The Why of Space Program Races 251
Deinhard writes "USA Today is running a story about the "why" behind the newly rekindled international space race. From the article: 'The science of space raises levels in areas such as computers, space materials, manufacturing technology, electronic equipment, systems integration and testing.' While it is a matter of national pride, China in specific also sees this as a way to increase the reputation of its high-tech exports."
Justifying space research (Score:5, Insightful)
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=164516&cid=13
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=165623&cid=13
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=164705&cid=13
Long story short, if you want better computers, research better computers. If you want better materials, research better materials. You shouldn't say "Invest in ways to get into space so we can make better materials". And you shouldn't say "Space research is good because it gets us better computers." It was the computer research that produced the benefit, irrespective of whether that research is "for space" or not. Don't use peripheral gains to justify a different goal. Just say what you mean.
Re:Justifying space research (Score:5, Insightful)
So yes your point is well taken but there is no point for the Chinese uless they can sell those advancements and the space program is their billboard. Whether it works or not is debateable and yet to be seen but thats the point in this case anyway.
The original reason for the space race (Score:5, Insightful)
Having the capability for heavy lift, accurate guidance, precise orbital adjustments and robust communication shows that your ICBMs are probably also just as good, without divulging specific classified technological details.
Basic research is very good (and underfunded and underappreciated) but there is also something significant to be learned when basic research is applied to a rigorous problem, e.g. space technology, before it has to hit the commercial market.
There is the "valley of death" in R&D development: it takes about 25 years from a technology to go from lab discovery to commercial development.
Academic development does the first 7 years, by then it is "old" and professors can't really write good papers or get good grants and tenure dicking around with small things.
Commercial development funds the last 2 years only.
The middle is the Valley of Death and you need some kind of funding source and goal to take technologies from a lab formula to a product of economic significance.
Re:The original reason for the space race (Score:4, Interesting)
That said, why did the USSR give up on the moon after failing to be first, whereas China still wants to go? Your explanation of demonstrating capability might explain China's actions, but not those of the USSR.
Re:The original reason for the space race (Score:2)
Since the chances of the US using an ICBM have dropped to near 0, how about changing the direction of our efforts.
Putting firecrackers underneath trash cans (chemical rockets) are cool and impressive, but they're a terrible way to get things in to space. the Apollo program in the 60s used drafting boards, adding machines, rotary phones, and liquid hydrogen/liquid oxygen rocket engines. We've completely replaced all of those technologies except the rocket engines.
The day someone commits billions of dollars
Re:The original reason for the space race (Score:3, Informative)
We haven't completely replaced all of those technologies.
Drafters still like to use drafting boards, even when they've got advanced CAD tools sitting right next to them. Technology has not managed to obviate the need for a drafting board.
Adding machines? Have you been in a store lately that wasn't run by a multi-national meglomaniac corporation? Many smaller stores and businesses still don't put a PC at the front desk, instead they use big fat 70's looking calculators. Even when they do have PCs, they o
Re:The original reason for the space race (Score:3, Informative)
Wrong limiting case. Orbit is a ballistic arc that continually misses. It's easier to put something in a ballistic arc (Freedom 7, SpaceShip 1) than it is to put something into orbit (Vostok 1, Friendship 7). Anybody that can put something into LEO can build an ICBM, but not everybody that can build an ICBM can put something into LEO.
The USA/USSR space race was pure politics that spun off from missile technology.
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Justifying space research (Score:4, Insightful)
I claim: It does not suffice to show that Y led to good thing X, to prove that Y was a good idea. You must also show that X was better than what not-Y would have led to.
Example: I take $100 from you. I buy a candy bar. I give you the candy bar. I then claim that the Theft-Candy Program was a good idea because it led to you having a candy bar.
You respond: I could have gotten a candy bar for less than $100. Also, there were things I wanted more than a candy bar. If I had spent my own money on my own needs, I would be better off. Therefore, the $100 candy bar was a waste.
Space program proponents: Government takes ~$100e9 from the economy. It bankrolls a trip to the moon. It then notices that some of the things it made with the intent of getting to the mood happen to have uses outside of getting to the moon. It gives people these technologies to people. It then claims the space program was a good idea because it led to us having the technologies.
I respond: I could have gotten those technologies for less than $100e9. Also, there were more pressing needs at the time. If consumers had spend their own money on their own needs, money would have been invested in satisfying demands higher on consumers' priority lists, and they would be better off. Therefore, the $100e9 was a waste.
The only real difference is that people have a "hard time" imagining private industry investing that forgone income in technology, because of public goods' problems, shortsightedness, etc. But those are separate arguments, rarely discussed in the context of the space program. Space program proponents typically stop at "The space program produced good thing X. Ergo, it was better than all alternatives"... which is really a poor argument when you think about it. I didn't start this thread to deny other possible justifications, just to deny that that one is valid.
Let's go over your LCD example again. NASA saw the possibility of LCD technology. More than likely, so did many people not working for NASA. All of those people at the time ruled it out as not being cost effective for consumer and industrial purposes. But NASA wasn't satisfying specific consumer or industrial demands: its solitary goal was to get a man on the moon and get him back safely. That alters the equation. An LCD may be cost-effective for that specific goal. So it produced this thing, which at the time was probably not cost effective for actual other human desires. Had it not happened, those funds would be diverted to higher-ranked cost-effective consumer and industrial demands outside of getting to the moon. Because such funds would then be directly targeted at pressing human desires, rather than getting to the moon, it is very likely they would have yielded something better, as judged by the average person (i.e., the benchmark you used to justify the LCD in the first place).
Now, you do have a point that maybe NASA "saw the light" and "guessed right" that the LCD had more and better uses than entrepreneurs at the time judged. But, like I keep saying, "that's not enough". You have to show that the government's "guessing what satisfies human desires" is correct more often than private entrepreneurs "guessing what satisfies human desires" in the aggregate - i.e., that the Social Security Administration is more efficient than McDonald's. Showing that the government outguessed private industry one time doesn't prove much.
Since private industry directly targets human desires, while the space program was targeting getting to moon; and since private industry guesses consumer desires and cost-effectiveness generally better than the government, the diversion from private industry into a government program not specifically intended to develop better technology likely means we got something not as good as what we could have.
Now, agree or not, do you understand the point I'm trying to make?
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
So if what you really want is the ancillary benefits, you're better to throw the whole $1billion at technologies that give you the ancillary benefits, instead of blowing it on things that don't advance knowledge.
Gr
Re:Justifying space research (Score:5, Interesting)
The Japanese, however, suffered for a long time from a reputation acquired in the early 20th century of being yellow monkeys who merely made bad copies of our great white man's gadgets. The Chinese government actually has an argument for wanting the biggest buildings, a space program etc. Chinese products ARE worth less because they are considered inferior, and Chinese achievements will increase the value of the trademark 'Chinese'. The US does not have that argument.
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
A space race is definitely a better way to show off technology than a world war. But Germany's reputation for quality technology predates WWII, and V2 missiles, just like Japan's image problem (that lasted into the eighties).
Re:Justifying space research (Score:5, Insightful)
There are many reasons to explore space:
1)It is an endeavor that will help bind many of us together - look at the projects we do with other countries that surround space travel, even during the cold war -it was one of the few positive connections we had with Russia
2)We are explorers - we always have been...because we first ventured beyond our cave and discovered fire, and then explored accross the ocean to bring us to a new land, and from there we found that we could fly...space is the next step..this is fuel for our souls.
3)The research done can yield new techniques, technologies, etc that may have a benefit to our everyday lives - just reference my example's above.
4)We may not be alone, and while we won't find life (probably) in this generation or the next ten, we eventually will
5)For the tin-foil hat folks - well some asteroid is bound to destroy us eventually, it would be nice if we were say spread out on different planets.
6)Travelling to space and doing research may bring more knowledge to us about us.
I don't care what we use to justify exploration into space, as long as we get there. Unfortunately, our elected officials and all those people who look at the bottom line want to see immediate benefits. You tell them we should spend 50 billion so we can find out that Mars may have had a couple of water molecules 3 million years and politicians will laugh; on the other hand, you tell them that by doing this research we could find a way to bring resources from Mars that will make our lives easier then they are more likely to consider it.
Re:Justifying space research (Score:4, Insightful)
Flame retardant material used on the space ship to protect the astronauts is used in fire fighter equipment.
Not to mention flame retardant material developed for use in movies.
Microwave (you know the stuff people use to cook with) was invented for astronauts.
No, Microwave was invented when engineers noticed that candybars in the pockets started to melt when they stood in front of WWII radar. (which wasn't a smart thing to do, but in the war you cared more about winning than your own life). After the war those engineers worked on making a product out of it. The first Microwaves were used on luxury ships because they were too large for any home (note that today many home microwaves have a large oven chamber and more power than those first ones)
Now I will grant that some things have come sooner because of space research. However what is the cost in things that we could have now if engineers hadn't been focused on space? This question cannot of course be answered, which is why I reject all arguments that space was really good for us. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't, since we don't have a proper scientific controlled experiment we cannot know.
Re:Justifying space research (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll agree that it's a "Virtual History" question and that there is no way of knowing whether there could have been other paths. But the benefits of space research are proven and should not be ignored. What you're questioning shouldn't be the benefits of space research but, instead, whether there are other better ways to achieve the s
Wrong analogy (Score:2)
Your analogy is wrong. You have consider taking I5, and CA-22. How you never considered teleportation, helicopter, or airplanes. Your thinking is constrained because the US and your state put a lot of money into building roads.
If your state had not put money into roads, and thus your road choices were dirt (not even gravel) tracks, you would have developed other modes of transportation. Because you are not the only one in the position of needing to get home from work, there would be great demands fo
Re:Justifying space research (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Justifying space research (Score:4, Insightful)
"Necessity is the mother of invention." -someone
Space research is a Necessity that will birth the inventions. You're putting the cart before the horse, as they say.
Re:Justifying space research (Score:4, Interesting)
Pushing up against the limits often yields the most interesting ideas. And space is one of those big, cold limits that stoke the fires of our imaginations and our resourcefulness. The cube at Intel can't hold a candle.
Having a bunch of smart folks with a budget and a mission, sitting around in a room is a great investment, in large part because of its peripheral benefits. Not everything's planned. Not all development is linear. And not all significant discoveries are immediately relevant. Science for science's sake. Coz it's cool and we get to reap the benefits of its coolness.
nothing is monocausative (Score:2, Insightful)
you said in a previous post:
"Hey, all you entrepreneurs working on technologies to satisfy actual human desires: STOP. Give us money so we can show the Ruskies where it's it."
Do you deny the strategic advantages of space? Do you have any doubt that Russia was seeking to gain power and eventually dominion over the U.S. in some way? You can validly say that the U.S. space program was run very ineffiently,
Re:Justifying space research (Score:3, Insightful)
Until your the
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
The "Hummer" is not the same thing as the HMMWV (high mobility multipurpose wheeled vehicle). It is a civilian spinoff of the military design that is merely designed to resemble what AM General came up with as a result of the Army's needs. The Hummer is a modified Tahoe, which wasn't originally designed with the military in mind even though there may be some modified ones in military service.
The HMMWV is not a civilian vehicle at all. To make it usable by civilians, it re
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
The Tahoe derivative is the H2, the "Hummer". The H1 is the "HMMWV". They are NOT the same vehicle. The differences I mentioned (interior, paint, no snorkel) are definitely there. I never said the drivetrain, the clearance, etc. were different. Where did I say that?
I never said the civilian HMMWV was significantly different from the military version. I said that the "Hummer" (which is the H2, says Hummer on the grille) is different.
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
Often it is the case that developing som
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
Somehow saying, "We want better weapons." doesn't have the same appeal as all of the idealistic crap that they did say. That's why it's called propaganda. It makes the idea of spending money on guns rather than butter plausible to those who respond to emotional messages.
Your frustration arises out of ignorance of the world and its function. You would have a hard time changing American propaganda, let alone Chinese, so a better plan is to learn to understand it for what it is.
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
All quite reasonable, but China doesn't use those reasons. They're not doing it for velcro and teflon, as TFA says it's "a matter of national pride ... a way to increase the reputation of its high-tech exports." Also, unstated, it gives them an excuse to research ICBM rockets without getti
Re:Justifying space research (Score:3, Insightful)
Correction, you should have said: "I am completely fucking ignorant of history, and have no idea what I'm talking about."
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2, Insightful)
Because the comment is percieved to be against one of the few remaining demographics allowing anti-group comments.
Also acceptable:
It is the nature of christians to explore, conquer, and colonize.
or
It is the nature of males to explore, conquer, and colonize.
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
Re:Justifying space research (Score:2)
Notice to the rest of the world (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Notice to the rest of the world (Score:3, Insightful)
(At least the new director [slashdot.org] went out and said that the shuttle and the space station cost at $250 billion were huge wastes of resources that should have had better uses. There might be hope, yet.)
No space race for US (Score:3, Interesting)
sPh
Re:No space race for US (Score:2, Interesting)
If that should happen, then that would be a sign to me that the US is definitely in decline. I have a hope that this current trend of declining interest in science and engineering will turn around one day and we (the US) will go back to being the creators that we once were. I'm not saying that everyone needs to become a scientist or an engineer (I for one have no talent for it: just a fan). I'm
Re:No space race for US (Score:2)
You'll just have to make arrangements with the Chinese or Russian governments, rather than booking on Pan Am, but at least the computer won't kill you -- not on purpose anyways.
Re:No space race for US (Score:2)
The space program will continue, even if it isn't at the pace that you and I would like, or the pace that the grand claims keep saying. Kennedy was the only one who was able to pull it off
Re:No space race for US (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:No space race for US (Score:2)
Re:No space race for US (Score:2)
Re:you have no evidence (Score:2)
The space race... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The space race... (Score:2)
Re:The space race... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The space race... (Score:2)
Re:The space race... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The space race... (Score:2)
Military conquest (Score:3, Interesting)
High tech is good but.... (Score:5, Insightful)
What I really want to see are low-tech solutions to the space race. Not to prove your own country's superiority but to make other governments look bad. Any large government can throw billions or trillions of dollars to get into space.
What I want to see is some guy get into space by sitting on a huge jug of exploding moonshine.
Re:High tech is good but.... (Score:2)
Add in sufficient sheilding, and I think you've just described dozens of sci-fi novels from the 1940s and 1950s.
Re:High tech is good but.... (Score:2)
Add in sufficient sheilding, and I think you've just described dozens of sci-fi novels from the 1940s and 1950s.
A Bicycle Built for Brew, (Astounding, 1958) [noosfere.com]
Re:High tech is good but.... (Score:2)
Re:High tech is good but.... (Score:2)
This makes sense. For a large enough firm, with assets including a billion slave laborers, the expenses of space exploration can be written off out of the ad budget.
If Moore's law applies (somewhat) to the costs of space travel, smaller ventures will be able to fund space travel as an investment in reputation capital (wuffie.)
When a rocket ship costs less than a superbowl ad,
Re:High tech is good but.... (Score:2)
Re:High tech is good but.... (Score:2)
Probably because he never wrote any stories about "coal fired spacehips". If he explained the technology at all, his spaceships were usually nuclear powered.
What it's really about (Score:2)
Re:What it's really about (Score:2)
The US knows this too, and so is getting back in the game to keep dominance over China.
Agreed. With the many countries also showing interest in the moon, it is better to be living and working there then to be surprised by an upstart country. It is certainly not in the US interest to cede the moon to Russia or China. The political forces at work here are no different that those that drove the development of the new world.
Pfft. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Pfft. (Score:5, Insightful)
We could be kinder to each country. The US has been upgrading their shuttles with newer materials. The Russians developed a new variant of their Soyuz craft (TMA class) as recently as 2002.
However America is about to go with a new CEV design, which while an upgrade in technology basically puts them back to where they were in 1968.
I'm very impressed with the Shenzhou spacecraft. It's larger than Soyuz by about 10-20%, which itself had significantly more space available than Apollo did on its own (not sure about Apollo-LEM). It's orbital module can operate autonomously, staying in orbit for many months, making the potential for Shenzhou orbital modules to be used as space station components. If its launch safety can be shown to be equivelant to Soyuz, the Shenzhou spacecraft will be the best operating in 2010.
The actual "space race" may be taking place now, in the design stage of the American CEV. Can they build a craft superior to the Chinese?
China has been building a lot of momentum here, while the US has stalled. I'm very curious to know how things will turn out in the next decade.
Re:Pfft. (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because it's a capsule design doesn't mean that it's a step backwards in technology. Your argument seems to be based on the capsule to shuttle to aerospace plane development map that failed.
I would argue that the CEV is a step forward, because it adds flexibility to the design. The second phase of the CEV includes not only a lunar module, but also the capacity to start building a lunar base. Where the Apollo mission could support two people on the lunar surface for a maximum of three days, the CEV will be able to support four people on the surface for a week, and those four people will be able to do much more than just pick up a few rocks and wander a few hundred meters at a time.
I base where we are on what we can do once we get there. If the CEV merely duplicated Apollo, that would put us back at 1968, and would be a sad waste of tax dollars. If it's capable of living up to its promise, then that puts us much further along, and only 10-15 years behind where we should be.
Re:Pfft. (Score:2)
The American models, by the specs, seem vastly superior to the Chinese craft. That this is merely a proposal for the same continued shuttle budget is even more intriguing. It shows how much of a setback the Shuttle really was.
It puts the US where the US should have been ~20 years ago, maybe 10.
Re:Pfft. (Score:3, Insightful)
Why? Unless tomorrow somebody discovers something everybody must have and must be made in microgravity, or some probe discovers a huge stash of unobtainium on the surface of Mars, there's no commercial impulse for space travel to progress beyond where it is now: putting microwave repeaters into geosynchronus orbit.
Exploration (space or otherwise) is nothing if not a long-term investment, and Wall Street prefers the short-term to boost q
Re:Pfft. (Score:2)
Space race? What space race? (Score:2, Informative)
I strongly suspect the driving force for the Chinese space program (much like the US and USSR), is to build ICBMs. If you can put a man in space, you can put a nuke anywhere in the world in 30 minutes or so. And it's very hard to shoot down an ICBM.
Re:Space race? What space race? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Space race? What space race? (Score:2)
This is what drove the USA/USSR nuclear arms race: most missiles were pointed at the other guy's missiles, with only a minority left to target other stratiegic interests (runways long enough for B-52s, for example).
And if it was China's main
Worked for the Russians -- NOT! (Score:4, Interesting)
Unless you are a third-world dictator needing some cheap airplanes, tanks, or guns, (with the sole exception of surplus rocket engines sold to NASA) I don't know of any area where the space-program advanced Russian high-tech exports.
I once had a Lada does that count ? (Score:2)
I once drove a Lada, tough as nails it was. could fix anythign on it with a comb and some duct tape.
http://www.crxsi.com/mycar/lada.htm [crxsi.com]
Re:Worked for the Russians -- NOT! (Score:2)
Did you miss Greg Olsen landing last week? From a Soyuz? One of the Russian space-related products is space itself in the form of $20mil trips to the space station. They may not have much going economically, but space launch is one of the bright spots. Russia has the only manned spaceflight system in the world that approaches regular flights - China is still testing and Shuttle is severely grounded.
Josh
Re:Worked for the Russians -- NOT! (Score:2)
Two things:
Why? (Score:2)
We keep score. We measure each other, both individuals and aggregates, incessantly. This is not new, surprising or unique to space. It has nothing to do with space specifically. We compete. Space exploration happens to be one of the more benign methods of competition we've managed to invent.
On any given day
R&D doesn't buy business growth (Score:3, Interesting)
What's interesting is that companies with extremely strong R&D foundations such as IBM and Lucent haven't done as well as low R&D companies such as Dell or Wal-Mart. Companies such as Dell and Wal-Mart show the power of very tightly managed business processes without a lot of the traditional science-based R&D.
I'm not saying that new materials aren't essential to the future, only that these new materials are useless without highly efficient business processes to commercialize them. I hope that space race R&D takes this fact into account.
Re:R&D doesn't buy business growth (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, that's fairly typical of many industries. The leading edge is dragged down by the overhead of all the experimentation, and once they've worked out a system, the imitators have a much smoother ride. It's easier to stand on giants' shoulders than to build the stilts yourself.
fighting the last war (Score:3, Insightful)
But it's a different story in biotech, nanotech or even funky networked software, which are areas where the US is megaparsecs ahead of the Chinese and if anything pulling away. Sure, a new cadre of starry-eyed Chinese metallurgists and aerospace engineers are going to have influence on the future, make stuff that people in the rest of the world -- say, in Southeast Asia or Africa -- are going to want to buy.
But what about the American firm that comes up with proteomics-based individualized cancer therapies that double lung cancer survival rates? Or a little in utero genetic magic that can cure cystic fibrosis or guarantee perfect vision and superior resistance to infection in every newborn child? How about a vaccine against Alzheimer's so everybody can be as sharp in their 90s as they were in their 50s? Cure for AIDS? Rapid-response antiviral technology that can snuff out avian flu before it gets started? Networking applications infrastructure that make it plausible for most of us to work anywhere without commuting further than from the bedroom to the home office? Nanoscopic fuel cells that let portable electronics work for days or weeks at a time off the electric grid? Any of those future-tech possibilities seems to me way more lucrative to bring to the international market in 2050 than the ability to build rockets or memory chips that are 5% more efficient than anyone else. So if I were buying stock in countries based on their R&D focus, I'd pass up the Chinese as slugfeet, based on their 1960s-era research focus.
Maybe it's just because I remember hearing similar arguments about Korean and Japanese innovations in steel- and auto-making in the 1980s, when American business was jumping out of heavy industry and getting into such weird niche vanity businesses like personal computers. (I mean, who the heck needed a computer on every single desk, just to play Solitaire and Zork and customize the fonts on your letters? Geez, you want computations, go to the computer center and punch a deck like everybody else...)
Oops, but we need Zero-G to make it all (Score:2, Interesting)
Wait, that wouldn't be funny at all, never min
ironic indeed (Score:3, Interesting)
Last word in outsourcing (Score:2)
Actually, I can't persuade myself that space is useful in any serious way for any kind of manufacturing.
I think space will be useful for manufacturing, and indeed will ultimately replace any kind of planet-based manufacturing. Think about it, to manufacture, you need two things, materials and energy, two things which are in abundance in space. If someone built a general purpose factory relatively close to the sun, to use that vast nuclear furnace, and supplied it with materials from asteroids, it opens
one manned launch in four years - is that a race? (Score:2)
ICBMs (Score:3, Insightful)
Here is the why of the space race (Score:4, Insightful)
Enough with the warm fuzzy of space exploration (Score:2)
"From a science and technology perspective, the experience of developing and testing a manned spacecraft will be more important to China's space effort than anything that their astronauts can actually accomplish on the new spacecraft," the article stated. "This is because it will raise levels in areas such as computers, space materials, manufacturing technology, electronic equipment, systems integration and testing."
US - China debt (Score:3, Insightful)
The "manned" and the "un-manned" (Score:2, Insightful)
Sid Says (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, yeah: National Pride (Score:2)
Not to mention that it plays a part in the next World War...
Re:Simple (Score:3, Funny)
Hah! You earth-bounders are just jealous of our enormous rocketships! If you had rocketships like we do, you'd be racing, too. But you'd lose, because our rocketships are bigger than anyone else's!
TO THE MOON!!!
Re:Simple (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Velcro (Score:2)
Re:Velcro (Score:2)
Wikipedia is part of the conspiracy to keep the information secret...
Who cares? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:250 million people in 20 years (Score:2, Insightful)
mod parent down (Score:2, Insightful)
Blind quotaions of random flame statistics such as this should be detected by moderators as flame already...mod down mod down mod down
Re:250 million people in 20 years (Score:2)
Re:250 million people in 20 years (Score:3, Interesting)
I believe my own eyes (Score:2)
no one said that wasn't true (Score:2)
Re:China, the Final Frontier (Score:2)