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To the moon Alice! (or, they will be hung by their own rope)

I’m a pretty big space buff. When I was in Junior High I used to spend my lunch time reading books on the space program during lunch. I have models of spacecraft in my office at home. As the extempers know, if I have the TV on at school, I’m usually watching the NASA channel.

That being said, I can’t say I’m a big supporter of the current plan to go to the Moon and Mars. I applaud the goals, but the methods and means are the wrong ones.

We can send human beings to Mars. I have no doubt it can be done. We can go back to the moon. Been there, done that. The problem is, any effort in going to Mars will undoubtedly be mostly wasted. Despite all the spin offs you hear about from the space program (like Tang) most of the effort of the Apollo mission, from an engineering standpoint, was wasted. We were never able to leverage the technology because we killed the program and moved on to something else. It was a one shot (or to be more precise, six shot) program.

The space shuttle was a step in the right direction, but the shuttle eventually fell victim to bureaucratic inertia and now is nothing more than a bus to a space station who’s only purpose is to be a destination for the space shuttle. Its its still damn expensive.

My primary argument isn’t that we can send robots to do research (which is true) its much more fundamental. Our priority right now should be to make the cost of getting into orbit really really cheap. Once that problem is solved, then you’ll see a rash of space innovation that will rival what we saw with the Internet. In fact, bandwidth is an excellent metaphor for cheap, reliable orbital transportation.

No one knew how TCP/IP or HTML would be used when it was developed. Cheap orbital transportation would be the same way. The actual cost of building a satellite can be pretty cheap now. The real cost is in getting it to space. If it was cheap enough, eventually universities and even high schools could launch satellites as projects. Do you remember a company called Teledesic? (note, how you can’t click on anything) It was a start-up founded by Craig McCaw and funded by bigwigs like Bill Gates. Their idea (and it is a good one) was to have a constellation of low earth orbit (LEO) satellites that would provide broadband data access anywhere on the face of the earth. Their trick was in making the satellites fly in LEO and routing the data between the satellites.

They eventually had to put everything on hold when the bubble burst because of the costs of the project, the majority of which was the cost getting hundreds of satellites into orbit. Imagine however, if access to orbit was several orders of magnitude cheaper. Even if it was only $100,000 to get a small satellite to orbit, you’d see an explosion of activity.

THAT should be the priority. Once you can do that, everything else will take care of itself. The hard/expensive part is getting out of the initial gravity well. Once your in orbit, the boost needed to get to escape velocity isn’t that great.

Perhaps the most promising long term solution to the problem is the space elevator. It sounds like science fiction, but the concept is pretty simple. Drop a cable from geosynchronous orbit to the ground. Climb up the cable. The problem is, nothing we have right now is strong enough to support its own weight, let alone anything which may climb up it. Steel is too heavy and not strong enough.

There is a material on the horizon that can do it, however: carbon nanotubes. The problem is, the biggest nanotubes ever created are only a few millimeters long. We need strands that are much thicker and about, oh, 21,000 miles long. That sounds like a long piece of rope…and it is, but moving from a few millimeters to 21,000 miles isn’t as big of a stretch as it might seem. Having nanotubes of arbitrary length in 10 years is not out of the question.

If you can crack the nut of cheap space access, you could probably lap the people working on a direct to Mars mission.

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MP0

Cnet, a company with whom I have had past relations, recently purchased MP3.com. They got rid of all the content and promised to bring the site back “new and improved”. Well its back.

They aren’t using any of the content from the old site, and now they aren’t even using the domain name. WTF was the point of buying it in the first place? Did they need MP3.com to create music.download.com???? The only possible reason I can think of as to why they’d do that, is to remove the competition, but considering the music was free anyhow, that probably wasnt necessary.

The one thing I really miss from MP3.com was the music of Robin Alciatore. Thankfully, she appears to have her own website up now, but no MP3’s yet. At least she does have a stream on Live365.

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MBAAAAAAAAAA

Its nice to have your beliefs confirmed.

Several times I have considered going to get my MBA. Each time I decided not too. It hasn’t hurt me so far, and from this recent The New York Times article, I was right.


Jeffrey Pfeffer, a professor at Stanford’s business school, published a study in 2002 based on decades of data to determine what the M.B.A. degree actually did for students. Internal studies by leading consulting firms and investment banks of their M.B.A. and non-M.B.A. employees showed that the degree had no impact beyond helping them get the job.

Professor Pfeffer concluded: ”There is little evidence that mastery of the knowledge acquired in business schools enhances people’s careers, or that even attaining the M.B.A. credential itself has much effect on graduates’ salaries or career attainment.”

and there was this gem..


Roger L. Martin spent 13 years at Monitor, a top consulting company based in Cambridge, Mass., where he was responsible for recruiting. He tended to recruit almost entirely from the Harvard Business School (of which he is a graduate). Harvard, he says, ”is a magnificent vehicle for extracting out of the global economy those people who are destined to be great business leaders and motivated and smart.” But beyond that, he believes, Harvard adds nothing.

”If you gave me a choice of recruiting with the admissions list or the graduating list, it would take me a second to decide — I’d go with the admissions list,” says Mr. Martin, now dean of the business school at the University of Toronto.

”If people were smart,” he says, ”they would apply to Harvard, get in, and then send their admissions letters out and use that to get jobs.”

Unlike most other professional schools, you don’t need an MBA to do well at business. Its not like law or medicine. In fact, if you look at who the movers and shakers are in business, the vast majority do NOT have an MBA because they were too busy starting their company. Its only use is for corporate ladder climbing.

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Sup?

We had the state speech tournament last week. It didn’t go as well as I had hoped in extemp, but it still wasn’t a bad showing. State is a funny tournament. The best you can hope for is to show up, throw stuff up agains the wall, and hope something sticks. The team as a whole did very well, getting 16 to finals (one short of the record) and winning four events.

We have national qualifiers this Friday and Saturday. I’m hoping we can get someone through, and hopefully more than one.

We got a lot of activity on PVP right now, which is a lot better than what we had during January and February.

Once again, I had several long posts that got lost before I could hit ‘submit’.

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Summer School

The spring semester is winding down. So far, so good in my classes. While my final grade will depend on the final exam of course, I think I should get A’s in both classes. Astronomy has been pretty easy so far. Its just a matter of paying attenetion in class, showing up for lab, and doing the required stuff. There is not much in the way of problem solving.

My concerns about my math class have been pretty unfounded. A lot of it has come back, and I’ll probably take two more classes in the “refresher” category.

This summer I’m scheduled to take Physics I and Linear Algebra and Differential Equations. I’ve already taken courses in linear algebra and diffy eq, and I wont get credit for them, but I could use the refresher. I’m taking physics becasue if I do it in the summer, I don’t have to deal with the crush of freshman taking it in the fall.

The course load I’m looking at in the fall is going to be much harder.

Geodynamics I Lab 9:05 – 11:05am M
Geodynamics I Lecture 1:25 – 2:15pm Tu, Th

Physics II 12:20 – 1:10pm M,Tu,W, F
Physics Discussion
Physics II Lab 2:30 – 4:25pm Th

Mathematical Logic 2:30 – 3:20pm M, W, F

Cryptology and Number Theory 3:35 – 5:00pm M, W

Multivariable Calculus/Vector Analysis 1:25 – 2:15pm W F
Multivariable Calculus/Vector Analysis 4:40 – 6:30pm Tu
Multivariable Calculus/Vector Analysis 4:40 – 5:30pm Th

That’s a total of 19 credits. The multivariate is another brush-up course, but the rest are all new stuff that can apply to degrees.