Curiosity Rover Makes First Foursquare Check-In On Another Planet 92
cylonlover writes "NASA launched a strategic partnership with location-based social networking site foursquare in 2010 with the first-ever check-in from the International Space Station (ISS) by astronaut Doug Wheelock. Now the space agency has gone one better with the first check-in on another planet thanks to its Curiosity Mars rover. Since fellow foursquare users will have a hard time checking in on the Red Planet themselves, they'll instead be able to earn a Curiosity-themed badge for visiting locations relating to science, technology, engineering and mathematics. The badge will be available later this year and is designed to spark the scientific curiosity of foursquare users by encouraging them to visit science centers, laboratories and museums."
What next? (Score:5, Funny)
Curiosity is a judge on America's Got Talent?
Re:What next? (Score:4, Funny)
No, but it will be a judge on Martian Idol. The best part is the thin atmosphere prevents any of the contestants from "singing" very loudly in the few seconds before they pass out from lack of oxygen.
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Curiosity is a judge on America's Got Talent?
And then right after that...
Curiosity is a judge on a patent case trial.
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I was going to make a point along those lines - is this going to attract the attention of the potential-STEM crowd or just clue them in to the fact that the mainstream doesn't give two shits about science (and is enamored with silly but highly profitable frivolities instead) earlier than desired?
This, on the other hand, I thought was immensely cool:
http://science.slashdot.org/story/12/09/01/2135239/darpas-phoenix-program-to-bring-satellites-back-from-the-dead [slashdot.org]
Getting to run your code on a robot in SPACE!? Th
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Curiosity is a judge on America's Got Talent?
No, curiosity will be a contestant on America's Got Talent and they'll have people text their opinion of who they think is more talented: Curiosity for landing on Mars or some girl who plays the theme to Gossip Girl on a marimba made of partially-filled Coke bottles. I bet the marketers win.
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It's pretty fucking depressing that all of the biggest news items in the press about an SUV that we drop on another planet is . . . the social networking it does.
Maybe it's time to just pack it in, consume whatever is left on this planet, and flash out of existence.
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Re:What next? (Score:4, Insightful)
Like it or not, the way to get more space funding is to put popular fads in space.
Curiosity runs ios 6 (Score:5, Funny)
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Google Maps claimed there was a Starbucks near the rover.
Hell, maybe there is
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Google Maps claimed there was a Starbucks near the rover.
Hell, maybe there is
It's highly likely. You cant walk a block without running into at least one Starbucks here on earth.
Anything to generate interest in math and science (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm fine with this as long as any revenue generated from this is going towards science or advancing NASA's missions.
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But that's slippery -- publicity generates NASA's budget.
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The money is more likely to be used to teach teachers to use Microsoft products.
Florida's Challenger/Columbia license plates [amfcse.org]
Most interesting part... (Score:1)
...Is that curiosity could get a GPS fix from that far away. Unless it is locating by cell tower or wifi. Though the presence of GPS, wifi, or cell towers would be a much more interesting find then the water it was sent up there to look for.
Re:Most interesting part... (Score:4, Insightful)
From what I recall vaguely, Mars has some sort of GPS system set up. Searching it they use GPS towers [stanford.edu] that give GPS to a small area.
Re:Most interesting part... (Score:4, Informative)
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Geeky dreaming time is over, realism ENGAGE!
I'm guessing NASA just asked Foursquare to manually fudge the data in, I'd be shocked if Foursquare supported locations on other planets at all.
Re:Most interesting part... (Score:5, Informative)
there's now a planet enum internally (only mars + earth for now ... hopefully we go do something interesting on the moon again soon), and an alternate latlng field that we're storing the planet-specific coordinates in. The web rendering code knows to look for the astralLatLng if planet != earth. So that all our current clients and api consumers don't explode , we're pushing out the earth latlng of mission control via the public api.
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Gender unspecific - that's why it's so damn curious
Re:Quick question (Score:5, Funny)
Mars Rover Bicuriosity will be visiting Uranus next year.
Re:Quick question (Score:4, Funny)
No it won't: Astronomers changed the name to Urrectum to end that stupid joke once and for all.
Re:Quick question (Score:4, Funny)
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Mars Rover Bicuriosity will be visiting Uranus next year.
I just hope it doesn't check in there.
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Gender unspecific - that's why it's so damn curious
Lucky it isn't on Uranus, then !
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Definitely Female. I sent it down to the shops for me and look where it ended up.
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Well it has a drill and 17 cameras connected to the internet to document it's drilling. So I would says its male.
Female (Score:4)
On report panels and interviews, the scientists and engineers on the Curiosity team refer to the rover as "she" and "her" .
Using the female gender seems to be traditional for ships, so perhaps that extends to spaceships, and by association, to space probes.
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She is brilliant for sure. And I was definitely "in love" with her when she blasted through the atmosphere and made that killer landing. But now that she spends so much time on studying rocks I feel we have drifted (or roved ;-) ) . I love her but I am in not "in love" with her now.
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Would not calling a space probe "her" then bring all new meaning to the victims who have been anally probed? Would that not mean that "she" was hermaphroditic??
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Is Curiosity rover male or female?
"It's complicated."
Mayor of Mars? (Score:3)
Or would it be more like God-Emperor by the time anyone else sets foot there?
Re:Mayor of Mars? (Score:5, Funny)
Nah, it's against its programming to impersonate a deity.
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Mayor of Mars? Or would it be more like God-Emperor by the time anyone else sets foot there?
I believe that the technically correct title for *any* Foursquare user is "Narcissistic, self-obsessed hipster scum". (^_^)
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...or they like free queso. [slickdeals.net]
What is foursquare (Score:2)
Re:What is foursquare (Score:4, Informative)
What is foursquare? I just looked and it looks like some cut-down facebook thingy
It's basically the most self-indulgent, navel-gazing, self-important-attention-whoring, up-their-own-arse and downright pointless aspects of social media distilled to a level of 100% pure worthlessness.
This is quite obviously another would-be public-attention-grabbing stunt along the lines of the Will.I.Am transmission a few weeks back, and it's open for debate which of the two are worse.
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I could see the value of sharing your location with friends, I'd just never use Foursquare to do it for numerous privacy-related reasons.
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It also gives you points for doing this and ranks your activity against your friends, which is why some people get really into it.
How sad (Score:5, Informative)
NASA should be doing pure science, and that should be reason enough to excite Joe Public. I mean hell, I can't get over the fact that I can see detailed images of Mars from the comfort of my own living room. If someone had told me that when I was a kid, I would never have believed it. Yet, there we are - humanity is there through its machines. It should blow people's minds!
Instead of that, NASA is regularly forced to do shitty high-profile, useless and pathetic "interstellar internet" stunts with shitty dotcoms to attract attention, and presumably funding. That's how sad, uneducated and blaze people have become.
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It is inevitable that the latest in technology and science becomes commonplace. As for this stunt, I doubt it's taking NASA much effort to do it and if it can create good PR and education people, it's a good thing. It might be "sad", but these are the alternatives to approaches that won't work.
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It is inevitable that the latest in technology and science becomes commonplace.
The problem is that the technology isn't anywhere near commonplace. I will discontinue my "WOW" response to NASA missions when I can afford to launch a probe to explore an asteroid or planet, and take a trip to the moon for the weekend.
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It's kinda cool, but definitely not any more mindblowing than getting video of a man on the moon.. especially since our computing and telecommunications prowess is (or at least, should be) a lot more advanced these days.
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That's how sad, uneducated and blaze people have become.
We are so on fire (blaze) we are not unimpressed or bored (blase).
If you want to complain about the uneducated masses, at least use the correct words lest you be considered uneducated yourself.
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Look, rocket fuel ain't cheap. Next mission the McRover will be covered in ads NASCAR-style.
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Maybe. But you'll know it's time to tune out permanently if they start talking about how the rover "has electrolytes."
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It has what plants want?
Nope, it has what plants crave
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If that means it manages to actually start plant life on Mars, I'm all for it.
Terraform away!
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NASA should be doing pure science, and that should be reason enough to excite Joe Public. I mean hell, I can't get over the fact that I can see detailed images of Mars from the comfort of my own living room. If someone had told me that when I was a kid, I would never have believed it. Yet, there we are - humanity is there through its machines. It should blow people's minds!
I dunno.. when I was a kid there was images from Viking and they don't look that different to me.
The science is way more advanced sure but in terms of public wow factor there's not a whole lot more to get excited about.
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Just out of curiosity (if you'll pardon the pun), just how much older than sixty (being charitable) are you? Because such things have clearly been coming since the first blurry images from Viking popped up on the boob tube in the comfort of my parent's living room back in the seventies when *I* was a kid.
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Actually, it's pretty important. The rovers don't communicate directly with Earth. They transmit to satellites orbiting Mars, which relay it to ground stations here on Earth, which relay it to JPL. So adding another hop to the Internet isn't that big an investment of resources, and is probably good practice for when this will become more commonplace (do you really want to coordinate the broadcast sched
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Why exactly should NASA be doing "pure science"?
Sure, that is a big part of NASA's mission. But if we don't find ways to entice young people to pursue science, where will that leave us? What's the harm in creating a little publicity? It seems to me that a stunt like this can go a long way towards advancing science, in the long run.
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This just in: not everybody likes the same stuff you do.
So negative! Did you ever think the people at JPL/NASA did this because it's fun? There are lots of us who absolutely have our minds blown by the success of Curiosity AND think stuff like this is neat too.
Copypasta? (Score:1)
This "submission" is simply a lift from the actual article.
If I wanted an RSS feed aggregator, I'd use a feed aggregator. Has Slashdot completely checked out at this point?
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Bad idea (Score:2)
I do not want a machine to be the mayor of anything, even a lifeless rock in space!
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I, for one, would welcome our robotic space overlords.
GPS doesn't exist on Mars (Score:2)
So how can we verify this post?
Also, GPS doesn't identify the body the planets are orbiting. So it might very well claim its landed on Jupiter.
I'm skeptical... (Score:1)
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It's entertainingly done, and I get a feed of it's pictures without having to remember to check for them. Most missions are 'fire and forget" to much of the population, but this is staying in the news a lot more.
I just hope they don't hire Randall Munroe [xkcd.com] to write them.
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It's a camera aperture, clearly. But maybe we can find out which day goatse launched and put some hands around the "O" as a user-submitted logo for the anniversary.
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Check In from Mars (Score:2)
I will give $10 via PayPal to the first person who can convince the Foursquare API to accept that they're checking in from Mars.
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In that case it's time to pay up! [geonames.org]
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In the context of this article, it should be obvious that I meant Mars, the planet, not Mars, the town. If not, well, you're dumb. :^P
Dammit! (Score:2)
Mars used to be cool, now it's gonna go downhill once all the idiots start going.