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Hilding Neilson, an assistant professor of physics and physical oceanography, talks about the debris warning due to the Atlas V rocket launch + Ian Gosse of the Torbay Harbour Authority on why Tapper's Cove is now off-limits + Brad House of Port Saunders talks about the opening of lobster season
Doppelfeuer in der Starbase in Texas: Die Starship Hardware für den 8. vollintegrierten Flugtest übersteht Feuertaufe. Nach Starship Oberstufe-Problemen auf dem 7. Flug mehren sich die Anzeichen, dass auch die Falcon-Raketen erneut Probleme mit der Oberstufe haben. - Blue Origin identifiziert Ursachen für Landeprobleme von New Glenn und entlässt 10% seiner Belegschaft. - Boeing warnt SLS Belegschaft vor Kündigungen wegen Unsicherheiten des Artemisprogramms. - Stoke Space stellt Update seiner vollständig wiederverwendbaren Rakete vor. - ULA baut Vulcan Rakete auseinander, um für Amazon Kuipersatelliten mit alter Atlas V zu starten. Und die ESA treibt den Frachttransport zur ISS voran.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
SpaceTime Series 27 Episode 124*Galaxies: Bigger Than We Ever ImaginedRecent findings suggest that galaxies are far larger than previously thought, with gaseous halos extending much further into intergalactic space. This study, published in Nature Astronomy, focuses on the circumgalactic medium of a starburst galaxy 270 million light-years away. These halos, accounting for about 70% of a galaxy's mass excluding dark matter, may already be interacting with neighboring galaxies like Andromeda and the Milky Way. The research offers fresh insights into galaxy evolution, gas cycling, and the cosmic web.*Ancient Microbes Found in Billion-Year-Old RocksScientists have discovered living microbes in 2 billion-year-old rocks from South Africa's Bushveld Igneous Complex. This groundbreaking find, published in Microbial Ecology, represents the oldest known living microorganisms. The study utilized advanced imaging techniques to confirm the microbes were native to the ancient rock, offering a glimpse into early life on Earth and potential clues for extraterrestrial life on Mars.*Vulcan Centaur Rocket's Successful LaunchThe United Launch Alliance's new Vulcan Centaur rocket overcame a faulty booster to successfully place its payload into orbit. Despite the anomaly, the mission proceeded from Cape Canaveral, marking an important step towards using Vulcan for high-priority payloads. This launch follows Vulcan's maiden voyage and highlights the transition from older Atlas V and Delta IV rockets.The Science Report00:00:00 - This is spacetime series 27, episode 124 for broadcast on the 14 October 202400:00:48 - New study finds that galaxies are much larger than previously thought00:06:25 - Galaxy is 270 million light years away and is a star bursting galaxy00:17:18 - United Launch Alliance's Vulcan rocket has overcome a faulty strap on booster00:22:12 - The 2024 Nobel Prizes for Science were awarded this week00:24:56 - A new study finds two diametrically opposed personalities enjoy magic the mostwww.spacetimewithstuartgary.comwww.bitesz.com
I interviewed Mobile Suit Gundam: Silver Phantom creators from Bandai Namco Filmworks including Naohiro Ogata, Kiichiro Inoue, Ken Iyadomi as well as Atlas V producers Arnaud Colinart and Julien Bercy, and technical art director Gaël Chaize at Venice Immersive 2024. See more context in the rough transcript below. Here's their artist's statement: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CoxzpYrQvt4 This is a listener-supported podcast through the Voices of VR Patreon. Music: Fatality
The United Launch Alliance's Atlas V carried out its final National Security Space Launch (NSSL). SpaceX is reportedly in talks with US and Australian officials to land and recover one of its Starship rockets off Australia's coast. Redwire plans to culture bioprinted vascularized liver tissue constructs on the ISS to determine if liver cells bioprinted on Earth can properly form functioning blood vessels in microgravity, and more. Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our weekly intelligence roundup, Signals and Space, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow T-Minus on LinkedIn and Instagram. T-Minus Guest Our guest today is Caroline Schumacher, CEO of the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation (ASF). You can connect with Caroline on LinkedIn, and learn more about ASF on their website. Selected Reading Atlas V rocket launches final national security mission- Space Exclusive: SpaceX in talks to land and recover Starship rocket off Australia's coast- Reuters Boeing Wins Space Mission Contracts Owing To Its 'Armies Of Lobbyists,' Says SpaceX CEO Elon Musk Amid Starliner Return Delay Redwire to Test 3D Bioprinted Liver Tissue in Space, Reinforcing the Company's Focus on Transforming the Future of Organ Transplantation on Earth- Business Wire A wearable device to track, analyse and predict astronaut health - iLAuNCH Equatorial Space secures pre-Series A round led by Farquhar VC with participation by Paspalis Delivery of MIRA II and MIRA III airframe structures Viasat Introduces Wearable Secure Wireless Hub for Advanced Network and Edge Communications NASA, JAXA Bounce Laser Beam Between Moon's Surface and Lunar Orbit T-Minus Crew Survey We want to hear from you! Please complete our 4 question survey. It'll help us get better and deliver you the most mission-critical space intel every day. Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at space@n2k.com to request more info. Want to join us for an interview? Please send your pitch to space-editor@n2k.com and include your name, affiliation, and topic proposal. T-Minus is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to Astronomy Daily, your friendly guide to all things celestial. I'm your host, Anna, and today we'll be diving into some fascinating stories from the world of Astronomy and space exploration. In this episode, we have an exciting lineup that includes groundbreaking achievements and stellar discoveries. So sit back, relax, and let's embark on this cosmic journey together.- NASA and JAXA's Laser Signal Exchange: In an impressive feat of international collaboration, NASA and JAXA have successfully exchanged laser signals between NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) and JAXA's Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (SLIM) on the lunar surface. Despite the SLIM lander's retroreflector facing sideways, the teams managed to overcome the challenge, showcasing the resilience and advanced potential of lunar retroreflectors.- Discovery of a Second Generation Star: Scientists have made a groundbreaking discovery of a rare second-generation star in the Large Magellanic Cloud. This find sheds new light on the early universe's element formation processes, offering valuable insights into how the universe's first stars operated outside our galactic neighborhood.- ULA's Final Atlas V Rocket Mission: United Launch Alliance is gearing up for a historic final mission using the Atlas V rocket for the US Space Force. This mission, designated USSF 51, marks the culmination of nearly two decades of reliable service from the Atlas V, carrying a top-secret payload for the US Space Force Systems Command.- Rocket Lab's Mars Mission Preparation: Rocket Lab is preparing to launch twin spacecraft to Mars for NASA's ESCAPADE mission. These twin explorers, named Blue and Gold, aim to study plasma and magnetic fields around Mars, providing valuable insights into the planet's climate evolution.Don't forget to visit our website at astronomydaily.io to sign up for our free daily newsletter, catch up on all the latest space and astronomy news, and listen to our previous episodes. Follow us on social media by searching for AstroDailyPod on Facebook, X, YouTubeMusic, and TikTok. Stay curious, keep exploring, and remember the universe is vast and full of wonders just waiting to be discovered. Until next time, keep looking up and dreaming big.www.bitesz.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/astronomy-daily-the-podcast--5648921/support.
Boeing launched astronauts into space with its delayed Starliner spacecraft for the first time Wednesday. 波音公司于周三首次使用其延迟的星际线飞船将宇航员送入太空。The launch marked the company's entry into competition with SpaceX to provide service for the American space agency NASA. 此次发射标志着该公司进入与SpaceX竞争,为美国航天局NASA提供服务。NASA test pilots Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams lifted off in the Starliner spacecraft for the International Space Station (ISS) from Cape Canaveral in Florida. It was powered by an Atlas V rocket from the United Launch Alliance of Boeing and Lockheed Martin. NASA测试飞行员Butch Wilmore和Suni Williams乘坐星际线飞船从佛罗里达州的卡纳维拉尔角起飞前往国际空间站(ISS)。该飞船由波音和洛克希德·马丁公司的联合发射联盟的Atlas V火箭提供动力。Boeing designed Starliner to fly without human assistance. But the astronauts can take control of the spacecraft if necessary. The test flight calls for Wilmore and Williams to take control of the vehicle on the way to the space station. The trip to the ISS is expected to last 25 hours, with arrival on Thursday. The two astronauts will spend just one week at the orbiting laboratory before heading back to Earth to land in the western United States on June 14. 波音设计的星际线飞船可以在没有人为干预的情况下飞行。但如果有必要,宇航员可以控制飞船。测试飞行要求Wilmore和Williams在前往空间站的途中控制飞行器。预计到达ISS的时间为25小时,预计将在周四到达。两名宇航员将在轨道实验室停留一周,然后于6月14日返回地球,降落在美国西部。Wilmore and Williams are former Navy pilots and long-time astronauts. The two have spent a combined 500 days in space over two ISS missions each. Both said repeatedly before the launch that they had full confidence in Boeing for this flight after so many delays. Wilmore和Williams都是前海军飞行员和长期的宇航员。两人分别在两次ISS任务中共度过了500天的太空时光。两人在发射前反复表示,在经历了这么多次的延误后,他们对这次飞行充满信心。The launch came two years after Starliner completed its first test flight to the ISS without astronauts on board. Last-minute problems had delayed the Starliner's first two launch attempts with humans. 此次发射是在星际线完成首次无宇航员的ISS测试飞行两年后进行的。最后时刻的问题导致星际线的前两次载人发射尝试被推迟。NASA halted a planned May 6 launch two hours before liftoff because of a problem with a rocket. Another attempt last Saturday was halted less than four minutes before liftoff because of a problem with a launchpad computer. 由于火箭问题,NASA在计划于5月6日的发射前两小时叫停了发射。上周六的另一次尝试则在发射前不到四分钟因发射台计算机问题而被叫停。“I know it's been a long road to get here,” NASA's commercial crew program leader Steve Stich said before the weekend delay. “我知道到达这里的道路很漫长,”NASA商业载人计划负责人Steve Stich在周末推迟前说道。Boeing and SpaceX are both paid to carry NASA's astronauts to and from the space station. The space agency wanted two competing U.S. companies after ending the space shuttle program. 波音和SpaceX都获得了运送NASA宇航员往返空间站的报酬。在结束航天飞机计划后,NASA希望有两家竞争的美国公司。In 2020, SpaceX became the first private business to launch astronauts into orbit. Only three countries, Russia, the U.S., and China have launched humans into space using their own systems. Since then, SpaceX has taken nine crews to the space station for NASA and three private groups for a Houston company. 2020年,SpaceX成为首个将宇航员送入轨道的私人企业。只有俄罗斯、美国和中国三个国家使用自己的系统将人类送入太空。从那时起,SpaceX已经为NASA送了九个航班到空间站,并为休斯顿的一家公司送了三个私人团体。If the Starliner mission goes well, NASA will use both SpaceX and Boeing for flights, beginning next year. 如果星际线任务顺利,NASA将从明年开始同时使用SpaceX和波音进行飞行。
A Week Of Milestones For SpaceflightThis has been a week of milestones for human spaceflight. After years of delays, Boeing's Starliner capsule, carrying astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, successfully launched Wednesday on the United Launch Alliance's Atlas V rocket. On Thursday, it docked with the International Space Station.Also on Thursday, SpaceX's Starship rocket made its first successful launch and reentry after three previous attempts (the massive rocket burned up in the atmosphere on the last launch). And on a more sobering note, NASA announced that its famous 34-year-old Hubble Space Telescope is experiencing issues with its gyroscopes and is opting to only use one for the time being. The agency says Hubble can still do science, but less efficiently than it once could.Maggie Koerth, science writer and editorial lead for Carbon Plan, joins Ira to discuss those and other top stories in science this week, including why the viral Joro spider you may have seen online does not pose a threat to humans, how a virus that's spreading due to deforestation in South America could overwhelm local healthcare, and why the FDA voted against the medical use of MDMA.Mexico Has Elected A Scientist President. What Will That Mean?This week, Mexico elected a historic president: Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, who will be the first woman to lead the nation, and was also an environmental engineer before entering politics.Despite the president-elect's scientific past, Sheinbaum Pardo has committed to following the lead of her predecessor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, whose science policies were deeply unpopular with many researchers in the country.Mexico's scientific community is split on how this election will impact science and research in the country. Rodrigo Pérez Ortega, a reporter at Science Magazine, joins Ira to talk through the complexities of this election and how scientists are reacting.Transcripts for each segment will be available after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
Well, we waited, we waffled, and we joked... but Boeing's Starliner finally made good! Seven or so years after their projected crewed flight date, the second provider of crew delivery to the International Space Station finally succeeded in sending two astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams, to the ISS. Despite a few problems with (sigh) valves, helium tanks, and thrusters, the mission appears to be going swimmingly. Then, just a day later, SpaceX launched a Starship on a fourth test flight with spectacular results--and may be ready for another test launch within a few weeks. All good news this week, and it feels like newspace just picked up a lot of steam. Join us! Headlines: China's Chang'e-6 mission successfully collected up to 2,000 grams of lunar samples from the far side of the moon and launched them back to Earth. The Hubble Space Telescope faces gyroscope issues, prompting NASA to use only one gyroscope to extend its lifespan until around 2035. A lava tube discovered on Mars near the Arsia Mons extinct volcano could potentially shelter future human habitats or host microbial life. A new star, "Blaze Star" T Coronae Borealis, may appear in the night sky between now and September, becoming the first visible nova since 1946. Main Topic - Starliner and Starship: Boeing's Starliner successfully launched, rendezvoused, and docked with the International Space Station, despite some thruster and cooling system issues. The mission marks the first time in decades that astronauts have launched from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on an Atlas V rocket. Starliner's reusability and cost per seat are compared to SpaceX's Crew Dragon and Russia's Soyuz spacecraft. SpaceX's Starship completed a successful test flight, with the Super Heavy booster and Starship vehicle performing well despite some heat shield damage during reentry. The hosts discuss the progress and challenges of Starship development, including the recent cancellation of Yusaku Maezawa's "dearMoon" mission. SpaceX's rapid launch cadence and plans for mass-producing Starship vehicles and engines are highlighted, along with the company's vision for catching Super Heavy boosters with the "Mechazilla" launch tower. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
Well, we waited, we waffled, and we joked... but Boeing's Starliner finally made good! Seven or so years after their projected crewed flight date, the second provider of crew delivery to the International Space Station finally succeeded in sending two astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams, to the ISS. Despite a few problems with (sigh) valves, helium tanks, and thrusters, the mission appears to be going swimmingly. Then, just a day later, SpaceX launched a Starship on a fourth test flight with spectacular results--and may be ready for another test launch within a few weeks. All good news this week, and it feels like newspace just picked up a lot of steam. Join us! Headlines: China's Chang'e-6 mission successfully collected up to 2,000 grams of lunar samples from the far side of the moon and launched them back to Earth. The Hubble Space Telescope faces gyroscope issues, prompting NASA to use only one gyroscope to extend its lifespan until around 2035. A lava tube discovered on Mars near the Arsia Mons extinct volcano could potentially shelter future human habitats or host microbial life. A new star, "Blaze Star" T Coronae Borealis, may appear in the night sky between now and September, becoming the first visible nova since 1946. Main Topic - Starliner and Starship: Boeing's Starliner successfully launched, rendezvoused, and docked with the International Space Station, despite some thruster and cooling system issues. The mission marks the first time in decades that astronauts have launched from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on an Atlas V rocket. Starliner's reusability and cost per seat are compared to SpaceX's Crew Dragon and Russia's Soyuz spacecraft. SpaceX's Starship completed a successful test flight, with the Super Heavy booster and Starship vehicle performing well despite some heat shield damage during reentry. The hosts discuss the progress and challenges of Starship development, including the recent cancellation of Yusaku Maezawa's "dearMoon" mission. SpaceX's rapid launch cadence and plans for mass-producing Starship vehicles and engines are highlighted, along with the company's vision for catching Super Heavy boosters with the "Mechazilla" launch tower. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
Well, we waited, we waffled, and we joked... but Boeing's Starliner finally made good! Seven or so years after their projected crewed flight date, the second provider of crew delivery to the International Space Station finally succeeded in sending two astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams, to the ISS. Despite a few problems with (sigh) valves, helium tanks, and thrusters, the mission appears to be going swimmingly. Then, just a day later, SpaceX launched a Starship on a fourth test flight with spectacular results--and may be ready for another test launch within a few weeks. All good news this week, and it feels like newspace just picked up a lot of steam. Join us! Headlines: China's Chang'e-6 mission successfully collected up to 2,000 grams of lunar samples from the far side of the moon and launched them back to Earth. The Hubble Space Telescope faces gyroscope issues, prompting NASA to use only one gyroscope to extend its lifespan until around 2035. A lava tube discovered on Mars near the Arsia Mons extinct volcano could potentially shelter future human habitats or host microbial life. A new star, "Blaze Star" T Coronae Borealis, may appear in the night sky between now and September, becoming the first visible nova since 1946. Main Topic - Starliner and Starship: Boeing's Starliner successfully launched, rendezvoused, and docked with the International Space Station, despite some thruster and cooling system issues. The mission marks the first time in decades that astronauts have launched from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on an Atlas V rocket. Starliner's reusability and cost per seat are compared to SpaceX's Crew Dragon and Russia's Soyuz spacecraft. SpaceX's Starship completed a successful test flight, with the Super Heavy booster and Starship vehicle performing well despite some heat shield damage during reentry. The hosts discuss the progress and challenges of Starship development, including the recent cancellation of Yusaku Maezawa's "dearMoon" mission. SpaceX's rapid launch cadence and plans for mass-producing Starship vehicles and engines are highlighted, along with the company's vision for catching Super Heavy boosters with the "Mechazilla" launch tower. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
Well, we waited, we waffled, and we joked... but Boeing's Starliner finally made good! Seven or so years after their projected crewed flight date, the second provider of crew delivery to the International Space Station finally succeeded in sending two astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams, to the ISS. Despite a few problems with (sigh) valves, helium tanks, and thrusters, the mission appears to be going swimmingly. Then, just a day later, SpaceX launched a Starship on a fourth test flight with spectacular results--and may be ready for another test launch within a few weeks. All good news this week, and it feels like newspace just picked up a lot of steam. Join us! Headlines: China's Chang'e-6 mission successfully collected up to 2,000 grams of lunar samples from the far side of the moon and launched them back to Earth. The Hubble Space Telescope faces gyroscope issues, prompting NASA to use only one gyroscope to extend its lifespan until around 2035. A lava tube discovered on Mars near the Arsia Mons extinct volcano could potentially shelter future human habitats or host microbial life. A new star, "Blaze Star" T Coronae Borealis, may appear in the night sky between now and September, becoming the first visible nova since 1946. Main Topic - Starliner and Starship: Boeing's Starliner successfully launched, rendezvoused, and docked with the International Space Station, despite some thruster and cooling system issues. The mission marks the first time in decades that astronauts have launched from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on an Atlas V rocket. Starliner's reusability and cost per seat are compared to SpaceX's Crew Dragon and Russia's Soyuz spacecraft. SpaceX's Starship completed a successful test flight, with the Super Heavy booster and Starship vehicle performing well despite some heat shield damage during reentry. The hosts discuss the progress and challenges of Starship development, including the recent cancellation of Yusaku Maezawa's "dearMoon" mission. SpaceX's rapid launch cadence and plans for mass-producing Starship vehicles and engines are highlighted, along with the company's vision for catching Super Heavy boosters with the "Mechazilla" launch tower. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
Food and Travel Nation with Elizabeth Dougherty IF IT SAYS BOEING - IT AINT GOING The TRUTH about Food and Travel Original Broadcast Date: 06/01/024 EPISODE 1633 It's Saturday morning, June 1st, 2024. Right now we see a Boeing Starliner sitting atop a massive Atlas V rocket awaiting launch. Elizabeth shares the story of Boeing's troubled venture into space and how: IF IT SAYS BOEING - IT AINT GOING BTW... just a few hours after this live broadcast, the mission was scrubbed... again! IF IT SAYS BOEING - IT AINT GOING ### Each week our listeners get the very latest food and travel information We produce homemade videos of healthy, easy to make recipes We feature no-holds barred interviews in a LIVE, fast-paced, nationwide call-in show. Elizabeth Dougherty is a writer, trained chef, world traveler and now an award-winning talk show host. Food And Travel Nation was on the forefront of presenting expert guests with vital information about GMOs, at a time when no one was talking about or even knew about the subject. We give our listeners, advertisers and stations a LIVE SHOW. (NO “BEST OF'S” EVER!) We present hard-hitting topics and interviews without the same old political spin. We are very social media conscious and stay in touch with our audience. (200,000 plus) We work closely with advertisers and stations to ensure their success. We are ready to deliver a fresh, tight, first-class show to your station from our digital studio utilizing Comrex Access and our own automation system. FOOD AND TRAVEL NATION FAST FACTS Website: Food And Travel Nation.com Social Media Sites: Facebook | Twitter website: FoodAndTravelNation.com email: FoodTravelUSA@proton.me Executive Producer – Michael Serio
The 77th edition of the Cannes Film Festival is featuring an inaugural Immersive Competition with eight pieces in competition along with six pieces outside of competition. I had a chance to speak with Elie Lavasseur, the Head of Immersive Competition Festival de Cannes, to get a bit more context for how this came about, their curatorial intention, and an overview of the program. I've had a chance to see 5 out of the 8 pieces in competition, and all 6 of the non-competition pieces curated by Atlas V in an exhibition titled "exhibition 'exhibition 'Cinema Beyond the Frame: An Introduction to Virtual Reality'. I'll link my Voices of VR podcast coverage down below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uh7XTZNtzGs Immersive Competition for Festival de Cannes: Evolver -- #1104: Tribeca XR: “Evolver” is an Awe-Inspiring Fluid Dynamics Simulation of Human Blood Flow Giving an Embodied Experience of Interbeing Colored -- #1251: From Book to Play to AR Installation, “Colored” Explores the Forgotten Segregation History of Claudette Colvin Maya: The Birth Of A Superhero -- #1244: “Maya: The Birth” Animation Uses Mythic Symbols & Magical Realism to Explore Menstrual Taboos as well as #1379: “Maya: The Birth of a Superhero” Evolves Storytelling Grammar with Magical Realism, Dream Logic, & Interactive Embodiment Traversing The Mist -- #1325 End of Tung-Yen Chou's Gay Sauna Trilogy with “Traversing the Mist” Human Violins: Prelude (Multi-user Version) En Amour Telos I The Roaming Immersive Selection of Non-competitive works: Notes on Blindness (2016) -- #1068: “Notes on Blindness” VR Experience Receives a Legacy Peabody Award for Interactive Storytelling Battlescar (2018) -- Unpublished interviews coming soon Spheres (2018) -- #617: Journey into a Black Hole with “SPHERES: Songs of Spacetime” Gloomy Eyes (2019) -- Unpublished interview coming soon Missing Pictures: Naomi Kawase (2022) -- #1103: Tribeca XR: Translating Unmade Films into Spatialized VR Story Treatments with “Missing Pictures” Emperor (2023) -- #1276: Beautiful “Emperor” Explores Aphasia Communication Gaps with Compelling Interactions
Astronomers have confirmed they found an atmosphere around an Earth-like rocky exoplanet for the first time. Also, Boeing's Starliner craft was scheduled to carry humans to the International Space Station in 2017. Its launch is now set for May 17, 2024.In A First, JWST Detects An Atmosphere Around A Rocky ExoplanetEarlier this week, astronomers announced they had discovered an atmosphere around a rocky Earth-like planet named 55 Cancri e, about 40 light-years away from Earth, thanks to instruments onboard the JWST telescope. Finding an atmosphere around a rocky planet is a big step for exoplanet exploration: Earth's atmosphere is crucial to its ability to sustain life, and astronomers need to be able to identify rocky planets that have atmospheres to search for life outside the solar system.However, 55 Cancri e is likely far too hot to have any life: Researchers estimate the surface temperature to be about 3,100 F, thanks to its close proximity to its sun and a probable magma ocean that envelops the planet. But this could also give clues to Earth's formation, as its own surface was also once covered by lava.Jason Dinh, climate editor at Atmos, joins guest host Sophie Bushwick to talk about this and other top news in science this week, including tightening restrictions on risky virus research in the US, possible evidence for a sperm whale “alphabet,” and how environmental changes are leading to an increase in disease in humans, animals, and plants.Boeing Plans To Fly Humans To The ISS Next WeekWhen NASA retired its space shuttle program in 2011, the agency had to find a new way to transport astronauts and supplies to the International Space Station (ISS). Russia's Soyuz program has met that need in the meantime, but NASA has wanted a more local solution. So they started awarding contracts to private US companies who could act as space taxis, including SpaceX, with its Dragon capsule, and Boeing with its Starliner capsule, through the United Launch Alliance (ULA).Unlike SpaceX, Boeing has yet to fly humans in its spacecraft. But it plans to do so no earlier than next Friday, carrying Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, NASA astronauts and former Navy pilots to the ISS. Starliner was originally supposed to launch this week, but due to issues with a pressure regulation valve on the Atlas V rocket's upper stage, ULA had to delay the launch to replace the valve.Brendan Byrne, assistant news director at Central Florida Public Media, talks with guest host Sophie Bushwick about Boeing's rocky road to the ISS and how NASA hopes to split the workload of ferrying astronauts between Boeing and SpaceX.Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
The Voyager probes have been transiting space since 1977, and they're still at it 46 years later. But late in 2023, Voyager 1, now 15 billion miles distant, started sending what the flight controllers called "gibberish" back to Earth---uncoordinated ones and zeros and a heartbeat tone. They knew it was still alive, but something had gone wrong. The small team of software wizards at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory got to work and came up with a workaround... but due to the age of the program, did not have an old enough computer on the ground to test it! They'd have to eyeball the sequence and send it to overwrite existing programming on the spacecraft. The round-trip radio signal from Earth takes 45 hours... and it was a nail-biter. Join us as we discuss this rescue beyond the solar system with Voyager Mission Scientist Dr. Linda Spilker. Headlines: Boeing Starliner launch delayed again due to a "buzzing" valve on the Atlas V rocket, not related to the spacecraft itself James Webb Space Telescope detects weather patterns on an exoplanet 41 light-years away, revealing a regenerating atmosphere on a puffy, molten world Elon Musk shares his thoughts on the lack of evidence for alien visitation, citing SpaceX's 6,000 satellites that have never had to maneuver around a UFO Feedback: A listener appreciates the discussion on how music relates to space exploration, but points out a missed opportunity to mention Ronald McNair's planned saxophone performance in space, which was tragically halted by the Challenger disaster. Main Topic - Saving Voyager 1 with Dr. Linda Spilker: Dr. Spilker's career at JPL, starting in 1977 and working on the Voyager mission, Cassini, and returning to Voyager as Project Scientist Voyager's small flight team and science team, many of whom have been with the mission since its inception The spacecraft's journey beyond the heliopause and into interstellar space, making unprecedented measurements of the interstellar medium The ambitious Grand Tour of the outer solar system, visiting Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, and the remarkable discoveries made at each planet and their moons The recent challenges faced by Voyager 1, including a failed chip and the efforts to restore its function from Earth The limited computing power and memory of the Voyagers compared to modern spacecraft and the ingenuity required to program and communicate with them Pressure Front 2, a mysterious feature in the interstellar medium that Voyager 1 was monitoring before its recent glitch The expected lifespan of the Voyager probes and the need to start shutting down instruments as power decreases in the coming years Dr. Spilker's personal highlights from the mission, including the beauty of Saturn's rings, the geysers on Neptune's moon Triton, and hints of Saturn's moon Enceladus feeding the planet's E-ring Wishes for future exploration of the outer solar system, focusing on the ice giants Uranus and Neptune, Pluto, and other small worlds with rings Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Dr. Linda Spilker Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
The Voyager probes have been transiting space since 1977, and they're still at it 46 years later. But late in 2023, Voyager 1, now 15 billion miles distant, started sending what the flight controllers called "gibberish" back to Earth---uncoordinated ones and zeros and a heartbeat tone. They knew it was still alive, but something had gone wrong. The small team of software wizards at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory got to work and came up with a workaround... but due to the age of the program, did not have an old enough computer on the ground to test it! They'd have to eyeball the sequence and send it to overwrite existing programming on the spacecraft. The round-trip radio signal from Earth takes 45 hours... and it was a nail-biter. Join us as we discuss this rescue beyond the solar system with Voyager Mission Scientist Dr. Linda Spilker. Headlines: Boeing Starliner launch delayed again due to a "buzzing" valve on the Atlas V rocket, not related to the spacecraft itself James Webb Space Telescope detects weather patterns on an exoplanet 41 light-years away, revealing a regenerating atmosphere on a puffy, molten world Elon Musk shares his thoughts on the lack of evidence for alien visitation, citing SpaceX's 6,000 satellites that have never had to maneuver around a UFO Feedback: A listener appreciates the discussion on how music relates to space exploration, but points out a missed opportunity to mention Ronald McNair's planned saxophone performance in space, which was tragically halted by the Challenger disaster. Main Topic - Saving Voyager 1 with Dr. Linda Spilker: Dr. Spilker's career at JPL, starting in 1977 and working on the Voyager mission, Cassini, and returning to Voyager as Project Scientist Voyager's small flight team and science team, many of whom have been with the mission since its inception The spacecraft's journey beyond the heliopause and into interstellar space, making unprecedented measurements of the interstellar medium The ambitious Grand Tour of the outer solar system, visiting Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, and the remarkable discoveries made at each planet and their moons The recent challenges faced by Voyager 1, including a failed chip and the efforts to restore its function from Earth The limited computing power and memory of the Voyagers compared to modern spacecraft and the ingenuity required to program and communicate with them Pressure Front 2, a mysterious feature in the interstellar medium that Voyager 1 was monitoring before its recent glitch The expected lifespan of the Voyager probes and the need to start shutting down instruments as power decreases in the coming years Dr. Spilker's personal highlights from the mission, including the beauty of Saturn's rings, the geysers on Neptune's moon Triton, and hints of Saturn's moon Enceladus feeding the planet's E-ring Wishes for future exploration of the outer solar system, focusing on the ice giants Uranus and Neptune, Pluto, and other small worlds with rings Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Dr. Linda Spilker Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
The Voyager probes have been transiting space since 1977, and they're still at it 46 years later. But late in 2023, Voyager 1, now 15 billion miles distant, started sending what the flight controllers called "gibberish" back to Earth---uncoordinated ones and zeros and a heartbeat tone. They knew it was still alive, but something had gone wrong. The small team of software wizards at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory got to work and came up with a workaround... but due to the age of the program, did not have an old enough computer on the ground to test it! They'd have to eyeball the sequence and send it to overwrite existing programming on the spacecraft. The round-trip radio signal from Earth takes 45 hours... and it was a nail-biter. Join us as we discuss this rescue beyond the solar system with Voyager Mission Scientist Dr. Linda Spilker. Headlines: Boeing Starliner launch delayed again due to a "buzzing" valve on the Atlas V rocket, not related to the spacecraft itself James Webb Space Telescope detects weather patterns on an exoplanet 41 light-years away, revealing a regenerating atmosphere on a puffy, molten world Elon Musk shares his thoughts on the lack of evidence for alien visitation, citing SpaceX's 6,000 satellites that have never had to maneuver around a UFO Feedback: A listener appreciates the discussion on how music relates to space exploration, but points out a missed opportunity to mention Ronald McNair's planned saxophone performance in space, which was tragically halted by the Challenger disaster. Main Topic - Saving Voyager 1 with Dr. Linda Spilker: Dr. Spilker's career at JPL, starting in 1977 and working on the Voyager mission, Cassini, and returning to Voyager as Project Scientist Voyager's small flight team and science team, many of whom have been with the mission since its inception The spacecraft's journey beyond the heliopause and into interstellar space, making unprecedented measurements of the interstellar medium The ambitious Grand Tour of the outer solar system, visiting Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, and the remarkable discoveries made at each planet and their moons The recent challenges faced by Voyager 1, including a failed chip and the efforts to restore its function from Earth The limited computing power and memory of the Voyagers compared to modern spacecraft and the ingenuity required to program and communicate with them Pressure Front 2, a mysterious feature in the interstellar medium that Voyager 1 was monitoring before its recent glitch The expected lifespan of the Voyager probes and the need to start shutting down instruments as power decreases in the coming years Dr. Spilker's personal highlights from the mission, including the beauty of Saturn's rings, the geysers on Neptune's moon Triton, and hints of Saturn's moon Enceladus feeding the planet's E-ring Wishes for future exploration of the outer solar system, focusing on the ice giants Uranus and Neptune, Pluto, and other small worlds with rings Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Dr. Linda Spilker Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
The Voyager probes have been transiting space since 1977, and they're still at it 46 years later. But late in 2023, Voyager 1, now 15 billion miles distant, started sending what the flight controllers called "gibberish" back to Earth---uncoordinated ones and zeros and a heartbeat tone. They knew it was still alive, but something had gone wrong. The small team of software wizards at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory got to work and came up with a workaround... but due to the age of the program, did not have an old enough computer on the ground to test it! They'd have to eyeball the sequence and send it to overwrite existing programming on the spacecraft. The round-trip radio signal from Earth takes 45 hours... and it was a nail-biter. Join us as we discuss this rescue beyond the solar system with Voyager Mission Scientist Dr. Linda Spilker. Headlines: Boeing Starliner launch delayed again due to a "buzzing" valve on the Atlas V rocket, not related to the spacecraft itself James Webb Space Telescope detects weather patterns on an exoplanet 41 light-years away, revealing a regenerating atmosphere on a puffy, molten world Elon Musk shares his thoughts on the lack of evidence for alien visitation, citing SpaceX's 6,000 satellites that have never had to maneuver around a UFO Feedback: A listener appreciates the discussion on how music relates to space exploration, but points out a missed opportunity to mention Ronald McNair's planned saxophone performance in space, which was tragically halted by the Challenger disaster. Main Topic - Saving Voyager 1 with Dr. Linda Spilker: Dr. Spilker's career at JPL, starting in 1977 and working on the Voyager mission, Cassini, and returning to Voyager as Project Scientist Voyager's small flight team and science team, many of whom have been with the mission since its inception The spacecraft's journey beyond the heliopause and into interstellar space, making unprecedented measurements of the interstellar medium The ambitious Grand Tour of the outer solar system, visiting Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, and the remarkable discoveries made at each planet and their moons The recent challenges faced by Voyager 1, including a failed chip and the efforts to restore its function from Earth The limited computing power and memory of the Voyagers compared to modern spacecraft and the ingenuity required to program and communicate with them Pressure Front 2, a mysterious feature in the interstellar medium that Voyager 1 was monitoring before its recent glitch The expected lifespan of the Voyager probes and the need to start shutting down instruments as power decreases in the coming years Dr. Spilker's personal highlights from the mission, including the beauty of Saturn's rings, the geysers on Neptune's moon Triton, and hints of Saturn's moon Enceladus feeding the planet's E-ring Wishes for future exploration of the outer solar system, focusing on the ice giants Uranus and Neptune, Pluto, and other small worlds with rings Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Guest: Dr. Linda Spilker Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
Noticias Económicas y Financieras Es hora del espectáculo. La segunda empresa más grande de EE. UU. por capitalización de mercado celebrará hoy un "tipo diferente de evento de Apple", lo cual es un momento algo inusual dado que solo falta un mes para la Conferencia Mundial de Desarrolladores (WWDC) anual de Apple $AAPL. El evento Let Loose promete "preparar algo especial para usted" y ya hay mucha especulación antes del inicio a las 10 a.m. (hora del Este). Sintoniza Apple Events, Apple TV, Apple Podcasts o YouTube Live. Está previsto que un comité asesor de la FDA se reúna el próximo mes para revisar los datos de la primera terapia asistida por MDMA para adultos con trastorno de estrés postraumático. Esta será la primera revisión de este tipo de un posible nuevo tratamiento para el trastorno de estrés postraumático en 25 años, según el fabricante de la terapia, Lykos Therapeutics. La MDMA, una droga para fiestas comúnmente conocida como éxtasis o molly, no ha sido aprobada por ningún regulador. Una recomendación positiva por parte del panel podría ser un buen augurio para otras empresas que evalúan terapias asistidas por MDMA, como Compass Pathways $CMPS y Awakn Life Sciences (OTCQB:AWKNF). Es posible que el gobierno japonés tenga que intervenir para respaldar el yen (USD:JPY) en caso de movimientos forex irregulares impulsados por la especulación, dijo el alto funcionario cambiario, Masato Kanda. Muchos sospechan que Tokio intervino dos veces la semana pasada, gastando más de 9 billones de yenes ($58.3B) para respaldar la moneda, pero Estados Unidos espera que estas intervenciones "sean poco frecuentes y que se lleven a cabo consultas", declaró la Secretaria del Tesoro, Janet Yellen. El Banco de Japón está tratando de evitar aumentar los tipos de interés ultrabajos mediante la intervención monetaria, según el analista de SA Harrison Schwartz, lo que "es como poner una curita en una herida que requiere un torniquete". $BA Boeing parece no poder tomarse un respiro. El lanzamiento de su primera misión Starliner con tripulación se retrasó una vez más debido a una válvula de alivio de oxígeno defectuosa en el cohete Atlas V, con planes de volver a intentar el lanzamiento el viernes. "Simplemente, no estamos dispuestos a correr ningún riesgo con lo que es nuestra carga útil más preciada", dijo Dillon Rice, ingeniero de United Launch Alliance, propiedad de Boeing y Lockheed Martin $LMT. La misión Starliner ha estado en suspenso durante años, plagada de problemas que van desde la codificación del software hasta válvulas atascadas. Mientras tanto, Boeing se enfrenta a otra investigación regulatoria, esta vez sobre las inspecciones de su 787 Dreamliner. $RDDT Reddit informará los primeros resultados trimestrales como empresa pública. $DIS Disney y $CMCSA Comcast recurren a una tercera empresa para valorar Hulu. Se dice que el nuevo modelo de IA de Microsoft $MSFT rivaliza con Google y OpenAI.
Ez lenne a protokoll, ha egy Földre veszélyes aszteroida közeledne a bolygónk felé Player 2024-05-07 04:57:01 Infotech Meteor Kicsit bajban lennénk, ha a becsapódás kevesebb mint öt éven belül következne be. Úgy tűnik, holnaptól újra kapható lesz a legendás Nokia 3210-es Rakéta 2024-05-07 14:03:05 Mobiltech Nokia A pletykák szerint cián és sárga színben, kamerával és modern csatlakozókkal, viszonylag barátságos áron. Lehet egyszerre mobil és otthoni az internet? Digital Hungary 2024-05-07 12:42:06 Mobiltech Telefon Mobiltelefon Mobilinternet A mobiltelefon ma már szinte mindenki zsebében ott lapul, de a mobilozást lehetővé tévő technológia új értelmet ad az eddig vezetékkel elért otthoni internetezésnek is. Még nem szoktunk hozzá teljesen, de érdemes: nemcsak kábelen lehet otthon netezni, hanem mobilinterneten is, méghozzá úgy, hogy teljes értékű otthoni internetszolgáltatáshoz jutunk. A koncertfotókra és az iPhone babérjaira utazik a vivo új csúcstelefonja PCW 2024-05-07 06:12:07 Mobiltech Koncert Apple Okostelefon iPhone Vivo A világ legnagyobb felbontású telefotó lencséjével lép színre be a vivo X100 Ultra. Több mint ezer ismeretlen objektumot azonosítottak a Naprendszerben Liner 2024-05-07 05:35:39 Tudomány Világűr A Hubble űrteleszkóp régi felvételeinek feldolgozása során több mint ezer, eddig ismeretlen objektumot fedeztek fel a Naprendszerben. Microsoft Ztdns: vége az internet szabadságának? ITBusiness 2024-05-07 06:06:49 Infotech Microsoft Windows DNS A Microsoft azt tervezi, hogy soha nem látott módon zárja le a Windows DNS-t. A Ztdns mindkét világból a legjobbat hozza a DNS-be: a titkosítást és a finomra szabott ellenőrzést. Az ember által olvasható doménnevek numerikus IP-címekké történő lefordítása már régóta tele van tátongó biztonsági kockázatokkal. A keresések ugyanis ritkán titkosítottak Már a következő járvány előtt elkészülhet az új koronavírus-vakcina Telex 2024-05-07 15:04:34 Tudomány Koronavírus Járvány Védőoltás Az egereken már tesztelt új oltóanyag egyszerre több törzs ellen is védhet, akár olyanok ellen is, amiket még nem is ismerünk. Egyre tágul a szibériai alvilági kapu 24.hu 2024-05-07 08:48:55 Tudomány A Batagaika-kráter egy hegyomlást követően alakult ki Oroszország szibériai részén. Szijjártó a Microsofttal tárgyalt Mínuszos 2024-05-07 06:33:49 Infotech Szijjártó Péter Afrika Microsoft Leányvállalat Szijjártó Péter Magyarország külgazdasági és külügyminisztere fogadta a Microsoft néhány vezetőjét, köztük Robert Ivanschitz-ot a Microsoft Microsoft Közép-Európa, Közel-Kelet és Afrika területének vállalati külső jogi ügyek főtanácsosát, valamint a helyi leányvállalat vezetőjét, Szabó Pétert. megköszönte a Microsoft magyarországi tevékenységét, és Még az Intelre is vonatkozik a rezsicsökkentés Bitport 2024-05-07 10:39:00 Infotech Ukrajna háború Írország Rezsicsökkentés Intel Igaz, nem nálunk, hanem Írországban. Tavaly állítólag 30 millió eurót kapott az orosz-ukrán háború hatásának ellensúlyozására. Warren Buffett szerint ez jelenti most a legnagyobb veszélyt a világra Igényesférfi.hu 2024-05-07 09:09:36 Életmód Mesterséges intelligencia Részvény Befektető Átverés Szombaton tartották a Berkshire Hathaway éves részvényesi közgyűlését, amelyen természetesen Warren Buffett is beszédet mondott. A legendás befektető szerint az egyik legnagyobb veszélyt jelenleg a mesterséges intelligencia jelenti a világra, az AI-ra épülő átverések pedig a következő nagy növekedési iparág. Bemutatták a SpaceX első, űrsétákhoz tervezett high-tech ruháját Liner 2024-05-07 13:43:00 Tudomány Világűr SpaceX Bemutatta a SpaceX azokat a különleges űrruhákat, amelyeket a "Polaris Dawn" küldetés során végrehajtott űrséta alkalmával fognak viselni az űrhajósok. Lefújták a Boeing Starliner űrkapszulájának tesztjét egy szelep miatt Rakéta 2024-05-07 11:45:08 Tudomány Világűr NASA Boeing SpaceX Űrállomás A Boeing lesz a SpaceX mellett a NASA második olyan partnere, amelynek űreszközével utazhatnak majd az asztronauták a Nemzetközi Űrállomásra, de a leendő űrtaxi tesztje során megint problémák merültek fel, ez alkalommal az Atlas V rakétával. A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon.
Ez lenne a protokoll, ha egy Földre veszélyes aszteroida közeledne a bolygónk felé Player 2024-05-07 04:57:01 Infotech Meteor Kicsit bajban lennénk, ha a becsapódás kevesebb mint öt éven belül következne be. Úgy tűnik, holnaptól újra kapható lesz a legendás Nokia 3210-es Rakéta 2024-05-07 14:03:05 Mobiltech Nokia A pletykák szerint cián és sárga színben, kamerával és modern csatlakozókkal, viszonylag barátságos áron. Lehet egyszerre mobil és otthoni az internet? Digital Hungary 2024-05-07 12:42:06 Mobiltech Telefon Mobiltelefon Mobilinternet A mobiltelefon ma már szinte mindenki zsebében ott lapul, de a mobilozást lehetővé tévő technológia új értelmet ad az eddig vezetékkel elért otthoni internetezésnek is. Még nem szoktunk hozzá teljesen, de érdemes: nemcsak kábelen lehet otthon netezni, hanem mobilinterneten is, méghozzá úgy, hogy teljes értékű otthoni internetszolgáltatáshoz jutunk. A koncertfotókra és az iPhone babérjaira utazik a vivo új csúcstelefonja PCW 2024-05-07 06:12:07 Mobiltech Koncert Apple Okostelefon iPhone Vivo A világ legnagyobb felbontású telefotó lencséjével lép színre be a vivo X100 Ultra. Több mint ezer ismeretlen objektumot azonosítottak a Naprendszerben Liner 2024-05-07 05:35:39 Tudomány Világűr A Hubble űrteleszkóp régi felvételeinek feldolgozása során több mint ezer, eddig ismeretlen objektumot fedeztek fel a Naprendszerben. Microsoft Ztdns: vége az internet szabadságának? ITBusiness 2024-05-07 06:06:49 Infotech Microsoft Windows DNS A Microsoft azt tervezi, hogy soha nem látott módon zárja le a Windows DNS-t. A Ztdns mindkét világból a legjobbat hozza a DNS-be: a titkosítást és a finomra szabott ellenőrzést. Az ember által olvasható doménnevek numerikus IP-címekké történő lefordítása már régóta tele van tátongó biztonsági kockázatokkal. A keresések ugyanis ritkán titkosítottak Már a következő járvány előtt elkészülhet az új koronavírus-vakcina Telex 2024-05-07 15:04:34 Tudomány Koronavírus Járvány Védőoltás Az egereken már tesztelt új oltóanyag egyszerre több törzs ellen is védhet, akár olyanok ellen is, amiket még nem is ismerünk. Egyre tágul a szibériai alvilági kapu 24.hu 2024-05-07 08:48:55 Tudomány A Batagaika-kráter egy hegyomlást követően alakult ki Oroszország szibériai részén. Szijjártó a Microsofttal tárgyalt Mínuszos 2024-05-07 06:33:49 Infotech Szijjártó Péter Afrika Microsoft Leányvállalat Szijjártó Péter Magyarország külgazdasági és külügyminisztere fogadta a Microsoft néhány vezetőjét, köztük Robert Ivanschitz-ot a Microsoft Microsoft Közép-Európa, Közel-Kelet és Afrika területének vállalati külső jogi ügyek főtanácsosát, valamint a helyi leányvállalat vezetőjét, Szabó Pétert. megköszönte a Microsoft magyarországi tevékenységét, és Még az Intelre is vonatkozik a rezsicsökkentés Bitport 2024-05-07 10:39:00 Infotech Ukrajna háború Írország Rezsicsökkentés Intel Igaz, nem nálunk, hanem Írországban. Tavaly állítólag 30 millió eurót kapott az orosz-ukrán háború hatásának ellensúlyozására. Warren Buffett szerint ez jelenti most a legnagyobb veszélyt a világra Igényesférfi.hu 2024-05-07 09:09:36 Életmód Mesterséges intelligencia Részvény Befektető Átverés Szombaton tartották a Berkshire Hathaway éves részvényesi közgyűlését, amelyen természetesen Warren Buffett is beszédet mondott. A legendás befektető szerint az egyik legnagyobb veszélyt jelenleg a mesterséges intelligencia jelenti a világra, az AI-ra épülő átverések pedig a következő nagy növekedési iparág. Bemutatták a SpaceX első, űrsétákhoz tervezett high-tech ruháját Liner 2024-05-07 13:43:00 Tudomány Világűr SpaceX Bemutatta a SpaceX azokat a különleges űrruhákat, amelyeket a "Polaris Dawn" küldetés során végrehajtott űrséta alkalmával fognak viselni az űrhajósok. Lefújták a Boeing Starliner űrkapszulájának tesztjét egy szelep miatt Rakéta 2024-05-07 11:45:08 Tudomány Világűr NASA Boeing SpaceX Űrállomás A Boeing lesz a SpaceX mellett a NASA második olyan partnere, amelynek űreszközével utazhatnak majd az asztronauták a Nemzetközi Űrállomásra, de a leendő űrtaxi tesztje során megint problémák merültek fel, ez alkalommal az Atlas V rakétával. A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon.
Dos astronautas de la NASA estaban listos para el lanzamiento a bordo de la cápsula Starliner de Boeing, en su primera misión tripulada. El despegue fue cancelado debido a un problema con el cohete. Despegue pospuesto debido a problemas técnicos en el cohete Atlas V. Boeing y la NASA se preparaban para el lanzamiento de la cápsula Starliner, que iba a ser lanzada desde la estación espacial de Cabo Cañaveral en Florida, el lunes por la noche. El despegue, que marcaría la primera misión tripulada de la nueva cápsula, fue cancelado dos horas antes del lanzamiento debido a un problema con una válvula en el cohete Atlas V, fabricado por United Launch Alliance. El problema se descubrió cuando el reloj de la cuenta regresiva se acercaba a cero, y los controladores de lanzamiento decidieron posponer el intento. La cápsula Starliner de Boeing fue diseñada para competir con la cápsula Crew Dragon de SpaceX, pero ha enfrentado múltiples retrasos y problemas técnicos. El lanzamiento del lunes, conocido como Crew Flight Test, fue una misión crucial para demostrar la capacidad de la cápsula de llevar astronautas a la Estación Espacial Internacional. La misión fue aplazada debido a un problema con una válvula en el cohete Atlas V. Los problemas técnicos han sido una constante en el desarrollo de la cápsula, incluyendo problemas con el sistema de propulsión, preocupaciones sobre el rendimiento de los thrusters, y el sistema de enfriamiento. La NASA y Boeing están optimistas acerca de un segundo intento de lanzamiento el martes por la noche. El lanzamiento es un paso importante para la misión, que es el último gran hito antes de que la cápsula sea considerada lista para operaciones rutinarias. Los astronautas Suni Williams y Butch Wilmore están listos para realizar pruebas de sistemas y controles manuales. Esta misión es crucial para Boeing, ya que ha enfrentado años de retrasos y desafíos técnicos. Si el lanzamiento es exitoso, Starliner se unirá a Crew Dragon de SpaceX en el programa de tripulación comercial de la NASA, ampliando las opciones de transporte de astronautas de Estados Unidos. Para obtener más detalles y noticias interesantes sobre tecnología y ciencia, te recomendamos el pódcast "El Siglo 21 es Hoy" en ElSiglo21esHoy.com.
Welcome to another episode of Talking Space, where we bring you the latest updates on space exploration and technology. In this episode, we're excited to introduce our new team member, Heather Smith, who brings her passion for space to our discussions. Welcome, Heather! The episode kicks off with news about Slovenia signing the Artemis Accords. These accords outline best practices for sustainable space exploration and Slovenia is the third European country to sign them in less than a week, closely following Switzerland and Sweden. Next, we delve into the Mars Sample Return Mission. This ambitious mission aims to bring back samples from Mars to Earth. However, escalating costs and potential impacts on other missions have presented challenges. What will the mission team do to cope with a much lower budget and still retrieve the samples? The answer lies within this episode. We also bring you updates on the upcoming crewed flight test of the Boeing Starliner. The spacecraft, aptly named Calypso, has already participated in the first two orbital flight tests. We eagerly look forward to its launch, planned for May 6th. Talking Space plans to be there! Wrapping up the episode, we present an enlightening interview with Rosa Banuelos, a Boeing Senior Communications Specialist for the Starliner program, and Steven Siceloff, NASA's Commercial Crew Program and ISS Program Lead Public Affairs Officer at Kennedy Space Center. Steven and Mark also provide interesting insights into the Atlas V rocket, the vehicle that will carry Starliner to space. Please be sure to let us know your thoughts on the topics we discuss. You can always reach us at mailbag@TalkingSpaceOnline.com. You now have a way to easily send us a voice recording that we may use on the show: just click on the blue microphone icon at the bottom right of any page at TalkingSpaceOnline.com. Show recorded 04-21-2024. Host: Larry Herrin Panelist(s): Mark Ratterman, Heather Smith (Gene Mikulka, Dr. Kat Robison and Sawyer Rosenstein will return) Podcast Editor: Larry Herrin Delta 4 Heavy NROL-70 poster – website photo credit: NRO
We've been waiting... and waiting... and waiting for Boeing's Starliner to fly. First selected in 2010, along with SpaceX's Crew Dragon, Starliner has been behind schedule for years. SpaceX got $2.6 billion for its six dragon flights, and Boeing received more at $4.3 billion, so you'd expect Boeing to be first to fly, right? Well, as of today, SpaceX has delivered crews to the International Space Station eight times, to Boeing's... zero. Delayed development, turbulence problems with the capsule on the Atlas launcher, stuck valves, flammable materials, and faulty parachute lines have all contributed to the delays. Boeing has flown two uncrewed missions—the first one a partial failure, with the second, funded by Boeing itself, flown to NASA's satisfaction. Now it's time to put a crew aboard. Will Boeing overcome their issues and deliver the goods? Join us. Headlines: Voyager's Return: NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory confirms reestablishment of contact with Voyager 1 after five months of silence, overcoming communication challenges over vast interstellar distances. China's Shenzhou 18 and Tiangong Space Station: China successfully launches Shenzhou 18 to the Tiangong Space Station, which was recently hit by space debris, prompting China to revamp its space debris management strategies. International Partnerships for Lunar Research: China announces new international partnerships for its International Lunar Research Station, contrasting its progress with NASA's Artemis Accords. Main Topic: Boeing Starliner's Upcoming Mission Starliner's Crewed Test Flight: A detailed discussion on Boeing's upcoming Starliner mission, highlighting the spacecraft's capabilities, the crew's preparations, and the significance of this test flight. Spacecraft and Mission Overview: Insights into the Starliner's design, the choice of Atlas V rockets for the launch, and the planned landing procedures in the southwestern United States. Crew Profiles: Focus on the astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams, discussing their backgrounds, roles in the mission, and expectations for the test flight. Closing Thoughts: Rod and Tariq wrap up with final thoughts on the importance of the Starliner mission for Boeing and NASA, discussing potential outcomes and what they signify for the future of commercial spaceflight. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
We've been waiting... and waiting... and waiting for Boeing's Starliner to fly. First selected in 2010, along with SpaceX's Crew Dragon, Starliner has been behind schedule for years. SpaceX got $2.6 billion for its six dragon flights, and Boeing received more at $4.3 billion, so you'd expect Boeing to be first to fly, right? Well, as of today, SpaceX has delivered crews to the International Space Station eight times, to Boeing's... zero. Delayed development, turbulence problems with the capsule on the Atlas launcher, stuck valves, flammable materials, and faulty parachute lines have all contributed to the delays. Boeing has flown two uncrewed missions—the first one a partial failure, with the second, funded by Boeing itself, flown to NASA's satisfaction. Now it's time to put a crew aboard. Will Boeing overcome their issues and deliver the goods? Join us. Headlines: Voyager's Return: NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory confirms reestablishment of contact with Voyager 1 after five months of silence, overcoming communication challenges over vast interstellar distances. China's Shenzhou 18 and Tiangong Space Station: China successfully launches Shenzhou 18 to the Tiangong Space Station, which was recently hit by space debris, prompting China to revamp its space debris management strategies. International Partnerships for Lunar Research: China announces new international partnerships for its International Lunar Research Station, contrasting its progress with NASA's Artemis Accords. Main Topic: Boeing Starliner's Upcoming Mission Starliner's Crewed Test Flight: A detailed discussion on Boeing's upcoming Starliner mission, highlighting the spacecraft's capabilities, the crew's preparations, and the significance of this test flight. Spacecraft and Mission Overview: Insights into the Starliner's design, the choice of Atlas V rockets for the launch, and the planned landing procedures in the southwestern United States. Crew Profiles: Focus on the astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams, discussing their backgrounds, roles in the mission, and expectations for the test flight. Closing Thoughts: Rod and Tariq wrap up with final thoughts on the importance of the Starliner mission for Boeing and NASA, discussing potential outcomes and what they signify for the future of commercial spaceflight. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
We've been waiting... and waiting... and waiting for Boeing's Starliner to fly. First selected in 2010, along with SpaceX's Crew Dragon, Starliner has been behind schedule for years. SpaceX got $2.6 billion for its six dragon flights, and Boeing received more at $4.3 billion, so you'd expect Boeing to be first to fly, right? Well, as of today, SpaceX has delivered crews to the International Space Station eight times, to Boeing's... zero. Delayed development, turbulence problems with the capsule on the Atlas launcher, stuck valves, flammable materials, and faulty parachute lines have all contributed to the delays. Boeing has flown two uncrewed missions—the first one a partial failure, with the second, funded by Boeing itself, flown to NASA's satisfaction. Now it's time to put a crew aboard. Will Boeing overcome their issues and deliver the goods? Join us. Headlines: Voyager's Return: NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory confirms reestablishment of contact with Voyager 1 after five months of silence, overcoming communication challenges over vast interstellar distances. China's Shenzhou 18 and Tiangong Space Station: China successfully launches Shenzhou 18 to the Tiangong Space Station, which was recently hit by space debris, prompting China to revamp its space debris management strategies. International Partnerships for Lunar Research: China announces new international partnerships for its International Lunar Research Station, contrasting its progress with NASA's Artemis Accords. Main Topic: Boeing Starliner's Upcoming Mission Starliner's Crewed Test Flight: A detailed discussion on Boeing's upcoming Starliner mission, highlighting the spacecraft's capabilities, the crew's preparations, and the significance of this test flight. Spacecraft and Mission Overview: Insights into the Starliner's design, the choice of Atlas V rockets for the launch, and the planned landing procedures in the southwestern United States. Crew Profiles: Focus on the astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams, discussing their backgrounds, roles in the mission, and expectations for the test flight. Closing Thoughts: Rod and Tariq wrap up with final thoughts on the importance of the Starliner mission for Boeing and NASA, discussing potential outcomes and what they signify for the future of commercial spaceflight. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
We've been waiting... and waiting... and waiting for Boeing's Starliner to fly. First selected in 2010, along with SpaceX's Crew Dragon, Starliner has been behind schedule for years. SpaceX got $2.6 billion for its six dragon flights, and Boeing received more at $4.3 billion, so you'd expect Boeing to be first to fly, right? Well, as of today, SpaceX has delivered crews to the International Space Station eight times, to Boeing's... zero. Delayed development, turbulence problems with the capsule on the Atlas launcher, stuck valves, flammable materials, and faulty parachute lines have all contributed to the delays. Boeing has flown two uncrewed missions—the first one a partial failure, with the second, funded by Boeing itself, flown to NASA's satisfaction. Now it's time to put a crew aboard. Will Boeing overcome their issues and deliver the goods? Join us. Headlines: Voyager's Return: NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory confirms reestablishment of contact with Voyager 1 after five months of silence, overcoming communication challenges over vast interstellar distances. China's Shenzhou 18 and Tiangong Space Station: China successfully launches Shenzhou 18 to the Tiangong Space Station, which was recently hit by space debris, prompting China to revamp its space debris management strategies. International Partnerships for Lunar Research: China announces new international partnerships for its International Lunar Research Station, contrasting its progress with NASA's Artemis Accords. Main Topic: Boeing Starliner's Upcoming Mission Starliner's Crewed Test Flight: A detailed discussion on Boeing's upcoming Starliner mission, highlighting the spacecraft's capabilities, the crew's preparations, and the significance of this test flight. Spacecraft and Mission Overview: Insights into the Starliner's design, the choice of Atlas V rockets for the launch, and the planned landing procedures in the southwestern United States. Crew Profiles: Focus on the astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Sunita Williams, discussing their backgrounds, roles in the mission, and expectations for the test flight. Closing Thoughts: Rod and Tariq wrap up with final thoughts on the importance of the Starliner mission for Boeing and NASA, discussing potential outcomes and what they signify for the future of commercial spaceflight. Hosts: Rod Pyle and Tariq Malik Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-space. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit
On this episode of the Ruff Talk VR podcast we are have just returned from PAX East and are excited to talk about our weekend! Although there wasn't the most VR year this, we still had a blast and the VR that was shown - Pin City from Studio 217 and Silent Slayer from Schell Games - both represented the virtual reality industry strongly! Besides our time at PAX East, we also have plenty of VR news to discuss including Toy Monsters VR getting an official release date, upcoming games like Soul Covenant VR, a new trailer for Mobile Suit Gundam: Silver Phantom from Atlas V, Mannequin hitting open alpha on SideQuest, a port of Riven coming to VR, and more news! We also cap off the episode with an interview from PAX East with the producer and technical director of Silent Slayer from Schell Games!Discord: https://discord.gg/9JTdCccucSPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/rufftalkvrTabor Radio: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2216985If you enjoy the podcast be sure to rate us 5 stars and subscribe! Join our official subreddit at https://www.reddit.com/r/RuffTalkVR/Get 20% OFF @manscaped + Free Shipping with promo code RUFFTALKVR at MANSCAPED.com!*We are paid a commission through affiliate links to help support the podcast on the Kiwi links abovePatreon: https://www.patreon.com/rufftalkvr Support the show
Raketen haben mich schon immer fasziniert. Die Atlas V Rakete ist eine moderne Lastenrakete und regelmäßig im Einsatz um Satelliten und Sonden in den Weltraum zu bringen.
United Launch Alliance (ULA) has completed the assembly of its first Vulcan rocket at Cape Canaveral, Florida. This preparation sets the stage for its initial launch next month, marking a crucial milestone in the field of aerospace. The Vulcan rocket, a new addition to ULA's fleet, aims to eventually replace the company's current Atlas V and Delta IV rockets.
Another meeting, another round of amazing student research! This episode, we talk to winners of the POMA Student Paper Competition from the 184th meeting of the ASA about their research into using machine learning to model concert hall reverberation time, the effect of clear speech on memory, noise from the Atlas-V rocket launch, the bridge force exerted on the string of a bowed instrument, and a new approach to underwater acoustic source localization. Associated Papers:Jonathan Michael Broyles and Zane Tyler Rusk. Predicting the reverberation time of concert halls by use of a random forest regression model. Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. 51, 015004 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1121/2.0001751Nicholas B. Aoki and Georgia Zellou. When clear speech does not enhance memory: Effects of speaking style, voice naturalness, and listener age. Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. 51, 060002 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1121/2.0001766Logan T. Mathews, Mark C. Anderson, Carson D. Gardner, Bradley W. McLaughlin, Brooke M. Hinds, Megan R. McCullah-Boozer, Lucas K. Hall, and Kent L. Gee. An overview of acoustical measurements made of the Atlas V JPSS-2 rocket launch. Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. 51, 040003 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1121/2.0001768Alessio Lampis, Alexander Mayer, Montserrat Pàmies-Vilà, and Vasileios Chatziioannou. Examination of the static and dynamic bridge force components of a bowed string. Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. 51, 035002 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1121/2.0001755Dariush Kari, Andrew C. Singer, Hari Vishnu, and Amir Weiss. A gradient-based optimization approach for underwater acoustic source localization. Proc. Mtgs. Acoust. 51, 022002 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1121/2.0001753Find out how to enter the Student Paper Competition for the latest meeting.Read more from Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics (POMA).Learn more about Acoustical Society of America Publications. Music Credit: Min 2019 by minwbu from Pixabay. https://pixabay.com/?utm_source=link-attribution&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=music&utm_content=1022
Amazon launched the first test satellites for its planned internet service on October 6 as a rival to SpaceX's broadband network. United Launch Alliance's (ULA) Atlas V rocket blasted off with the pair of test satellites, kicking off a program that aims to improve global internet coverage with an eventual 3,236 satellites around Earth. Amazon plans to begin offering service by the end of next year. Elon Musk's SpaceX has a huge head start over Amazon and its founder Jeff Bezos, who has his own rocket company, Blue Origin. SpaceX flew its first test Starlink satellites in 2018 and the first operational satellites in 2019. It has since launched more than 5,000 Starlinks from Florida and California, using its own Falcon rockets. Europe's Eutelsat OneWeb is also launching internet satellites, with around 600 in orbit. Amazon originally agreed to put the satellites on the debut launch of ULA's Vulcan rocket. But with the Vulcan grounded by problems until at least the end of this year, Amazon switched to the long-established Atlas V. When licensing the program, the Federal Communications Commission stipulated that at least half of the planned satellites will be operating by 2026 and all of them by 2029. Amazon has reserved 77 launches from ULA, Blue Origin, and Europe's Arianespace to get everything up. This article was provided by The Associated Press.
I interviewed Meta XR producer Ryan Genji Thomas at Venice Immersive 2023. Check out all of the Quill pieces, narrative apps, and Horizon worlds that Ryan has produced down below and check out more context in the rough transcript below as well. Narrative animation experiencesYearTitleStudio/Creator2019The RemedyDaniel Martin Peixe2020Tales from Soda Island - Chapter 1: The Multiverse BakeryStudio Syro2020The ReservoirMaiden InteractiveRic Carrasquillo2020Cube Farm (ep 1)Two Trick PonyDir. Tory Stanton, Scott McCabe2020Cube Farm (ep 2)Two Trick PonyDir. Tory Stanton, Scott McCabe2020Cube Farm (ep 3)Two Trick PonyDir. Tory Stanton, Scott McCabe2020Tales from Soda Island - Chapter 2: The Neon JungleStudio Syro2020Goodbye Mr. OctopusAtlas V x Studio GepettoDir. Amaury Campion2020The BeastBlue Zoo AnimationDir. Grant Berry, Dave Winn2020Lifetime AchievementParade AnimationDir. Yonatan Tal2020Four StoriesNick Ladd2020Tales from Soda Island - Chapter 3: The Quantum RaceStudio Syro2021Peace of MindBlue Zoo AnimationDir. Ben Steer2021Kteer TayyebSamia Khalaf2021Tales from Soda Island - Chapter 4: The Golden RecordStudio Syro2021RebelsFederico Moreno Breser2021NightMara Ep.1So Meta StudiosDir. Gianpaolo Gonzalez2021_HELLOSamuel Klughertz, Nicolas Capitane2021Tales from Soda Island - Chapter 5: The School TripStudio Syro2021NamooBaobab StudiosDir. Eric Oh2022Lustration Ep.1New CanvasDir. Ryan Griffen2022Lustration Ep.2New CanvasDir. Ryan Griffen2022Lustration Ep.3New CanvasDir. Ryan Griffen2022Lustration Ep.4New CanvasDir. Ryan Griffen2022Mescaform HillEdward Madojemu2022NightMara Ep.2So Meta StudiosDir. Gianpaolo Gonzalez2022Tales from Soda Island - Chapter 6: SilenceStudio Syro2022Tales from Soda Island - Chapter 7: The First IngredientStudio Syro2023ReImagined - Volume I: NyssaVery CavaliereDir. Julie Cavaliere2023ReImagined - Volume II: MahalVery CavaliereDir. Michaela Ternasky Holland NARRATIVE APPSYearTitleCreator(s)2017Dear AngelicaOculus Story StudioDir. Saschka Unseld2017Baba YagaBaobab StudiosDir. Eric Darnell2023Wallace & Gromit in "The Grand Getaway"Atlas V x AardmanDir. Finbar Hawkins, Bram Ttwheam2023(confidential)(confidential) HORIZON WORLDSYearTitle2022Creepy Cabin2022Dead End Drive-In2022Neon Arena2022Shaqtacular Spectacular2023(confidential)2023(confidential)2023(confidential) This is a listener-supported podcast through the Voices of VR Patreon. Music: Fatality
Starfish Space announces the successful stabilization of the Otter Pup. Hurricane Idalia causes delays to ULA's launch of the NRO Silentbarker satellite. Robotics company GITAI raises an additional $15 million in a Series B Extension round, and more. Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our weekly intelligence roundup, Signals and Space, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow T-Minus on Twitter and LinkedIn. T-Minus Guest Our guest today is Intellectual Property Lawyer Kyriacos Tsircou on space startups navigating IP hurdles. You can connect with Kyri on LinkedIn and learn more about his work on his website. Selected Reading Satellite Internet Market worth $17.1 billion by 2028 - Exclusive Report by MarketsandMarkets™ ULA delays Atlas V launch to roll the rocket back ahead of Tropical Storm Idalia- Florida Today US offers rare preview of upcoming spy-satellite launch- Defense One TEMPO - Nitrogen Dioxide Air Pollution Over North America- NASA NASA to Demonstrate Laser Communications from Space Station India to launch solar observatory mission Aditya-L1 this week- TechCrunch India's Skyroot expects to double rocket launches amid Chandrayaan-3's success- Reuters South Africa and China Sign Agreements on Space Exploration Activities- Space in Africa Space Robotics Startup GITAI Raises an Additional US$15 Million in Funding Kremlin plays down moon landing failure, says space programme will continue- Yahoo Space Florida board picks Space Force Col. Long as next CEO- Orlando Sentinel Announcement of Opportunity ETP - Open Call for Technology - Call Four- UKSA A Very British Space Launch review – as flimsy as Richard Branson's rockets- the Guardian NASA and Forest Service offer seedlings to grow Artemis 'moon trees'- Space.com T-Minus Crew Survey We want to hear from you! Please complete our 4 question survey. It'll help us get better and deliver you the most mission-critical space intel every day. Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at space@n2k.com to request more info. Want to join us for an interview? Please send your pitch to space-editor@n2k.com and include your name, affiliation, and topic proposal. T-Minus is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © 2023 N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Fortune is a series of 8 Snapchat and Instagram AR filters that explore the topic of money and our relationship to money. Each project is around 90-seconds in length and uses a variety of immersive storytelling techniques from tabletop-scale animation to interactive facial filters to experiences AR-enabled interactions. At the end of each episode is a question designed to kick off a broader social media engagement campaign and group discussion about money. It should be premiering on Arte's social media channels later in the fall, and I had a chance to speak to the production team at Tribeca Immersive including Emilie Valentin (Writer of Fortune), Claire Meinhard (Director of Fortune), and Aurélie Leduc (Producer of Fortune working at Atlas V). This is a listener-supported podcast through the Voices of VR Patreon. Music: Fatality
MONSTRORAMA is a mixed reality narrative game from Atlas V that transforms your living room into a monster museum. There is a lot of environmental storytelling that's used to modulate your home, and you end up using your hands to draw mixed reality portals in order to battle both inner and outer monsters. I had a chance catch up with director Clement Deneux (previously directed Missing Pictures) at Tribeca Immersive to break down the design process, mixed reality considerations, future plans, and collaborating with Andy Serkis as a voice actor and narrator for the piece. This is a listener-supported podcast through the Voices of VR Patreon. Music: Fatality
Boeing says its Starliner spacecraft will be ready by early March, but has not decided on a launch date with NASA. Amazon plans to launch the first Kuiper satellites on ULA's Atlas V in September. Firefly Aerospace announces an expansion of its on-orbit services with its new Elytra fleet, and more. Remember to leave us a 5-star rating and review in your favorite podcast app. Miss an episode? Sign-up for our weekly intelligence roundup, Signals and Space, and you'll never miss a beat. And be sure to follow T-Minus on Twitter and LinkedIn. T-Minus Guest We have the first of a two part interview with Kaylin Trychon and Steve Luczynski, from the Aerospace Village, on the nonprofit's mission, their programs, and the upcoming DEF CON hacker convention. You can connect with Kaylin and Steve on LinkedIn and find out more about the Aerospace Village on their website. Selected Reading Starliner undergoing three independent investigations as flight slips to 2024- Ars Technica Amazon switches rockets for first test satellites to avoid launch delay- Reuters Firefly Aerospace Debuts Elytra Orbital Vehicles with Enhanced On-Orbit Mobility and Services- Firefly Aerospace Redwire Corporation Reports Second Quarter 2023 Financial Results Billionaire Charlie Ergen merging Dish and EchoStar to expand mobile and satellite telecom empire- CNBC NOAA Eliminates Restrictive Operating Conditions From Commercial Remote Sensing Satellite Licenses- Office of Space Commerce Pioneering worldwide space partnerships to boost UK innovation- Gov.UK Japan Selects Warpspace for Optical Communications SBIR Program - Via Satellite Pale Blue expands partnerships in Asia to supply water-based propulsion systems for Yonsei University- Press Release Eutelsat and Thaicom Partner for New Satellite Over Asia- Via Satellite Govt speeds up feasibility study into spaceport plan- Bangkok Post Watch: Fiery ‘meteor' over Australia probably Russian space rocket - BBC News Global Launches: Trends, Observations, and Opportunities- Astralytical The moon is open for business, and entrepreneurs are racing to make billions- Business Insider Space Development Agency announces mission expansion at Grand Forks Air Force Base- Grand Forks Herald T-Minus Crew Survey We want to hear from you! Please complete our 4 question survey. It'll help us get better and deliver you the most mission-critical space intel every day. Want to hear your company in the show? You too can reach the most influential leaders and operators in the industry. Here's our media kit. Contact us at space@n2k.com to request more info. Want to join us for an interview? Please send your pitch to space-editor@n2k.com and include your name, affiliation, and topic proposal. T-Minus is a production of N2K Networks, your source for strategic workforce intelligence. © 2023 N2K Networks, Inc. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week: a DOUBLE FEATURE.First: our good friend Monica Miklas joins us to talk about a career arc that has taken her from indie work at the Hollywood Fringe Festival to being a senior manager of creative direction at RWS Entertainment, one of the biggest themed entertainment companies in the world, working on everything from haunts to cruise ships.Then we take a leap over into the digital realm and talk with Clement Deneux and Michael Masukawa of Atlas V about MONSTRORAMA, a Tribeca Immersive selection that truly delighted me this month.SHOW NOTESRWS EntertainmentCapital WAtlas VMONSTRORAMA Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This edition features stories on a missing F-16 pilot, preventing the flu, an Atlas V rocket launch, new inductees to the Officers' Honor Role and Airmen playing flag football. Hosted by Master Sgt. Shawn Sprayberry.
Astrea is the publishing arm of Atlas V that aims to close the current gap in distribution for immersive stories that debut on the film festival circuit, but then often don't make it wider distribution. There's a lot of optimization, porting, and marketing involved in this process, and I had a chance to catch up with Astrea's head of distribution Danielle Giroux to talk about their curation and publishing process as well as some selections from their full lineup. We also talk about other distribution options for immersive stories including projection mapped experiences and location-based entertainment. Distribution is one of the biggest open problems for these immersive stories, and Giroux talks about how the festival debut is just the very beginning of the life cycle for an immersive story and how they're taking a bespoke process for each story that's in their line-up.
Federalism: Is a state-issued cannabis license a legally protected interest, given that cannabis remains illegal under federal law? - Argued: Fri, 27 Jan 2023 9:53:11 EDT
La NASA continue de préparer un futur vol habité vers Mars, qui pourrait avoir lieu à l'horizon 2030 ou un peu plus tard. Pour ce faire, elle vient de mettre au point un nouvel engin, qui pourrait se révéler très utile pour les astronautes s'apprêtant à fouler le sol de la planète rouge. Il s'agit d'un bouclier thermique gonflable, que les scientifiques ont nommé "Loftid". Il a été placé dans une fusée Atlas V, lancée elle-même dans l'espace le 10 novembre 2022. Le bouclier thermique s'est alors placé en orbite, durant un certain temps, avant d'amorcer sa descente sur terre. Il s'agissait de savoir si, lors de cette descente, le bouclier pourrait se gonfler de façon autonome. Les scientifiques ont pu s'apercevoir que le bouclier s'est bien déployé de la manière prévue. Il a pu ensuite amerrir au large d'Hawaï et être récupéré. L'avantage principal de cette technique innovante, c'est que Loftid ne fait qu'un peu plus de 2 mètres quand il est plié. Mais, quand il se gonfle, son envergure passe à 6 mètres. Ce nouveau type de bouclier thermique permet donc d'emporter dans l'espace une charge plus légère et moins volumineuse. Le rôle de ce bouclier thermique gonflable est de faciliter l'atterrissage du matériel sur Mars. En effet, l'atmosphère de cette planète, plus fine que celle de la Terre, ne freine pas suffisamment les atterrisseurs utilisés par la NASA. Aussi, pour faire atterrir un rover, par exemple, des parachutes ne suffisent pas. Dotées de rétrofusées, les grues mises au point par les techniciens de la NASA se sont révélées plus efficaces. Mais on ne peut pas s'en servir pour faire atterrir des charges trop lourdes. On voit alors tout l'intérêt d'utiliser ce type de bouclier thermique gonflable, capable d'assurer l'atterrissage d'un matériel plus important, mais aussi de transporter les astronautes eux-mêmes. Ce bouclier, qui devrait se déployer lors de sa descente sur Mars, sera tout de même équipé de parachutes, pour renforcer encore la sécurité de l'équipage. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
La NASA continue de préparer un futur vol habité vers Mars, qui pourrait avoir lieu à l'horizon 2030 ou un peu plus tard. Pour ce faire, elle vient de mettre au point un nouvel engin, qui pourrait se révéler très utile pour les astronautes s'apprêtant à fouler le sol de la planète rouge.Il s'agit d'un bouclier thermique gonflable, que les scientifiques ont nommé "Loftid". Il a été placé dans une fusée Atlas V, lancée elle-même dans l'espace le 10 novembre 2022.Le bouclier thermique s'est alors placé en orbite, durant un certain temps, avant d'amorcer sa descente sur terre. Il s'agissait de savoir si, lors de cette descente, le bouclier pourrait se gonfler de façon autonome.Les scientifiques ont pu s'apercevoir que le bouclier s'est bien déployé de la manière prévue. Il a pu ensuite amerrir au large d'Hawaï et être récupéré.L'avantage principal de cette technique innovante, c'est que Loftid ne fait qu'un peu plus de 2 mètres quand il est plié. Mais, quand il se gonfle, son envergure passe à 6 mètres. Ce nouveau type de bouclier thermique permet donc d'emporter dans l'espace une charge plus légère et moins volumineuse.Le rôle de ce bouclier thermique gonflable est de faciliter l'atterrissage du matériel sur Mars. En effet, l'atmosphère de cette planète, plus fine que celle de la Terre, ne freine pas suffisamment les atterrisseurs utilisés par la NASA.Aussi, pour faire atterrir un rover, par exemple, des parachutes ne suffisent pas. Dotées de rétrofusées, les grues mises au point par les techniciens de la NASA se sont révélées plus efficaces. Mais on ne peut pas s'en servir pour faire atterrir des charges trop lourdes.On voit alors tout l'intérêt d'utiliser ce type de bouclier thermique gonflable, capable d'assurer l'atterrissage d'un matériel plus important, mais aussi de transporter les astronautes eux-mêmes.Ce bouclier, qui devrait se déployer lors de sa descente sur Mars, sera tout de même équipé de parachutes, pour renforcer encore la sécurité de l'équipage. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
SpaceTime Series 25 Episode 127*How black holes control star formationNew observations using NASA's Webb Space Telescope are showing astronomers how black holes control star formation in galaxies.*Euclid completes thermal vacuum testingThe European Space Agency's new Euclid spacecraft has completed a key phase of its pre-flight thermal testing program as engineers and scientists prepare the probe for next year's launch to orbit.*Last Atlas V launch from CaliforniaSkywatchers have witnessed a bit of history with the last ever launch of an Atlas V rocket from the Californian coast.*More Chinese space junk pollutes low Earth orbitAnother Chinese rocket has exploded in orbit, The latest incident involved a Long March 6A rocket carrying the Yunhai 3 spy satellite into orbit from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in Shanxi province.*The Science ReportDiscovery of a link between exposure to pollution and low birth weight in babies.A new breed of rice that could be more sustainable.Study finds that being young, male, religious, with a high income makes you more likely to gamble.Skeptics guide to avoiding hangoversListen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ If you love this podcast, please get someone else to listen to. Thank you…To become a SpaceTime supporter and unlock commercial free editions of the show, gain early access and bonus content, please visit https://bitesz.supercast.com/ . Premium version now available via Spotify and Apple Podcasts.For more podcasts visit our HQ at https://biteszhq.com #space #astronomy #science #news #podcast #spacetime
Friday November 11, 2022Today's headline stories:Astronomy Daily – The Podcast-NASA will continue a lunar smallsat mission for launch in mid 2023, despite exceeding its cost cap by 30%.-The Atlas rocket family, a staple of the US. Launch industry since June 1157, ended its West Coast operations on November 10 with the launch of an Atlas V rocket with the JPS Two weather satellite.-A new satellite image shows that the world's largest iceberg 76 A has entered the Drake Passage, a waterway that contains a fastmoving ocean current that will send the mighty Berg on a one-way trip to a watery grave.-One of the largest pieces of NASA's fallen space shuttle, Challenger, has been discovered on the ocean floor by a TV documentary team searching for a downed World War II aircraft.-Our warming planet – a new study-Mars has a core – confirmed-The ever-changing Artemis launch date…will it or won't it?-An Exoplanet updateS01E56Andrew's back! Big thank you to Steve for the great job he did while Andrew was away, and Steve will be returning down the track in a little.Astronomy Daily – The Podcast is available on Apple Podcasts and Spotify:Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/astronomy-daily-the-podcast/id1642258990 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2kPF1ABBW2rCrjDlU2CWLW Or stream from our websites at www.spacenuts.io or our HQ at www.bitesz.com If you'd like to find out more about the stories featured in today's show, you can read today's edition of the Astronomy Daily Newsletter at any of our websites – www.spacenuts.io , www.bitesz.com or go directly to www.astronomydaily.io – subscribe and get the new edition delivered to your mailbox or RSS reader every day….it's free from us to you.Please subscribe to the podcast and if you have a moment, a quick review would be most helpful. Thank you…#space #astronomy #science #podcast #astronomydaily #spacenuts #spacetime
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
SpaceTime Series 25 Episode 115*Discovery of two interstellar objects which reached the Earth Astronomers have confirmed that two meteors which burned up in Earth's atmosphere were both alien visitors from interstellar space.*NASA's new time lapse movie of the universeNASA's NEOWISE spacecraft has provided astronomers with a new time lapse movie of the universe showing how its evolved over the past decade.*New SpaceX record breaking launchSpaceX is continuing to set new records with an unprecedented 53 launches in 53 weeks.*Atlas V launches two satellitesA United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket has carried two new telecommunications satellites into geostationary orbit.*The Science ReportNew COVID-19 Omicron BA.2.75.2 variant largely evades neutralizing antibodies and treatments.Fishing equipment is a major pollutant in the world's oceans.Study shows Neanderthals lived in small communities of around 20 individuals.Skeptics guide to telling science from pseudoscience.Listen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ If you love this podcast, please get someone else to listen to. Thank you…To become a SpaceTime supporter and unlock commercial free editions of the show, gain early access and bonus content, please visit https://bitesz.supercast.com/ . Premium version now available via Spotify and Apple Podcasts.For more podcasts visit our HQ at https://biteszhq.com Your support is needed...SpaceTime is an independently produced podcast (we are not funded by any government grants, big organisations or companies), and we're working towards becoming a completely listener supported show...meaning we can do away with the commercials and sponsors. We figure the time can be much better spent on researching and producing stories for you, rather than having to chase sponsors to help us pay the bills.That's where you come in....help us reach our first 1,000 subscribers...at that level the show becomes financially viable and bills can be paid without us breaking into a sweat every month. Every little bit helps...even if you could contribute just $1 per month. It all adds up.By signing up and becoming a supporter at the $5 or more level, you get immediate access to over 280 commercial-free, double, and triple episode editions of SpaceTime plus extended interview bonus content. You also receive all new episodes on a Monday rather than having to wait the week out. Subscribe via Supercast (you get a month's free trial to see if it's really for you or not) ... and share in the rewards. Details at Supercast - https://bitesznetwork.supercast.tech/ Details at https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com or www.bitesz.com #astronomy #space #science #news #podcast
SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
SpaceTime Series 25 Episode 94*The Perseverance rover finds the sands of Mars are green as well as redThe accepted view of Mars is red rocks and craters as far as the eye can see. But NASA's Perseverance rover has found lots of olivine.*New planetary nebulae discoveryAstronomers have confirmed a large and evolved planetary nebula 4500 light years away in the Messier 37 open star cluster in the constellation Auriga the charioteer.*Atlas V launches new spy satelliteA United Launch Alliance Atlas V Centaur rocket has successfully placed a new American Early warning spy satellite into orbit.*September SkyWatchThe September Equinox the constellations Capricorn and Aquarius and the Aurigids and Epsilon Perseids meteor showers dominate the night skies of September on SkyWatch.Listen to SpaceTime on your favorite podcast app with our universal listen link: https://spacetimewithstuartgary.com/listen For more SpaceTime and show links: https://linktr.ee/biteszHQ If you love this podcast, please get someone else to listen to. Thank you…To become a SpaceTime supporter and unlock commercial free editions of the show, gain early access and bonus content, please visit https://bitesz.supercast.com/ . Premium version now available via Spotify and Apple Podcasts.For more podcasts visit our HQ at https://biteszhq.com Sponsor Details:This episode of SpaceTime is brought to you by the I Am BIO podcast - The only podcast at the intersection of biotechnology, politics, patients & the planet. You can subscribe wherever you get your podcasts or find out more by visiting their website at https://www.bio.org/podcast Highly recommended!#mars #space #science #astronomy #spacetime #skywatch
Amazon is purchasing up to 83 launches from Arianespace, Blue Origin and United Launch Alliance—in addition to the 9 Atlas V launches they bought last year—to deploy their Project Kuiper constellation. This is a huge deal that changes the game for heavy lift launch providers, and has major implications for the small launch providers in the industry.This episode of Main Engine Cut Off is brought to you by 40 executive producers—Simon, Lauren, Kris, Pat, Matt, Jorge, Ryan, Donald, Lee, Chris, Warren, Bob, Russell, Moritz, Joel, Jan, David, Joonas, Robb, Tim Dodd (the Everyday Astronaut!), Frank, Julian and Lars from Agile Space, Tommy, Matt, The Astrogators at SEE, Chris, Aegis Trade Law, Fred, Hemant, Dawn Aerospace, Andrew, and seven anonymous—and 766 other supporters.TopicsAmazon signs multibillion-dollar Project Kuiper launch contracts - SpaceNewsArianespace, ULA, Blue Origin discuss executing ambitious Kuiper constellation missions for Amazon - NASASpaceFlight.comAmazon launch contracts drive changes to launch vehicle production - SpaceNewsAndrew Parsonson on Twitter: “Interesting details from @Arianespace regarding the @amazon deal. 16 of the 18 missions will be launched aboard the Ariane 64 with the upgraded P120C+ boosters. The new boosters are set to be introduced in 2025 and only if they are approved by @esa Member States in November.”Episode 55 - I've Slept on a Torpedo - Off-NominalThe ShowLike the show? Support the show!Email your thoughts, comments, and questions to anthony@mainenginecutoff.comFollow @WeHaveMECOListen to MECO HeadlinesJoin the Off-Nominal DiscordSubscribe on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Pocket Casts, Spotify, Google Play, Stitcher, TuneIn or elsewhereSubscribe to the Main Engine Cut Off NewsletterBuy shirts and Rocket Socks from the Main Engine Cut Off ShopMusic by Max JustusArtwork photo by NASA/Ben Smegelsky
Real Madrid comes back to beat the star filled Paris Saint Germain to move on to the quarterfinals in the UEFA Champions League. We also touch on the tragedy in Mexico in the match between Atlas v Queretaro. and finally we talking about Week 2 in the Major League Soccer. Follow the show @QuattroQuattroDos on Twitch, Twitter & IG Follow Cristian @CrisPutallaz on IG and Twitter --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/quattroquattrodos/support