India and US to Cooperate in Space Exploration 153
p1234 writes "India and the US plan to cooperate in the exploration and use of outer space. India's first mission to the moon, Chandrayaan-1, is scheduled to be launched later this year. This is the culmination of long-term planning on both sides of the Atlantic. Apart from India's moon mission, Nair said a probe of Mars by India was very much on the agenda.'Our scientific community would like to see what new things we can find. It is not just for the sake of sending a probe to Mars. Yes, we have an agenda by 2012, by then we should have a Mars mission.'"
Cooperation? (Score:3, Funny)
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Call centers in space... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Call centers in space... (Score:5, Funny)
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Yet another propagation of the misquoted phrase.. It was never "Houston, we have a problem;" it was:
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Re:GOD DAMNIT (Score:4, Insightful)
I think the anti-offshoring sentiment is more an anti-corporation movement than an anti-Indian movement. I've seen in detail how corporate lobbyists manipulate the facts to create a "shortage". The bad guys are really the corporate lobbyists who hype free-trade and bribe politicians with campaign donations. We are not a democracy if lobbyists control politicians to such a degree.
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I can't help feeling sorry for the poor devils working in unsafe conditions making things for pennies while the corporates sell them for hundreds of dollars. One may say that progress would be unattainable without the cheap help. Yet, decades ago when shipping was more expensive and risky, there was a sustainable local industry, albeit with lower standards and less propensity to sue for every little work injury, as well as lower wages.
Automation and technology will likely eliminate the exploit
Re:Call centers in space... (Score:5, Insightful)
This is Machiavellian geopolitics. Having a friend on the Asian continent will be useful much like having Israel for a friend in the Mid-east.
Re:Call centers in space... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Stick with the Saudi's, they make a good market for your multi-billion dollar defense deals and keep your dollar high. Unfortunately they don't tend to show off the fireworks for your enemies' buddies to covet and last time they publicly demonstrated the capabilities of American industrial technology, you got a few thousand dead civilians in New York and a recession.
Better luck with poverty-stricken Egypt, Baathist Syria, little poor Jordan, crumbly Lebanon and war-torn Iraq.
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They are islamic and they do have a bomb already.
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Re:Call centers in space... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Call centers in space... (Score:4, Interesting)
If that is true, then there are a lot of government officials being grossly negligent in their duties. If I were the US president, I'd already have a military strategy for destroying or smuggling out those Pakistani nukes in case their government were replaced with a radical islamic government.
11% is more than enough. And we don't know how secular the military chain of command will remain. Given what has happened in the past with the Pakistani nulcear program, this isn't something that I'd rely on.
Pakistan isn't firmly in anyone's pocket. And given how shaky (and illegitimate) their government is right now, you're whistling in the dark.
Re:Call centers in space... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Thumbing a lift (Score:2)
NASA's just planning for when the shuttles wear-out completely and any replacement vehicles have been lost in the cracks.
Buying rides in India won't be as embarrassing as begging ones in Russia.
New Catch-phrase (Score:1)
It's just a plan to get CHEAP astronauts! (Score:2, Funny)
Astronauts have had it too good & expect too m (Score:3, Funny)
NASA really had no choice. Either NASA had to get around the H1-B laws, or hire illegal alian astronuts. And Sigourney Weaver advised against that.
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Isn't "alien astronaut" an oxymoron? It hurts my nauts to think about that one.
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You must not be a US engineer.
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Math110 has less content than most math classes in the first year of high school in Europe!
Maybe there are enough US engeeners around, but are they good for anything?
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Besides, good engineers are the ones that don't depend upon what they learn in school for everything anyways.
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Re:mutual benefit? (Score:5, Interesting)
The CEO, the CFO, and one of our principal investors are all from Iran. The CTO, the DBA, and my supervisor are from India. (The CTO is writing a tech book for a well-known publisher; I expect it will be reviewed here in a few months.) The principal database curator, the statistician, and three people on the dev team are Chinese nationals. The product manager is from the former Soviet Union; so is one of the UI devs and our street-smart IT guy. The head of tech support is Indian (OK, technically Canadian); she manages an offshore team of scientists in South America who import data into the system all day. We also just hired two additional Indian employees whom I haven't really met yet.
And then there are three white guys including me- AFAIK the only U.S. citizens. Maybe a few others are too (I've never really thought about it). Half of the people where I work came from a company that was originally started by another white guy. He lost faith in the future of the United States a few years ago, sold his business to a Fortune 500 corporation here (which promptly mismanaged it into oblivion), and took something like 10 or 20 million dollars back home to Australia.
I read threads like this one, I watch the news, and I listen to all the bloviating over Iran, over India and China, and it all just seems surreal to me. I wonder what the future holds for this place.
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I read threads like this one, I watch the news, and I listen to all the bloviating over Iran, over India and China, and it all just seems surreal to me. I wonder what the future holds for this place.
I have two scenarios.
1. Soft Landing: The British model. Gradual decline from preeminence, rolling back of military commitments globally. Remains a respected power on the American continent, a strong voice among equals on the global stage, no longer considered a super-power in terms of economy, wealth, standard of living, conventional military, retains strategic nukes to no purpose, like dirt-poor descendants of nobility holding on to useless heirlooms from a happier age.
2. Hard landing: Post-soviet-style
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Who even cares "where they end up"? If we're lucky they'll stick around, but you shouldn't blithely assume people will always want to keep coming here and staying here because the U.S. is so great. I just think it's funny to see everyone bashing India, China, and especially Iran at the same time I'm depending on immigrants f
Re:mutual benefit? (Score:5, Insightful)
Satellites are not launched everyday, moon missions still more infrequently. The usual way to obtain access to space for whatever reasons is often to provide some payload to a party who's going to launch a vehicle anyway. Not too long ago, India launched a military satellite for Israel. What India is providing here, is the excellent satellite launching infrastructure it has due to an active space program. The US space program was always geared towards manned-missions.
Let me end this rant by saying that developments in all fields do not have to reflect the trends in IT (where India does provide a cheap back-office). It's time people got off the idea that the US always provides the money, the knowledge, while other countries are sources of cheap brainless workers. Appreciate the achievements of others.
MOD parent up (Score:1)
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It is good. (Score:2)
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But they'll invent curry-in-a-tube.
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This is geopolitics 101 (Score:5, Insightful)
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India will have the last laugh because they will have bribes and weapons from all three, in the end.
Correction: 4 (Re:This is geopolitics 101) (Score:1)
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How dare you accuse other countries of infecting our oil with mold!
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Probably not much of one. There are already more people in China who can speak English than there are in the U.S.
By 2025 China will have more English speakers than the entire rest of the world.
Re:This is geopolitics 101 (Score:5, Interesting)
China and India are likely to be very serious rivals, rather than friends. Both have huge populations, and are developing countries trying to break into high-tech. Being right next to each hurts rather than helps.
Iran seems an extremely unlikely partner as well. India is an open democracy, with a far freer society, and are not predominately Muslim. I also don't see much that Iran could offer India to begin with, as India is technologically much further along.
Russia... Maybe... Though India has much stronger economic ties with the English speaking western world than it does with Russia. Are Indian car makers trying to buy the Range Rover and Jaguar brands so that they can sell such branded vehicles to Russia? China? Iran? Not likely.
Re:This is geopolitics 101 (Score:5, Interesting)
India's greatest strength over Iran is it's liberal education, particularly in colleges and universities. That is why the technocrat generation in India is much larger and better trained than the ones in Iran.
Interestingly, a lot of Iranian students are now interested in pursuing higher education in India, particularly after Ahmadinejad expelled liberal professors from Iranian Universities, and Iranians have a harder time getting into western universities because of political problems. I spent a summer in the Inter-University Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics in Pune, India and there were several Iranian students with very progressive and liberal outlook , unlike the Ayatollahs (they got me hooked on Dariush Mehrjui http://www.opendemocracy.net/arts/iranian_cinema_2595.jsp [opendemocracy.net] films) who were all cursing the Islamic theocracy in Iran.
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Re:This is geopolitics 101 (Score:5, Interesting)
Russia has historically strong ties with India and still sells it a lot of weaponry. With the rise of a the Shanghai Cooperation Organization as an emerging military alliance between Russia, China, various Central Asian countries, and now Iran, India has to choose whether to ally with her neighbors or the U.S. The stakes are pretty high geopolitically.
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No need to worry here folks. SCO is already in bankrupt!
China? (Score:3, Informative)
And there is more (Score:2)
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I can't beleive that got modded insightful.
I hate to jump on the bandwagon, but, as others have pointed out, there is exactly zero chance of India and China being friendly any time soon. And, secondly, while I understand that it's considered "cool" these days to assign eeeevil motives to all US interac
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I'm curious: Have you seen the foreign policy documents, or the transcripts of interviews with chief diplomats, that support your claim? Or are you just guessing?
Jokes (Score:5, Insightful)
It really makes me wonder where India borders the Atlantic...
A likely indication the summary was done with some US-style geography classes
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The borders have been offshored too.
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If you start in Utah and move east long enough (including crossing the Atlantic) you eventually end up in Nevada. Therefore, Nevada and Utah are on opposite sides of the Atlantic, even though they border each other.
-:sigma.SB
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Its like being in Australia and saying that Greenland is on the other side of India. It makes you go "wtf has India got to do with greenland and australia?"
Sharing of knowledge will help US and India (Score:4, Informative)
This is a great opportunity for both countries to share the best scientists on both sides. This mission http://www.isro.org/chandrayaan/htmls/about_chandrayaan.htm [isro.org] is very critical and challenging for Indian scientists. They need every help they can get to pull this. In the past, when US denied supercomputing facilities, Indian went and reinvented the wheel http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/2906865.stm [bbc.co.uk] (although the effort was worth it).With relations improving between two countries, it will be foolish and immature not to accomplish.
This effort will NOT face any opposition like the Nuclear deal. The nuclear deal went down the drain because the stupid "left" politicians played the "Indian congress government is surrendering to US" card. They also threatened to withdraw their support which would have collapsed the Congress ruling party http://www.heritage.org/Research/AsiaandthePacific/wm1688.cfm [heritage.org]. This time, they will make sure this deal is made and take the bragging rights for landing India on the moon. Yes, the Indian politics is screwed up. But they are not fools to let this deal go away.
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Of Indian politics I know nothing, but if they're more screwed up than ours I'd be very impressed.
I just HAVE to ask (Score:2)
Shamless Pun (Score:1)
Hmmm. Obviously trying to curry favor there
Waiting... (Score:2)
So... any yet?
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Good God man, why? This is Slashdot, not The Journal of International Relations! Where else would we show off our subtle and sophisticated Western wit (or at least half of it)?
Wow... (Score:2)
Just a ruse (Score:1)
Science and Engineering in the US are dead. They died when we stopped teaching Math and Science to our kids back in the 90's.
Both sides of the atlantic? (Score:2, Insightful)
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Joining NATO doesn't mean that you move a subcontinent and a continent to Europe/Africa (the other side of the atlantic). otherwise you can't expect reinforcement for a billion of years or so.
Huh??? (Score:2)
Uh... I'm fairly sure that India doesn't border the Atlantic. Rather, I'm fairly sure they border another ocean, the Indian ocean perhaps.
comments here remind me of blue collar miners (Score:5, Insightful)
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Seriously though, they can innovate too, and while idealistic speeches like that are all fine and good, it's too much to expect us to overcome powerful economic forces with mere innovation. To really compete, legal and economic realities need to be taken into account. Free trade puts us at a severe disadvantage economically that I don't think mere innovation can overcome.
Awesome News (Score:2)
India has pursued a positive course in emerging from colonialism in terms of its robust democracy and liberal society (not glossing over internal conflicts, just not enough space to go into it here), and for the most part in its relations with other nations in the world. Sadly, its economic progress has not proceeded along the same lines due to protectionism, corruption, and inability to build up its infrastructure.
China, on the
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I coineth a new term: "Moonshoring"
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how about 'Mooning'
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Right next to Pinkslip Crater.
Re:Wrong country to learn from (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you have any idea what you talking about, what the value of near-Earth space efforts have been? Billions upon billions in economic returns (hell, weather monitoring alone is worth the price of admission.) Space research is hardly wasted. Could all of us do better at managing our world? Sure. But shutting down space programs isn't the way to do that.
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Great, so other countries are arranging their priorities the way the US does. Of course, shit like space exploration is a better investment than dealing with widespread problems ON OUR OWN FCUKING PLANET! Poverty? Disease? War? Pfft, who gives a shit when we can waste billions on exploring space?! *wide, greedy grin*
I see a couple of responses. First, space exploration is an investment in the future. These others are not. They merely fix problems that shouldn't exist.
Second, which one of that list is the most important? Why aren't you advocating that all resources go to fix the most urgent problem first? That is, if war is the worst problem, then forget poverty and disease. Focus on war, right? Such an extreme viewpoint would ignore, of course, that there's tremendous synergy in spreading resources around and worki
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So you're saying space can help to alleviate the problems we face on Earth?
Yes, I'm saying exactly that. There's plenty of history to back me up too. When humans have pushed the boundaries of what they can do, that usually has resulted in bettering the human condition in some way.
Give me a break. If we can't deal with the problems on the surface (of the planet, that is), how do you suppose we're going to magically make things in space work?
Humanity has done a lot of "magical" stuff over the millenia. Problems get solved when someone needs that problem to be solved. One thing I didn't mention was that the grandparent's concerns all had solutions already. We know how to end poverty and most communicable diseases. We know how to avoid war
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when you print an endless amount of money, it becomes worthless, therefor not suitable in exchange for goods and servies.
think before posting please, and read up on inflation while you're at it.
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As per BBC, 80% of the Indians live on 20 rupees (25p) a day. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6946800.stm [bbc.co.uk]
And that matters how?
20.00 INR = 0.511247 USD as per http://www.xe.com/ [xe.com]
20? My that's different from a few years ago. Has your currency fallen to half its value in comparison to ours in such a short time? Huh. I know you got screwed with Bush and all but damn, some of that rise is our doing.
And do NOT expect a civilized society in India...
I'm sorry for you. Your ignorance is astounding. I apologise if you've experienced the hillbilly backward-ass Bihar or UP but if you're talking anywhere else, dude wtf? Glass houses eh. All these people, presumably Americans talking about 'bad education' and all, lol
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