NASA Investigates Possible Sabotage by Worker 166
mytrip writes "NASA said today it is investigating suspected sabotage of a recorder placed on the shuttle Endeavour for delivery to the space station where it will track physical stresses on the orbiting lab."
Recorder sabotaged (Score:4, Funny)
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The subcontractor reported the damage themselves, so it wasn't like NASA employees caught
Dr Smith (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Dr Smith (Score:5, Funny)
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Heather Graham or Lacey Chabert (Score:2)
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She's mid-twenties now, and gorgeous. but she seems to be getting parts in films that I am not interested in.
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The family needs to be respectable and needs to put up a fuss before anything really happens. If you shack up with some poor white trash, it appears nobody will object seriously enough to call you out on it.
16 is one of those funny ages. where you're
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Damn kids and their loud music....
Re:Pardon me while I throw up a little in my mouth (Score:5, Funny)
Worst. Film. Ever. The friggin series was bad enough.
Re:Pardon me while I throw up a little in my mouth (Score:4, Funny)
Highlander, my friend, was a documentary (Score:2, Funny)
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A) It had a potential it didn't even come close to fulfilling,
B) Manos never tried to pretend it was good.
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If Matrix Reloaded, Episode II/III, and Third Space hadn't come out since, I'd agree with you.
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(And yes, I rather liked the Lost In Space film - certainly no worse than any Michael Bay stuff. Yes, this includes Transformers.)
Re:Dr Smith (Score:4, Interesting)
Not only that, but his even newer job at Scaled Composites doesn't seem to have worked out, either [foxnews.com]. Not to joke, though. Looks like some people died today out in the Mojave at that facility.
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I suspect from Dr. Smith's fey mannerisms that he is a robosexual.
Robot: Warning! Warning! Impending climax!
Dr Smith: Oh! The pain, the pain.
Was is really sabotage? (Score:1)
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Re:Was is really sabotage? (Score:5, Informative)
According to that article the work also got the backup/ground test model (not sure what is, just that it wasn't flight hardware). Definitely not an accident
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That didn't even make sense otherwise.
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Remember kids... (Score:1)
Erm... (Score:1)
Two! Measly! Paragraphs!
=/
I know NASA might have been sketchy on the details, but I can't believe this has made its way to the front page with a few lines of text in the fine article. I know we never RTFA, but we don't have a bloody chance today! How can you get a meaningful discussion out of this?!
Ahhhhh.
Bye bye, karma.
Vague (Score:4, Insightful)
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Mothers Against Drunk Astronauts (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Mothers Against Drunk Astronauts (Score:4, Funny)
Official NASA statement to drunk astronauts: (Score:5, Funny)
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Details are scant, but.... (Score:2, Informative)
A better article (Score:5, Informative)
Re:A better article (Score:4, Interesting)
"The U.S. space agency NASA on Thursday confirmed it had discovered the apparent sabotage of a noncritical component of the international space station due to be carried up by the space shuttle Endeavour. It launched an investigation after finding cut wires in a piece of computer equipment intended to transfer data from station sensors to the ground, the agency said."
That's about it on the topic.
It still has the feeling of "Wha? I don't get it.". Either NASA is deliberately playing down a more serious issue, or we have some very incompetent saboteurs. Or an employee who had a momentary temper tantrum at whatever piece of equipment was in front of them.
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Yeah, I can't see the possible value in the act other than to a) marr NASA's image b) start a fire. Option "b" makes more sense to me in terms of having a greater potential effect. Option "a" would only work if it were part of an ongoing program of sabotage.
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Third option: It's not just the pilots who are drunk.
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wiki news karma whoring (Score:3, Informative)
A better Article (Score:1, Informative)
The damage was done by a (currently) unidentified sub-contractor on a non-essential computer intended to collect and moniter data from sensors that detect the vibrations and forces on the space station's external trusses.
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True (Score:1, Interesting)
Of course, why is this happening? Who would do it? At this point it just looks like a group that wants NASA to fail.
I blame Thomas Dolby.
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Who would benefit most from making space appear too dangerous for civilians, and coincidentally has common contractors with NASA?
Of course, this is utter paranoia: the current administration just isn't that subtle.
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Seven? (Score:1)
Now all we need is a UFO sighting by a decorated pilot..
Well done sir, (Score:2)
Outside contractor? (Score:1)
1988 (Score:2)
It was the RIAA (Score:1)
a little more info (Score:3, Informative)
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Some how I can't get too excited about this.
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That a Federal issue and it applies to all agencies.
You do NOT want to be using a 1K resistor from radio shack on any critical systems. Those resitors tollerance will be all over the board. Hell, do they even sell gold band level a tolerance at radio shack?
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Improper Use (Score:2, Funny)
Inflated title as usual (Score:3, Insightful)
Happens all the time! Although you would hope people would be more willing to own up to that kind of thing for anything life threatening.
I guess they never talk about the guy that dropped the o-rings while they were putting them on the shuttle, huh...
This Sounds Like A Job For... (Score:1)
Other news: Fatal explosion at Mojave Airport (Score:5, Informative)
http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=&q=mojave+e
http://www.personalspaceflight.info/2007/07/26/ [personalspaceflight.info]
According to local media reports, there has been a fatal explosion at a rocket test stand at Mojave Airport, home to a number of entrepreneurial space companies. Two people were killed and four people were injured. The company involved hasn't been identified; according to an amalgam of the sketchy reports available so far, it involved a nitrous oxide "flash explosion" on a test stand.
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"Scary, loud, like an airport breaking the sound," Jackson said.
Re:Other news: Fatal explosion at Mojave Airport (Score:4, Interesting)
This certainly throws a wrench into the "hybrids are so much safer" works. Very bad for the two dead and four hurt, I'm just hoping Rutan wasn't among them.
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19983814/ [msn.com]
Are we even sure it's bad? (Score:2)
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This isn't some consumer electronic piece here.
3-2-1 (Score:2)
(two references for the price of one)
In other news... (Score:2, Funny)
Don't F*ck with a NASA nerd's computer (Score:2, Interesting)
But if there is anything that you never EVER do if you want to live, it is f*ck with a nerd's computer. If you f*ck with a NASA nerd's computer, you are dead where you stand.
Whoever this person is who has attempted to tamper with so much as a peice of recording equipment has attempted to tamper with an inter
Why this happened (Score:2)
LEVIATHAN
NASA has had its share of bad publicity lately. (Score:2)
How do they know it was sabotage? (Score:2)
I mean, they haven't found the person who did it, so far all they know, the damage could have simply been caused by gross negligence or incompetence.
The fact that there's a serious lack of motive for this sort of sabotage suggests that this possibility may merit consideration.
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Our fine conspiracy theories.--Vote now! (Score:1, Funny)
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But you're right, I didn't get to the part of the article where it talks about the worker clipping wires.
The fact that the current administration is interfering with scientific research isn't really arguable, however. If I wasn't half-sloshed from these Vodka Collins my wife's making I'd go hunt up the links. You can find them pretty easily with Google, though.
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Re:Our fine government employees (Score:4, Informative)
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sounds like a loser (Score:1, Troll)
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The above post was rude and thus modded "troll," but think about it for a second. What's more likely: a vast conspiracy to destroy the space station by sabotaging something non-life-threatening or someone with narcissistic or borderline personality disorder (or some sort of "Cluster B" personality disorder combination) who has difficulty relating to others
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I used to teach the Behavioral Emergency module in addition to ACLS and airway maintenance. "Cluster B" is also known as the "Drama Queens," and thus disproportionately represented in the patients seen in emergency rooms.
And, after working with a few histrions, a supervisor with a gaping narcissistic wound, and a trainee who was a classic example of borderline personality disorder, it's a little hard to forget
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sigh...
In the three drink minimum state I am in tonight I have moments when I ponder, do *We* deserve this existence, this blessing of life. Pyscho's want to blow me up because they love to kill, extremeists would love to put a collar a
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Nobody, no species, deserves anything. They carve out what they can to strive forward. No more, no less
Human are a fantastic species!
We mold stone, make steel, build glass buildings that touch the sky!
We can get from one major city to another major city, ANYWHERE in the world, in a day. We have machines that can explore the ocean depths, we've sent men to the moon and brought them back safely, we sent machines out side our solar system, found planets orbiting distant stars, Are are starti
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Tick-Tock, another second lost."
I just did. I inspired you to comment. As to beyond that, I have my moments when I inspire just as I am inspired by others. Amazing perspective you have. Similar to the wine I had last night, A little pretentious, but with softer atfer tones and just a hint of sass.
Life, it is to be enjoyed!
Boy are you an idiot (Score:5, Insightful)
No, they've killed one and a half dozen astronauts through making mistakes, and if you use your head for something other than keeping your ears apart you'll realize that making mistakes is part of their mission. That's what exploration and research are all about. How the hell do you expect to learn anything new if you don't make mistakes? Did you learn to walk without skinning your knees? Did you learn to use the toilet without crapping in your pants once or twice? Does any complex program compile the first (or fifth) time through without error?
Or do you think using chemical bombs to accelerate people and tons of hardware to 4 or 5 miles per second up into a hard vacuum, with reusable craft, over and over again, with randomly shifting priorities set by a bunch of accountants and lawyers is a trivial task, the kind of thing any moron can get right the first time?
Apparently you haven't learned that the way to avoid any mistake is totally obvious in hindsight, but that, alas, this profound wisdom has yet to reduce the frequency with which human beings make mistakes. Go accomplish something new and remarkable in your life, count up the goofs you make along the way, and then come back with a little more wisdom and a little less clueless arrogance.
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This is especially true of Challenger, where it was fairly clear to all who were in the know that the Shuttle was not tolerant of low temperatures, and management had a long history of redefining problems into
Just one word: Powerpoint (Score:2)
Re:Boy are you an idiot (Score:4, Insightful)
While I agree with you that you need to accept some mistakes, NASA's bureaucracy has not been faultless. I encourage you to read Richard Feynman's report on the Challenger disaster [nasa.gov].
Sample quote:
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No, they've killed one and a half dozen astronauts through making mistakes ... making mistakes is part of their mission
Well, there's mistakes and there's mistakes. Chunk of foam comes off the external tank and puts a hole in your heat shield, well, maybe you should have seen that coming, but it's a pretty subtle mode of failure. Ditto for using a slightly wrong kind of rubber in your rocket booster gaskets.
But filling a capsule with 1 bar O2, a lot of electricity, and three flammable humans? Apollo-era NASA deserves to be cut some slack, but anyone could tell you ahead of time that was a total bonehead maneuver.
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You are so against NASA waisting lives? Then why not look to the Army (ie. all the armies of the world, wasting lives for profit mostly)?
And it is asinine to suggest that "customers of your spaceship flight can sue if they die"!!! You clearly DO NOT understand the motives of what NASA stands behind and what it is for. You do not understand what science and pushing frontiers means.
Finally, it is not important that some moron kills astronauts. What is important is that some moron can hold the entir
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You're the type of dumbass that sprouts "accountability" and other MBA BS that drives company into
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No, I thought not.
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