FutureBoy
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I found this to be really interesting. Even just to get an idea of size as a proxy of difficulty.
I would have said that you are ascribing intent with your statementI'd heard Blue Origin was bidding against SpaceX for some of the NASA projects...
This makes it difficult to fathom how. No wonder Blue Origin wants so much more money, they are expecting NASA to foot the bill for developing their platform while SpaceX has a finished/ self-funded platform.
But Bezos himself today said something that rankled many. In an interview just after landing he saidthey are expecting NASA to foot the bill for developing their platform
I can certainly see why people reacted to this. And I think this thinking basically backs up your idea.I want to thank every Amazon employee and every Amazon customer because you guys paid for all of this
That's like Ford Lightning vs CybertruckI found this to be really interesting. Even just to get an idea of size as a proxy of difficulty.
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I like to keep half an ear on what's going on with space flight, but Bezos tickling the edge of space doesn't interest me a whole lot. Aside from a very small number of people, this isn't going to advance science or... well much of anything.I can certainly see why people reacted to this. And I think this thinking basically backs up your idea.
Regarding the lunar lander, yes Blue Origin lost. And then protested. Wanted in on the project despite having no real plan and costing way more.One of the podcasts I listen to regularly (Liftoff, it's quite good) was talking about the bidding process for the lunar lander NASA is funding. SpaceX won the bid and Blue Origin protested it. The Blue Origin bid was more than 2x the SpaceX bid from what I recall. It wasn't even close. (Please feel free to correct me on that number, it's off the top of my head).
I have a ton of respect for Bezos... but IMO Bezos is a billionaire because he's a fantastic businessman. Musk... is a weird engineer/ business hacker. Musk seems uniquely suited to engineering. He can attract and retain engineering talent and manage them in a way nobody else can.
I just don't see how Bezos can compete with Musk on this level. Lots of other playing fields, sure.
Yep, but it made for a good internet yesterday:In my view, Bezos is getting too whiny and petulant. Sure he has built a great business in Amazon. But now he’s just wreaking havoc on everything around him that doesn’t go his way. I’m losing respect for the guy. And the way he runs Amazon is already controversial so if he loses respect from the public, it wouldn’t surprise me if Amazon ends up in trouble with the government.
Totally agree.I don't want to defend the company, because yes, it is behind - it's not as far behind as many companies with working orbital systems. They've created many optimizations and reusability unheard of in the rest of the conventional space industry.
Yes… SpaceX already got there but we do need options so go for it.Blue Origin is trying to build reusable space vehicles.
I heard a comment on this today in an interview by Chris Hayes with Naomi Klein of the University of British Columbia:We need to take all polluting industry, all heavy industry, and move it off earth. This is going to take many decades. But that’s what we can do if we have reusable space vehicles.
Naomi:
“So never underestimate what the super rich will do to escape the impacts of their behaviors. Just look at Jeff Bezos in his cowboy hat, scanning the horizon for his next toxic waste dump. I mean we were told when billionaires went to space they would have some sort of ecological awakening. We didn’t realize they were going to be scouting for new waste dumps.
….
Chris:
Yeah, going up to space, suborbital, about where the Soviet dog Lika went. But coming back and saying, “You know, I had a revelation. We need to pollute up there”.
This whole topic of manufacturing everything in space is just weird. We can't make steel or concrete in space without first pushing the raw materials to orbit. That's a lot of rocket fuel pushing lots of very heavy materials up and down the mountain. Maybe once we get established on the moon we can find some materials there, but this whole idea doesn't make sense. Even things like cars, how much Lithium is on the moon? Can we extract it?I heard a comment on this today in an interview by Chris Hayes with Naomi Klein of the University of British Columbia:
Plus invent whole new techniques of processing. Most smelting requires oxygen in the atmosphere in order to burn fuel to heat things up. And if it’s done in 0g, how do we get the heat to “rise” from the flames to the materials being smelted… Basically all industrial processes will have similar very basic issues.This whole topic of manufacturing everything in space is just weird. We can't make steel or concrete in space without first pushing the raw materials to orbit. That's a lot of rocket fuel pushing lots of very heavy materials up and down the mountain. Maybe once we get established on the moon we can find some materials there, but this whole idea doesn't make sense. Even things like cars, how much Lithium is on the moon? Can we extract it?
There is nothing in orbit so we'd need to venture pretty far to chase it down.
Now:Plus invent whole new techniques of processing. Most smelting requires oxygen in the atmosphere in order to burn fuel to heat things up. And if it’s done in 0g, how do we get the heat to “rise” from the flames to the materials being smelted… Basically all industrial processes will have similar very basic issues.