its good that I turned down that job offer at Stanford last year?
Re:Moffett (Score:1)
Re:Moffett (Score:5, Funny)
Reasoning (Score:4, Funny)
Just a real-estate leasing deal... (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/12
Re:Just a real-estate leasing deal... (Score:2)
Where did Velma go to work after Scooby Doo? NASA.
Where will Dib go to work after Invader Zim [mwctoys.com]? Google.
<sigh> and what ever happened to Penny (Inspector Gadget) ...
Re:Just a real-estate leasing deal... (Score:1)
Re:Just a real-estate leasing deal... (Score:2)
There's a very important piece of information in the article:
"The agreement would allow the company to design and develop a campus for whatever needs it envisions.
Google has been hoping to expand for at least a year, combing the Bay Area for suitable sites, including downtown San Francisco and San Jose."
I guess they took the hint from George Lucas [sfgate.com]
Congratulations Google (Score:1)
3 cheers for Sergey and Larry!
"Do no evil!"
"Do no evil!"
"Do no evil!"
Re: Congratulations Google (Score:1, Funny)
Google Universe? (Score:1)
Google to assist NASA .... (Score:3, Funny)
All right, I'm done. Warn your children! This is what happens when your out of work!
GMOONGLE (Score:3, Funny)
Huge freaking text ad on the MOON!
Re:GMOONGLE (Score:1)
Re:GMOONGLE (Score:1)
It's still stuck on "CHA"
Google takes their mission seriously! (Score:5, Funny)
They really are trying to search everything, aren't they?
Re:Google takes their mission seriously! (Score:2)
Re:Google takes their mission seriously! (Score:3, Funny)
Google and Nasa.... (Score:4, Funny)
I mean we all know their main business is adverts
Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
And on that note, I for one, welcome our new space-searching overlords.
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
Re:Makes me wonder... (Score:1)
I'm sure the kids at Google are bright but (Score:1)
Re:I'm sure the kids at Google are bright but (Score:2, Insightful)
Then there is the fact that Google is so adaptable that simply having them on the team gives NASA a boost. Google has done pretty much everything Internet related
Re:I'm sure the kids at Google are bright but (Score:2, Insightful)
"Could" is irrelevant. The processing power is a lot cheaper and easier to come by than the people necessary to do the science. I'm really not feeling this one.
Then there is the fact that Google is so adaptable that simply having them on the team gives NASA a boost.
In PR, maybe, which seems to be what they need most. It's almost like the NASA PHB's were sitting aro
Re:I'm sure the kids at Google are bright but (Score:1)
Re:I'm sure the kids at Google are bright but (Score:1)
about a year ago, where Burt Rutan spoke. He mentioned being in some forum of famous people with the Google founders and others. After the meeting, one of the Google founders approached him and asked some very insightful questions about the commercial space technology. Rutan's reaction was: these guys have really done their homework, they know what they're talking about, don't be surprised if some portion of their billions is invested in tha
Re:I'm sure the kids at Google are bright but (Score:1)
I can see it all now... (Score:5, Funny)
"Pathfinder 1, roger that, wait one..."
"Pathfinder, this is Mission Control, please surf to history.nasa.gov/ap13rb/ch4pt.2.pdf. If you need a copy of Acrobat Reader please advise and I will supply the URL, over..."
Re:I can see it all now... (Score:5, Funny)
"Mission Control, this is Mars Pathfinder 1, we are experiencing minor power fluctuations on bus C and require some diagnostic advice, over..."
Clippy: It looks like your all going to die. Would you like to.....
*silent scream*
Re:I can see it all now... (Score:2)
*blue scream of death*
duh-dunk, tch...
Re:I can see it all now... (Score:2)
Re:I can see it all now... (Score:2)
ASTRONAUT: "Mission Control: Please find me Sea of Tranquility"
MISSION CONTROL: "Cannot find Sea of Tranquility - did you mean Sea of Tranquility Drive ?"
Re:I can see it all now... (Score:2)
Google never should have went public (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Google never should have went public (Score:1)
Re:Google never should have went public (Score:5, Informative)
[1] WaPo: After IPO, Google Founders Plan to Remain in Control [washingtonpost.com]
Re:Google never should have went public (Score:2)
Google Earth vs. NASA World Wind (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Google Earth vs. NASA World Wind (Score:1)
Re:Google Earth vs. NASA World Wind (Score:1)
SETI to GETI (Score:5, Funny)
The Search for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence will be replaced by Google for Extra Terrestrial Intelligence.
Re:SETI to GETI (Score:2)
Google Space Search (Score:2)
|Aliens___________| Search
Better than YETI.... (Score:2)
NASA to announce gShuttle (Score:5, Funny)
I'm feeling lucky's detailes has been announced! (Score:1)
The new "I'm feeling lucky" navigation button will get you to a random planet.
Just a few minutes ago CNN reported some UFO crashing somewhere around Redmond, could you guess where?
Re:NASA to announce gShuttle (Score:1)
Re:NASA to announce gShuttle (Score:2)
It's simple: you just type your destination and click the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button, then you end up there, or at least you end up somewhere.
Re:NASA to announce gShuttle (Score:2)
gMoon (Score:2, Funny)
At last (Score:2)
Re:At last (Score:1)
Re:At last (Score:2)
Is Google the New Bell Labs? (Score:5, Insightful)
Google has formed Google Labs including a lot of folks formerly from Bell Labs. It's interesting that NASA is working with them on the Moon Landing 2.0. Hopefully, without the bureaucracy of an AT&T, Google Labs will be more successful at translating R&D into marketable product. So far, their early track record looks very promising.
Re:Is Google the New Bell Labs? (Score:2)
[disclosure: formerly worked at Bell Labs, speculate in Google stock]
It is a merger... (Score:3, Insightful)
A merger of the buzzwords that drive the investors of today.
Nothing new for NASA (Score:2)
Advanced Search (Score:1)
Your search was limited to: Solar System / Earth.
Would you like to extend your search to other locations?
Please note that it may take up to a couple trillions years for our Googled-Nasa Probes (tm) (beta) to scan the most distant, not yet explored galaxies. Thank you for your patience.
The Perfect /. Story (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The Perfect /. Story (Score:2)
Seriously, we do.
Censorship (Score:1, Interesting)
If people can't find what you published to read it, you perish.
Channel for money (Score:1)
Wonder want they're really paying?
Searching martians (Score:1)
Google Moon, Google Mars (, Google Galactic?) (Score:3, Insightful)
As you head out into the solar system and attempt to settle elsewhere, one of the problems is that you won't be able to google a query back to Earth and get a lightning fast response. (Well, uh, perhaps as fast as lightning, but that could be seconds, minutes, or hours....) You no longer can present every problem to Mission Control and wait for an answer. And you probably will not have trained for every scenario.
Survival of a small colony of smart people on the Moon or Mars could partly depend on taking large portions of your planetary knowledge base with you and looking for solutions that others have figured out but you haven't. (It also is a form of taking your culture with you.) The trick is to do it without rooms of massive power-hungry clusters, but for a smaller group of users. I can imagine Google working with NASA to pull some of these technologies together. Things like nanotechnology, one of the focal points of work at Ames, will be key to making it happen.
Google's probably getting international leeway (Score:1)
Google-bubble (Score:2, Interesting)
Google expandig out of it's domain...why? (Score:5, Insightful)
But what incredible need does NASA have for a partner to provide search? Sure, data mining is a useful tool for NASA I'm sure, but why do they need Google to actually set up shop there with them to do this?
Seems to me like Google is expanding out of it's domain. And that's not usually a good thing. Pick one thing and do it well, don't try to be Jack of all trades.
NASA has needed Google technology for a long time (Score:5, Informative)
Current archives are merely huge, and off-the-shelf databases are having trouble indexing it all - I've heard of a database holding just metadata (date/time, geographic extent, data type, resolution, format, etc.) for millions of observations where queries were taking tens of seconds, and this was with top-of-the-line commercial database software with all the spatial search bells and whistles.
If anybody can come up with a better way to store and index this stuff, it's Google.
Re:NASA has needed Google technology for a long ti (Score:2, Insightful)
Google = Web pages/multi-media content that is hyperlinked
NASA = Large relational tables storing petabytes of data from sensors and telescopic readings...
The techniques for mining are different in both cases.. when they talk about "Bio/Nano" it refers to entirely new domain.. Its not as easy as plug-n-play with different domains. Agreed, Google has mastered the algorithms for ranking and extracting data from Web-
You mean... (Score:2, Funny)
Beta (Score:3, Funny)
Next: Google and SETI (Score:2, Funny)
Testing is slated to begin in Q4 2005 by searching for intelligent life here on Earth.
Google Moon (Score:2, Funny)
Well, I hope the collaboration does not imply NASA is going to land their ships with the aid of Google's close-range moon maps. Last I heard, they had some 'holes' in their technology.
From NASA ARC Contractor... (Score:2, Funny)
PS when's lunch?
Welcome to nasa.google.com! (Score:2, Funny)
*****searching
404 Not Found -> Back -> Search
*****searching
10 of 1000000000000000000 results found
Froogle results: Would you like to buy a new shuttle? Only $17,000,000.00!
Search results ranked in order:
Aliens found on Mars! -> *CLICK!*
404 Not Found -> Back -> Google Cache
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www. csicop.org/si/8512/face-on-mars.jpg&imgrefurl=http
Larry and Sergei just got a new driveway (Score:2)
Marriage of the year? (Score:1)
Slashdotters, er, I mean Google Zealot must be ejaculating with joy right now.
This is real estate, not technological cooperation (Score:2)
Google is North of Shoreline Blvd, South of Shoreline Blvd is Moffet Field. It used to be a Navy facility, and its most promin
Looking for life on other planets? (Score:2)
This is why we love Google (and hate Microsoft) (Score:2)
With that said, I'm trying to understand Google's roll in this. I don't think it's completely selfless. Considering how much data NASA has to process, I think Google's tools fit right in (since they, too, have so much data th
Re:This is why we love Google (and hate Microsoft) (Score:2)
"Considering how much data NASA has to process, I think Google's tools fit right in . . ."
I remember a TV news piece about NASA not having the capability to process the data in it s collection due to the bandwidth of the tape backup system at the time and the shelf life and quantity of the tapes. This is the sort of data set that Google seems to look for in any market they can conceive of.
Since this data is work of the federal government it should be Public domain as well. The Public would benefit form
That was a misprint (Score:2)
Re:creators collaborate: demise of unprecedented e (Score:1)
Re:Had to say it... (Score:1)
Re:Coming soon!... (Score:1)