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Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Here's Some Real Hope & Change; BrasscheckTV: The next Steve Jobs: A self-taught rocket scientist
Lisbon,
Elon Musk is the next Steve Jobs, says Merrill Lynch analyst Steve
Milunovich, and I hope he's right.
Milunovich is referring to Elon Musk's role as CEO of Tesla Motors,
I am referring to Musk's role in making mankind a 'multi-planet
species'.
Last year, Musk's company, SpaceX, became the first PRIVATE COMPANY
to successfully orbit and recover a spacecraft and he now holds a
$1.6 billion contract with NASA to make 12 robotic supply missions
to the International Space Station.
This just might be the coolest thing ever.
Free market capitalism and the future of space travel...
Goodman Green
- Brasscheck
SpaceX: Entrepreneur's race to space
From PayPal to electric cars to rockets, billionaire entrepreneur Elon
Musk wants his company, SpaceX, to build America's next manned
spacecraft. Scott Pelley reports.
1st Private Mission to Space Station Set to Launch April 30
by Mike Wall, SPACE.com Senior Writer A
private spaceship mission to the International Space Station is on
track for a planned April 30 launch, which will mark a historic first
for the orbiting laboratory, NASA officials announced today (April 16).
The launch will kick off a pivotal demonstration flight for the
unmanned Dragon capsule built by the company Space Exploration
Technologies (SpaceX) of Hawthorne, Calif. During the mission, the
gumdrop-shaped spacecraft will rendezvous with the space station, be
captured by astronauts operating a robotic arm and offload some cargo.
If successful, it will be the first time a commercial American
robotic spacecraft has ever flown to the International Space Station.
NASA space station managers and SpaceX officials met earlier today
to review the Dragon spacecraft's readiness for its debut trip to the
orbiting lab. They said the capsule is on track to blast off in two
weeks, but only if a few remaining issues are resolved.
"Everything looks good as we head towards the April 30 launch date,
but I would caution us all that there's still quite a bit of work that
needs to be done," Bill Gerstenmaier, NASA associate administrator for
Human Exploration and Operations, told reporters today. More software
validation tests for the Dragon spacecraft, for example, are among the
items remaining to be completed.
"We'll continue to work through this stuff over the next week or
so," he added. "On the 23rd of April, we'll get back together again and
just kind of assess where we are overall to see how things are moving
forward."
Making history
SpaceX aims to become the first company to launch a spacecraft
toward the orbiting lab under NASA's Commercial Orbital Transportation
Services (COTS) program, which seeks to spur the development of American
private vehicles to take over the duties of the agency's retired space
shuttle fleet.
The firm holds a $1.6 billion contract with NASA to make 12 robotic
supply missions to the space station. But the scheduled April 30 flight
is not one of the 12; rather, it's a demonstration to show that Dragon
and SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket have the right stuff.
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