Sheepo
The Freeman
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2007
- Messages
- 10,577
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GODDAMNER KYRNN SHUT THE **** UP I'M TRYING TO TALK TO NO-
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In terms of stuff like privatisation and that, I'm just glad we have no idea if aliens exist, because at least it means there's no real reason for the military to get involved. We already have weapons good enough for killing bad guys, with no need to have them buggering off into space.BAAAAAAAA, BAAA BAAAAAAAAA!
In terms of stuff like privatisation and that, I'm just glad we have no idea if aliens exist, because at least it means there's no real reason for the military to get involved.
You're talking about Hubble. I'm not. I expect more. You don't.
And don't question my knowledge of NASA. Even if I don't appreciate them, I know them.
NASA gives the contracts, gives them Canaveral, and makes sure they adhere to their strict safety protocol. In the meantime they can continue the research of their ongoing projects.
It costs more for NASA to operate these projects within the atmosphere than it does to give contracts to private companies or cooperate with the space programs of other countries. You may just see them as money whores, but companies like SpaceX have proven incredibly innovative and efficient in building rockets to get our satellites up and I think that's a good sign for getting fresh blood into American space projects and going to ****ing mars.
Yeah, I've already said that's what we've done and we would be doing. Giving them less tax dollars to do it makes sense. Also, you're comparing entirely different space craft, of course one can hold a much larger payload than the other.The majority of funding Space-X has gotten has been from Nasa as well as other government agencies. It might be a private venture, but most of the funding comes from government sources. What is the heaviest pay load they can take to space? Something like a few hundred kilograms? Compare that to Nasa which is capable of launching thousands of kilograms.
Oh, so since they're using ancient technology I should be cool with it costing more. That's why they shouldn't be using ancient technology. I don't see how you could think that. Private companies are motivated by profit, and NASA will take whatever they think is necessary to get the job done. You won't see NASA saving millions collecting scrap parts from other launches to build things and having a launch system that will take a space craft from at rest to taking off within an hour. SpaceX is already doing this.Again, you are looking at a shuttle developed in the 1960s and the 1970s and comparing the operating costs of that ancient thing to the operation costs of something designed in the 21st century. I see absolutely no evidance that if you gave the same amount of money to Nasa as you did to a private company to develop a rocket that the private company will do it cheaper and more efficient. In fact I think it's a bit absurd that Nasa is taking public money and instead of developing it's own launch rockets it is funding private companies which will skim profit off the top to do the exact same thing. And I can't wait to see what the true launch costs are in the next few years using these private companies, I am willing to bet they won't be much, if any better than what Nasa could do.
Inefficient in what way? You got any specifics?
Because I think this should be pretty much entirely how they operate. Doing some things efficiently =/= being as efficient as possible.You are advocating this kind of stuff but the fact is that Nasa has been doing this for a long time. So I don't understand why you were so quick to call them inefficient.
Hmm, well I'm not sure where the 30% number comes from but as long as the cheapest offer costs less to NASA even including the 30%, then it doesn't matter.My point with the Boeing example was that what Space-x is doing isn't all that significant and it is not innovative. It is the same thing Nasa has always done because we have a real hard on for private industry in this country. But there is no evidance none of this is any more efficient than if Nasa simply did it itself. Nasa does the research, nasa provides the funding, and what does the private company do? They profit off it. That's a logical reason to believe that if you have to put 30% of your funding in to profits chances are things are going to cost 30% more.
I don't think I've really made very bold claims or talked shit. I think our space program would benefit from taking on larger projects, along with their current projects, via private contracts. That is my opinion. It is not backed up by any actual testing, but the flip side of that is, of course, that neither is yours. Hell, if NASA began making concrete efforts to go to Mars or make a permanent establishment on the moon, I probably wouldn't give a shit how they did it.I will go back to the fact that I think it's absurd for you to constantly make claims when you have no evidance behind those claims. This all started when you talked alot of smack about Nasa without being able to point out a single specific thing you didn't like about what Nasa has done.
Bring back life form. Priority One. All other priorities rescinded.I've seen enough movies to know that Corporations would have only themselves to answer too if they take the forefront in space.
Because I think this should be pretty much entirely how they operate. Doing some things efficiently =/= being as efficient as possible.
Eh, I shouldn't really have said exploration, and I sort of exaggerated, but my rant was intended to really highlight how poorly NASA's been utilized and run in recent years. The fact is it hasn't been used for anything new or innovative in decades. The shuttle program is unnecessary, since we can hitch up with the Russians for cheaper. Private companies are already proving that they can build rockets far more efficiently and for far cheaper.
Hmm, well I'm not sure where the 30% number comes from but as long as the cheapest offer costs less to NASA even including the 30%, then it doesn't matter.
I don't think I've really made very bold claims or talked shit. I think our space program would benefit from taking on larger projects, along with their current projects, via private contracts. That is my opinion. It is not backed up by any actual testing, but the flip side of that is, of course, that neither is yours. Hell, if NASA began making concrete efforts to go to Mars or make a permanent establishment on the moon, I probably wouldn't give a shit how they did it.
No, I definitely did that. How can I ask some one to improve in efficiency while implying they operate at 100% efficiency?So you were just making the statement that they should operate as efficiently as possible, you weren't suggesting that they weren't operating as efficiently as possible?
Well that first thing is very much an opinion. Why should I say that at the end of my post? Won't the absence of the information be enough?So next time when you say something as if it is a fact but you have no evidance for the claim you should probably say that at the end of your post.
Interesting.The 30% is a number I pulled out of my ass based on an assumption of what these companies take off the top for profit. The reason I used 30% is because that is what we mark up our governmetn contracts where I work. Any contract a private company writes up is going to be inflated to account for expected profit. If Nasa was doing this themselves they wouldn't be inflating prices to account for profit.
Perhaps you should try and memorize this sentence, I've already said it several times: It is my opinion. I have no evidence, because there really isn't any, for or against it. Sorry, that's the reality we live in.You claim there is no evidance one way or the other but you keep insisting that you are right.
What is this evidence of?The evidance is that Nasa giving out private contracts to do launches is nothing new, it has been doing this for decades.
Okay.And the fact is that none of this has gotten any cheaper. In fact what Space-X is doing is currently turning out to be more expensive than what Boeing has done in the past.
They've only been asked to really do one thing, not exactly an incredible opportunity for innovation. And I still find the one hour launch idea really cool, so you can go with that.So if you have any examples of something new and innovative that private industry has done I'm all years. But if your example of new and innovative is delivering a few rockets in to space at a cost of 1.6 billion then that has been happening for decades.
Your example of them not being efficient is that they don't hand over alot of what they do to private industry. Your example is false. Nasa has been doing that for ages. So when you say the efficient way to get to space is to let private industry do it while saying Nasa is inefficient when it does just that your argument is clearly flawed. Yet you continue to refuse to admit that.No, I definitely did that. How can I ask some one to improve in efficiency while implying they operate at 100% efficiency?
Well that first thing is very much an opinion. Why should I say that at the end of my post? Won't the absence of the information be enough?
Interesting.
You keep repeating there is no evidance but clearly as I keep pointing out there is. My example is evidance that private industry doesn't do things all that more efficiently if you believe Nasa is inefficient (which you clearly do since you keep repeating it). Private industry has been eating up Nasa contracts to launch things in to space for decades, yet the process has not gotten any cheaper. That is not the fault of private industry by any means, space flight is expensive. But seeing that you have absolutely no foundation to stand on when you say private industry does these things more efficiently.Perhaps you should try and memorize this sentence, I've already said it several times: It is my opinion. I have no evidence, because there really isn't any, for or against it. Sorry, that's the reality we live in. What is this evidence of?
Fuel prices aren't cheaper for Nasa than they are for anyone else. Neither are materials, labor, nor anything else. So when you take all those costs and add 30% as profit chances are things are going to be 30% more expensive. Simple as that.Okay.
They've only been asked to really do one thing, not exactly an incredible opportunity for innovation. And I still find the one hour launch idea really cool, so you can go with that.
And if you look at Nasa overall they are ran very well and they do give us insight in to the universe on pretty much a daily basis that we wouldn't have otherwise. Something private industry has absolutely no interest in. And Nasa does all this at a budget of $20 billion a year, hardly expensive for the amount of information we get for that $20 billion.