Girl Geeks Launch Picosatellite 134
Anonymous Coward writes "Girl Geeks Launch Picosatellite
Artemis, a team of
Girl Geeks at
the Santa Clara University have designed and built a pico-satellite. An
EE Times article
says the Santa Clara women spent
over 5000 hours designing and building the satellite. Ham radio operators
will be able to tune in and listen to the telemetry from the satellite
to be launched from Vandenburg Air Force Base in Lompoc, California.
The girls took the name of their team from Artemis, the Greek hunter
godesss of the moon."
ASU has one too. (Score:1)
Re:The standard comments... (Score:1)
Anyway, the idea of the project is to eventually produce arrays of these mini-sats, all communicating w/ one another and mission control.
I hate to say it... but sounds like (no--don't say it) a perfect application (someone stop me!) for a (Noooooooo!) Beowulf Cluster!
--
Re:I know those chicks, I went to school with them (Score:1)
Re:Still, not there yet (Score:1)
I'm not sure this is a myth. Seems like there are those that do computers for money, and those that do computers as a way of life. Or more. For some people, computers are more important than life. Or air. Or food. Or anything.
I'll submit to you that the 20-odd grad students you know that don't go home and immediately fire up a computer are not serious hackers.
They are the "for the money" type, not the "way of life" type.
Just my opinion. I could be wrong.
Re:Sucks to be him. (Score:1)
You must spend a lot of time sulking, considering the staggering number of accomplishments made by all-male teams
--
Paint Chip? (Score:1)
+--
stack. the off
Re:excellent! (Score:1)
excellent! (Score:3)
a request (Score:2)
Duh (Score:1)
And don't be offensive to us pigs, either
So the team's all female... (Score:1)
Re:hey (Score:1)
The whole discriminatory thing (Score:1)
Otherwise: I noted that one of the goals was to 'encourage women to persue engineering'. Initial thought: "oh no, someone thinks there have to be more females in Engineering". Second thought: better that they encourage women to take part in engineering, than that they tell engineers to make their profession more female-friendly.
As a general point on this 'equal opportunity' discrimination lark, I'd *much* prefer things to be this way round - rather than arbitrarily imposing ideas like 'must be 50-50 male/female', it should be acknowleged that guys & gals are attracted to different things differently.
So, that said, good on them for getting there with the satellite!
Next thought: I'm still searching for a one-liner purpose for the "mission". It seems to have a circular purpose that it goes up there, broadcasting the website (URL? Content?) so that radio amateurs can go visit it. When they get there, check the 'mission' link, they get something that looks to be saying "we put this here so you'd find it"... erm...
Oh yeah. If it's a team of only "girl geeks", what's someone with a name of Duncan being involved in the computer engineering side?
Re:Antichristian Liberal Affirmative Action Social (Score:1)
The fact that you used him as a reason for your own shortcomings is appaling.
Sure, I even posted a sexist comment on this, but more as just a jab. I did not intend to discourage women engineers, nor did I bring the name of God into it.
+--
stack. the off
Re:Helps to have that breadwinner in the trenches (Score:1)
Re:Sucks to be him. (Score:2)
I dunno, spending lots of time outnumbered by smart, geeky women sounds kind of fun. But then I've always worked well with women, and have had several women managers and co-workers.
I think it's great that's it was a multidisplinary team. On my two Aerospace engineering class projects ( 4 person business turboprop and experimental solar sail), it was all Aerospace undergrads, we fudged the EE and CS stuff. No women on our teams either, if I recall, you would have had to combine the classes of 88, 89 and 90 to get six women Aerospace undergrads.
George
Way to miss the point. (Score:2)
Much as I hate hardware (stupid evil sound card of doom sound cards, especially, at the moment), I'm pretty impressed.
"So, what'd you do last weekend?"
"Oh, we put our satellite, that we built because we wanted to, into orbit. You?"
Pico Satellite (Score:2)
Re:AA Batteries? (Score:1)
I guess this was supposed to be about girls, but (Score:1)
At that point, everyone can have their own personal communications satellite, c/o artemis, and, add in some lenses and a ccd, and everyone can have their own personal intelligence satellite.
Now my heart pines. Wanted: geek girl who is building a 500-foot Gerald Bull rail gun.
Re:Pico Satellite (Score:2)
Have you heard about the emacs satellite? I think it goes by the name "Mir" now. The code is held together with duct tape, it's slow as molasses, and it's huge, but you can do anything with it once you figure out where to get an extra two fingers for those 12-key combination commands. The Vi satellite, sadly, has yet to get off the ground, because nobody can figure out how to put it into command mode. Supposedly vi will be the fastest and most powerful satellite ever, but the difficulty of operating it means that very few are in use.
pico launch.now
emacs control-alt-meta-left bucky-shift-escape-L
vi? launch
? take off
? blastoff
? go!
? listen you damn machine!
? get going! move!!
? launch now
? ok, dammit
***Smash***
uh, (Score:1)
Gnotepad+ satellite (Score:2)
George
Flamage (Score:1)
To all the reactionary, defensive, humorless female bastards: get a life
go ahead, moderate me down, I had to say it...
Re:Who designed the control system? (Score:1)
Some clarification. (Score:1)
There are many (that is, isn't not uncommon) student run projects developing, designing, building, and even managing small scale spacecraft/space instrument projects. Check out the Space Grant College [ucsd.edu] and specifically, the Colorado Space Grant Consortium [colorado.edu]. There have been an increasing number of females involved here, I might add.
And I do not get too upset with general accomplishments of an all male team, but rather get upset at what are specifically advertised as an all particular-gender team. That is, I expect women to be able to do as much as any man would do. Making a big deal out a women doing something tells me that you didn't think they could accomplish the task. It's this mentality I dislike. Apologies, I realize my comment was a little vague.
Again, I'm glad to see this work. I can't wait until this level of work occurs in high schools. There are some high schools that are beginning to be involved in these projects, so there's encouragement.
~afniv
"Man könnte froh sein, wenn die Luft so rein wäre wie das Bier"
Re:isn't there a lot of junk in space (Score:1)
Adoption of technology ... (Score:1)
I can see 2050 high school projects now
When we start talking about the good ol' days of Linux hacking, then its time to quit mainstream and find something new to do.
LL
Re:. . . and the hardware engineering? (Score:1)
I don't understand this comparative statement. If you're good at it and enjoy it, practically anything is easy. I do both hardware and software design for a living (embedded systems) and as such you find days where the hardware just flys by and days where you are scratching your head trying to figure out why the software just ain't working, and then later on it reverses...
It's all relative to what you like and what you're good at.
Re:. . . and the hardware engineering? (Score:1)
I don't understand this comparative statement. If you're good at it and enjoy it, practically anything is easy. I do both hardware and software design for a living (embedded systems) and as such you find days where the hardware just flys by and days where you are scratching your head trying to figure out why the software just ain't working, and then later on it reverses...
It's all relative to what you like and what you're good at.
Re:Helps to have that breadwinner in the trenches (Score:2)
Amen! and I'm a men!
As I said to my wife the other night... it's a team effort... she gets kind of upset (ninth month pregnant, etc.) and starts sorrowing about how she can't work and she feels useless and everything, but it's a team effort. She keeps the house and makes it a home, and I enable us to have the house. She feeds me and keeps me healthy, and I use that to keep us fed and sheltered.
She can 'tolerate' our three year old where I find myself getting angry when he's not doing what he is supposed to. She diffuses an arguement between a 3 year old and a 23 year old before I make an ass of myself. Somehow she manages to keep a good demeanor on almost no sleep and makes sacrifices for the family. I get my sleep because of it, and can work hard to bring home extra money to help the family.
The world will never be 100% equality, because men and women are different. Different strengths, different abilities (physically speaking), different ways of looking at things to solve problems.
So no, your 5'4" 98lb woman will never be a fireman (er.. person), but it's not sexist... she can't physically do the work. Simiarly a man will never be a true mother, nor have the abilities to become one (freakish medical science apart from this).
I lived in my house by myself for a few years... it was where I lived, but it wasn't quite a home... more a three-story computer lab. When she came into my life things changed...fast. And despite my dislike of having to squish things into smaller spaces, the house -- and myself -- are better for it. I now have a home and a family.
Re:Some clarification. (Score:2)
I looked all over the Artemis web page, and couldn't find much more on Duncan.
I'm guessing here, but I'm thinking the seven women designed and built the hardware, and Duncan did the software part, thus, the women didn't work much with Duncan, and they became the focus of the third party stories.
Maybe one of those eight people read slashdot, and they can illuminate.
George
Damn. (Score:2)
;)
Why? (Score:2)
Re:. . . and the hardware engineering? (Score:1)
I've found the exact opposite to be true. I started out designing embedded systems (both hardware & software), but found the hardware design so unchallenging & unrewarding that I gave it up to concentrate exclusively on software development, and I haven't looked back since.
Re:Who designed the control system? (Score:2)
Well, it's not like they're building a million of these things. Whether it fits in 8192 bytes or 128 Meg, doesn't really matter on a one-shot project being done for fun/experience.
---
Re: AA cup size? (Score:2)
Ah, Linda Lovelace. No wait, she was famous for polishing rockets, not programming and launching them. Perhaps you're thinking of overbloated-overspecced-defense-department-program ming-language-from-hell Lovelace? No wait, that's not it, either. Even the thought of C++ Lovelace troubles me too much. C Lovelace. Yes, that has a nice ring to it. I think if I ever have a daughter, I will name her C. C Sloppy. See Sloppy run. Run, Sloppy, run!
---
Stanford (OPAL), ASU (ASUSAT) = same launch (Score:1)
Re:a request (Score:2)
----
Re:So the team's all female... (Score:1)
But welcome back to the real world. Some of us know that women are good at math and science, but not every young woman knows that yet. Many are still (either subtly or overtly) steered away from productive and valuable careers in math or science. The reporting of such achievements can serve as examples to young people (especially young women) of what they can achieve.
On the achievment itself, it's _damn_ cool. I look forward to tuning in to the little bird.
Re:So the team's all female... (Score:1)
But welcome back to the real world. Some of us know that women are good at math and science, but not every young woman knows that yet. Many are still (either subtly or overtly) steered away from productive and valuable careers in math or science. The reporting of such achievements can serve as examples to young people (especially young women) of what they can achieve.
On the achievment itself, it's _damn_ cool. I look forward to tuning in to the little bird.
Re:Helps to have that breadwinner in the trenches (Score:2)
That's true to some extent, though I would say *people* are different. Some males may have a knack for nurturing and some females may do better as firefighters. There are 5'4" 98lb men, and 6'6" 250lb women, right?
People shouldn't be directed away from a profession due to their sex unless there is some objective reason it matters. If they're too short and weak to be a firefighter, fine, use that as the reason. To say *no* women can/should be firefighters, and *no* single men can/should be parents is what gets folks upset, there is no reason to use sex as the discriminating factor.
Let people find the direction that suits them without having statistical proof of unsuitability thrown in their face. We don't need strict roles for sexes, but rather job qualifications to determine if individuals, regardless of their demographics, are well enough suited to the task.
Re:Antichristian Liberal Affirmative Action Social (Score:2)
Kintanon
Re:Helps to have that breadwinner in the trenches (Score:2)
Ok... I've thought quite a bit about this, and I just can't figure out. Could you please explain this to me, Who is forcing you to have children? I just don't see it...
Personally I work full time (I'm a tech, if it don't break I ain't busy) so that my GF can develop her webdesign/hosting business along with the female half of another couple, the male half of which also works full time. I would expect the same of her if I was working on a business idea that I thought could get off the ground and needed her to support us for a few months. I don't see anything wrong with this, and I STILL can't figure out who's forcing people to have children...
Kintanon
Re:Helps to have that breadwinner in the trenches (Score:1)
This group was students. The article talked about juggling classes, part time jobs and this project. I saw no indication that these women were being supported by male breadwinners. (As students they may well be supported by parents, but that's irrelevant to your point and as likely to apply to male students).
There is probably a certain amount of truth in you r theory, but it's off-topic and not really a new development, other than the stuff done changing. It's mostly an upper/upper-middle class thing. In the past it's mostly been volunteer work etc. I don't any real change here.
Now women being breadwinners so men can 'do stuff' (code open source projects?), That would be more of a change.
thejeff
Re:Helps to have that breadwinner in the trenches (Score:2)
Geralizations and assumptions do nothing more than make you look stupid. And as for the above statement, that is the EXACT situation I'm in most of the time, so kiss off.
Luckily for me my GF loves to cook (she was going to be a chef but didn't like 12+ hour days) so I get GREAT meals, I do all the cleaning and work full time (more like play with 'puters all day). I love it, we have a great relationship. So it IS possible for it to work. Unless 1/2 of the couple is a jackass...
Kintanon
My school hits Slashdot, and other jaw-droppers (Score:2)
Unfortunately, I saw the sign a few days too late. I had missed a major golden geek opportunity.
Santa Clara actually does have a damn cool engineering program--I know, I go there. My kudos to these very ambitious students, and those faculty who (I assume) helped them get their project into orbit.
Yours Truly,
Dan Kaminsky
DoxPara Research
http://www.doxpara.com
Top 011 reasons why women should design satellites (Score:1)
007 Women are used to breaking barriers
006 Many would argue that it takes a rocket scientist to understand men
005 Perhaps Rush Limbaugh is right and there are Feminazis - and they'll target him from space!
004 Actually, size does matter
003 Communication satellites: More Lifetime, less WWF
002 Better priorities: first cargo would be an array of women's toilets in space - if they can't get a reasonable number on Earth they'll get 'em in space!
001 Launch vehicles that look like giant breasts or vaginas finally get some real consideration.
000 Female piloted satellites won't get lost since they'll actually ask for directions (and listen to them) before making a manuever.
What are you talking about? (Score:1)
Where did they "play the gender card" in terms of the engineering they did? And what makes you believe they're not good enough to succeed?
You seem to think that acknowledging their gender somehow excludes competence. That's idiotic. Evaluate their work on its own merits, okay? What's so hard about that?
Quite frankly, our culture has a ubiquitous awareness of the fact that guys can do this stuff; if women are doing it too, a little PR is a fine thing. If there's no PR, people will claim that no women are doing engineering; if there is PR, people (like you) will try to use it against them . . . They're damned if they do, and damned if they don't. Well, hey. I guess what they're doing is whatever they damn well want to do (primarily engineering), just as if they were free citizens instead of women. And they probably don't really give a damn what you think about it.
They failed to mention... (Score:1)
you'll notice that all the programming was done by
yup you guessed it.
Men.
-- snip --
DUNCAN LAURIE is the God of Computer Engineering. He is responsible for the flight code of the three picosatellites, along with interns, Erik Jonsson and Robbie Schingler. Duncan likes to go days without sleeping. Erik doesn't like frogs or slurpees, Robbie likes frogs, and Duncan's pet snake eats frogs.
-- snip --
Possible alliance with Sega?? (Score:1)
Sucks to be him. (Score:2)
I'm all for women in engineering, there is plenty of room for more. However, let's be team players and all work together. I am discouraged whenever a same sex team accomplishes something.
Good luck to the group. I certainly had fun doing similar work in college.
~afniv
"Man könnte froh sein, wenn die Luft so rein wäre wie das Bier"
Re:a request (Score:1)
Re:You fool (Score:1)
Re:Still, not there yet (Score:1)
I'm working with 3-4 other graduate students very closely and know at least 10-20 others very well. There's not a single one I know who, after a hard day's work of hacking, goes home and immediately fires up a computer. And grad students tend to be pretty serious hackers.
Everyone I know here has hobbies that have little or nothing to do with electronics. Volleyball, fishing, music, dancing, acting, you name it.
Society seems to view engineers as very one-dimensional people. I submit that engineers are some of the most well-rounded individuals around. They're just very dedicated to their work and thus seem to be completely immersed in it.
--
Re:My POINT was . . . (Score:3)
Have you ever bothered to even SPEAK to a female engineer? They are competent bastards! I've YET to see a Fem programmer or engineer make a serious mistake. They are VERY VERY good at what they do. And guess what, a lot of them do it without and sometimes inspite of parental or societal guidance. A good female friend of mine, despite her insane mother, is an excellent programmer and techie. As is my GF. You are just insane. And should I ever meet you I would be hard pressed not to maim you and leave you in a ditch to die to make sure your DNA was never propogated.
Kintanon
Best part -- the antenna (Score:1)
Re:ASU has one too. (Score:1)
[BTW, I'm on the software team for the ASUSat1 project.]
Re:Gnotepad+ satellite (Score:2)
I bet if we built a tower several miles high, it would make launching satelites, etc. much easier.
Pico already? (Score:1)
-Lars
Re:Paint Chip? (Score:1)
but didn't Alan Shepard hit the golf ball
off the surface of the moon..
"Miles and miles..!!!"
Re:Helps to have that breadwinner in the trenches (Score:1)
I never ever meant to imply that men couldn't be caring parents and women firefighters. I was trying to make a point that there are a lot of (I'm gonna use the word stupid) politically-correct people out there who seem to think that it's their god-given right to equality, regardless of extenuating circumstances. I used the 5'1" 98lb firewoman as I believe there was actually a case like that here in Canada a while ago. I want a firefighter capable of carrying my sorry unconscious ass out of a fire, not helplessly trying to drag me out and having to call for help.
I agree with you completely that people should find work for themselves in whatever fields they desire. But if they don't get it because of some valid reason, don't wave the flag of discrimination.
I dunno; I guess I'm a bit touchy this subject, being a white male and all.
More nifty satellites (Score:1)
Re:you broach some valid points, but in the wrong (Score:1)
> work required to maintain society, man or woman?
> Big Lie=Man. Women make babies, carry 20 lbs. of
> child on one arm and 20 lbs. of groceries on the
> other, manage the books of a household, and do
> it continuously 400 months straight on 4 ounces
> of food and 4 hours of sleep. This regime would
> kill a man. To man, a 4-minute mile, or a 4-hour
> marathon, is a test of physical "endurance."
Silly exaggeration, that'd kill anyone. Dare I say society needs both sexes? I'm a guy. Since when was that a crime? That's beside the point, I know. The point is, which sex is stronger. I've known girls who are greatly smarter than me. And others who weren't. Same with physical strength, endurance, speed at learning. Some more, some less.
And since when is stronger better? Aren't we all geeks here?
> whose brain is more efficient, prehaps even
> intelligent, in terms of ability to indentify
> information, gather it, organize it, store it
> and retrieve it? Big Lie=Man. Like myself now,
> men are constantly blasting off, focusing on
> this point or that point, while women listen,
> gather sort and organize information about
> everything else going on in the room.
Oh, I'm a listener, just in a talkative mood right now. Maybe if I talk reasonably instead of in an insulted way, I can improve the reputation of guys as a whole? Worth a shot. There are women who think all guys are jerks, pigs. Maybe I can show them that's not so.
As for the "more intelligent" part, it used to be quite socially acceptable to talk about how a Hispanic or Asian brain was genetically incapable of matching the superior Caucasian intelligence. Of course now, we know how ridiculus that is. Now some women are using the same argument against guys. It'll blow over, I'm sure. If it doesn't, I'll manage to get a good job anyway, I'm sure.
> In term's of brain structure, men's neurons are
> organized in cubes, women's in tetrahedrons. The
> timing differences of these two shapes, and the
> smaller cellular packing, i.e. in terms of
> neuron timing, the faster neuron spacing, makes
> the brains of women "faster" than that of men,
> in that their brains respond to a higher
> frequency of information.
Pardon me while I sing along to "Alive and Kicking" on the radio - love that 1980's rock.
I know this is wild blue yonder off topic, but I have *got* to get that on cd... anyone know what group did that song?
Oh, yes - brain structure - yeah, I was reading in "Escalante" by Jay Mathews, (good book, btw) how it used to be very fashionable to talk about the inferior brain structures of Blacks, Hispanics, and Asians. Don't flame me, I know it's ridiculus. But back then, they scientifically "proved" how blacks, asians, and hispanics couldn't hope to keep up with a caucasian. They used that to excuse why the research labs and engineering classes were full of whites. Then Jaime Escalante taught advanced placement calculus to a bunch of inner-city hispanics. Anyone can be whatever they want to be, if they believe it and work hard for a long time.
> God did not write men out of the picture. He
> gave them higher capacity for physical impulse,
> and their "slower," i.e. the longer timing
> synchronicity of their brain structures, gives
> them an inclination to see a more distant
> horizon than women's brains can in general
> perceive.
Gee, if that was a compliment, I think I may have missed it... are you saying men are workhorses, good for physical strength and endurance?
> On the way out fringes of feminism, the long
> range challenge for geek women, i.e. for the
> survival of "mankind" in space, is to figure out
> a way to steal from the seed of their fathers,
> i.e. to clone-breed women only, eliminating the
> inefficiency and imbalance, and vision distance
> or creativity, of men.
Stealing sperm and raising women only? What are you going to do with the women who disagree with your methods?
To say nothing about what you'll do to the men.
Look, I won't deny any of that. I'm imbalanced, inefficient, imperfect. Comes with being human. I'm sure there are plenty of women who've locked their keys in their car, or slept through an alarm, or been late for a deadline. I don't like perfect people, they're arrogent, proud... just please, let everyone be human? Forgive people for not being perfect, okay? No man, and no woman could live up to the standards you list.
Who designed the control system? (Score:2)
Thank goodness someone with some knowledge got to them and put a 68HC11 microcontroller in "Rev. 2"! That's a real controller, with real features. (Yes, you can even get C compilers for it.)
A comment for the "Does it run Linux?" people:
Many embedded controllers do not run any operating system at all. On reset, they just jump to the program people load into their memory. You don't need an operating system for most embedded devices. If you need multitasking, you can use timer-based interrupt vectors yourself to run routines, or you can use a "realtime executive" (very small multitasker) on them. This is why I sometimes laugh when I hear CompSci-types designing an embedded device to run Linux. Why do you need it? Build a standalone program, and save money on memory and processing power.
Re:isn't there a lot of junk in space (Score:2)
Of course, there's always a first time.
George
What is the frequency Kenneth? (Score:2)
I'm going to get my EME array and blast that girrrrrly thing out of orbit!!!!!!!!! (just kidding).
Re:So the team's all female... (Score:4)
I freely grant that we've come a long way from my mother's adventures as a chemistry major in the late 60's and early 70's; most women don't get asked "You mean you want to be a chemistry teacher?" or told by their guidance counselors that they have no chance and should maybe look into something that they can handle. This doesn't mean that girls are quite convinced that this can be their realm, too. So to speak.
I'd be really, really happy if a group of female undergraduates designing a satellite wasn't a really big deal, or at least wasn't a big deal primarily because they were women... because things like that happened everywhere. But they don't. The fact that the final team was not, in fact, completely female (replacing the woman who left, I suppose) and the way that this was ignored by the news article does certainly say something. Basically, it's reflecting a desire to get a story about "girls and science" out, because "girls and science" is still news. That's why it's good to hear about things like this... not everyone quite gets it yet.
Re:isn't there a lot of junk in space (Score:2)
In general, any space vehicle that's hit with space junk is not going to survive it well.
Re:hey (Score:1)
Re:isn't there a lot of junk in space (Score:2)
Tell me more. Did NASA have comprehensive glass coverage on the shuttle, and how much did their premiusm go up? Did the insurance company take their word on it, or did they want to see the damage? Did a glass shop fly up into orbit to replace it? Was the shuttle able to pass inspection as long as the crack wasn't in the pilot's line of site?
Thanks,
George
Still, not there yet (Score:3)
Re:excellent! (Score:1)
Some of the best engineers are male, as well.
Re: AA cup size? (Score:1)
Re:excellent! (Score:1)
Re:Who designed the control system? (Score:1)
Re:So the team's all female... (Score:1)
I know those chicks, I went to school with them (Score:1)
Re:One thing . . . (Score:1)
Re:Sucks to be him. (Score:1)
Given quite a bit of talk about women's role and contribution to the technical world around here lately, though, I wonder if that's the reason for it's posting.
In previous discussions on /. we find comments about not having the women's perspective, we (men) are not even conscious of what we're missing in our projects if we don't have the women's perspective, etc. As I read through the links I noticed that these women faced and overcame the same technical challenges, answered the same technical questions, and completed a technical project in much the same way any man would.
I applaud them for their amazing work. I'm just a software developer, I couldn't comprehend developing a project of their scope as an undergraduate, and certainly not in 10 months with other classes and projects to take care of at the same time. Perhaps our concern with underrepresentation of women in the technical fields is unwarranted. We all face the same challenges and overcome them in similar, analytical ways.
- Colnago
Re:a request (Score:1)
-73's de Max G7UOZ
Helps to have that breadwinner in the trenches (Score:2)