|
Reader's Favorites
Media Casualties Mount Administration Split On Europe Invasion Administration In Crisis Over Burgeoning Quagmire Congress Concerned About Diversion From War On Japan Pot, Kettle On Line Two... Allies Seize Paris The Natural Gore Book Sales Tank, Supporters Claim Unfair Tactics Satan Files Lack Of Defamation Suit Why This Blog Bores People With Space Stuff A New Beginning My Hit Parade
Instapundit (Glenn Reynolds) Tim Blair James Lileks Bleats Virginia Postrel Kausfiles Winds Of Change (Joe Katzman) Little Green Footballs (Charles Johnson) Samizdata Eject Eject Eject (Bill Whittle) Space Alan Boyle (MSNBC) Space Politics (Jeff Foust) Space Transport News (Clark Lindsey) NASA Watch NASA Space Flight Hobby Space A Voyage To Arcturus (Jay Manifold) Dispatches From The Final Frontier (Michael Belfiore) Personal Spaceflight (Jeff Foust) Mars Blog The Flame Trench (Florida Today) Space Cynic Rocket Forge (Michael Mealing) COTS Watch (Michael Mealing) Curmudgeon's Corner (Mark Whittington) Selenian Boondocks Tales of the Heliosphere Out Of The Cradle Space For Commerce (Brian Dunbar) True Anomaly Kevin Parkin The Speculist (Phil Bowermaster) Spacecraft (Chris Hall) Space Pragmatism (Dan Schrimpsher) Eternal Golden Braid (Fred Kiesche) Carried Away (Dan Schmelzer) Laughing Wolf (C. Blake Powers) Chair Force Engineer (Air Force Procurement) Spacearium Saturn Follies JesusPhreaks (Scott Bell) Science
Nanobot (Howard Lovy) Lagniappe (Derek Lowe) Geek Press (Paul Hsieh) Gene Expression Carl Zimmer Redwood Dragon (Dave Trowbridge) Charles Murtaugh Turned Up To Eleven (Paul Orwin) Cowlix (Wes Cowley) Quark Soup (Dave Appell) Economics/Finance
Assymetrical Information (Jane Galt and Mindles H. Dreck) Marginal Revolution (Tyler Cowen et al) Man Without Qualities (Robert Musil) Knowledge Problem (Lynne Kiesling) Journoblogs The Ombudsgod Cut On The Bias (Susanna Cornett) Joanne Jacobs The Funny Pages
Cox & Forkum Day By Day Iowahawk Happy Fun Pundit Jim Treacher IMAO The Onion Amish Tech Support (Lawrence Simon) Scrapple Face (Scott Ott) Regular Reading
Quasipundit (Adragna & Vehrs) England's Sword (Iain Murray) Daily Pundit (Bill Quick) Pejman Pundit Daimnation! (Damian Penny) Aspara Girl Flit Z+ Blog (Andrew Zolli) Matt Welch Ken Layne The Kolkata Libertarian Midwest Conservative Journal Protein Wisdom (Jeff Goldstein et al) Dean's World (Dean Esmay) Yippee-Ki-Yay (Kevin McGehee) Vodka Pundit Richard Bennett Spleenville (Andrea Harris) Random Jottings (John Weidner) Natalie Solent On the Third Hand (Kathy Kinsley, Bellicose Woman) Patrick Ruffini Inappropriate Response (Moira Breen) Jerry Pournelle Other Worthy Weblogs
Ain't No Bad Dude (Brian Linse) Airstrip One A libertarian reads the papers Andrew Olmsted Anna Franco Review Ben Kepple's Daily Rant Bjorn Staerk Bitter Girl Catallaxy Files Dawson.com Dodgeblog Dropscan (Shiloh Bucher) End the War on Freedom Fevered Rants Fredrik Norman Heretical Ideas Ideas etc Insolvent Republic of Blogistan James Reuben Haney Libertarian Rant Matthew Edgar Mind over what matters Muslimpundit Page Fault Interrupt Photodude Privacy Digest Quare Rantburg Recovering Liberal Sand In The Gears(Anthony Woodlief) Sgt. Stryker The Blogs of War The Fly Bottle The Illuminated Donkey Unqualified Offerings What she really thinks Where HipHop & Libertarianism Meet Zem : blog Space Policy Links
Space Future The Space Review The Space Show Space Frontier Foundation Space Policy Digest BBS AWOL
USS Clueless (Steven Den Beste) Media Minder Unremitting Verse (Will Warren) World View (Brink Lindsay) The Last Page More Than Zero (Andrew Hofer) Pathetic Earthlings (Andrew Lloyd) Spaceship Summer (Derek Lyons) The New Space Age (Rob Wilson) Rocketman (Mark Oakley) Mazoo Site designed by Powered by Movable Type |
Undying Mythologies Disney has a new ride in Orlando that they claim is the most technically advanced they've ever done--a simulated mission to Mars. ...what makes Epcot's Mission: SPACE centrifuge truly unique is that it's not like a carnival ride version of a centrifuge -- such as the Gravitron -- where you're "simply strapped in" and whirled around for a few moments in the open air. Sounds pretty cool. They've had a "Mission To Mars" ride in the past (that was an update on the original "Rocket To The Moon" that was part of the original Disneyland), but this sounds much more individualized, high fidelity, and upgradeable. However, I have mixed feelings about it. "We have worked for a long time about doing 'space' at Epcot because it's just such a natural fit with what we're about here," said Brad Rex, Disney's vice president in charge of Epcot. "This is a tribute to NASA and the space program." My problem is that this perpetuates the heroic historical NASA myth--that only massive government bureaucracies will get us to Mars, that the only way to participate in space is to be a scientist, or engineer, or technologist, or "astronaut," that the only reason people would go to Mars is to "explore" and "do science," that this is what NASA would be doing, dammit, if we just had some politicians with vision! Despite their proud proclamation of "tying it to reality," I get no sense of any realistic vision of the future at all--it's just using updated technology to promote the same socialistic utopias of the past that Disney has always promoted. We just don't realize it because we don't recognize it, partly due to similar propaganda put out unendingly by Disney and others for the past half century (the original Colliers pieces with von Braun were in 1953, I believe). Which is pretty ironic, considering that this is being sponsored by a mostly private-enterprise company, Hewlett-Packard. Which just shows that they don't get it either. While it's nice that they worked with NASA on some of the technical aspects, it would have been nice if HP and Disney had consulted with someone besides NASA on the even more important social, business and cultural ones. Of course, the fact that they didn't sums up in a nutshell why it's been thirty years since the last time a human walked on another world. Posted by Rand Simberg at August 05, 2003 10:45 AMTrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.transterrestrial.com/mt-diagnostics.cgi/1555 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference this post from Transterrestrial Musings.
X Prize Update
Excerpt: Via InstaPundit, here's the latest on the X Prize, a $10 million contest to build the world's first do-it-yourself spaceship. The winning craft will be the first to fly to a height of 62.5 miles twice within a two-week period.... Weblog: The Speculist Tracked: August 5, 2003 02:00 PM
X Prize Update
Excerpt: Via InstaPundit, here's the latest on the X Prize, a $10 million contest to build the world's first do-it-yourself spaceship. The winning craft will be the first to fly to a height of 62.5 miles twice within a two-week period.... Weblog: The Speculist Tracked: August 5, 2003 02:01 PM
Alannis Morisette, Call Your Office
Excerpt: I think it's terribly ironic that the money spent to do this faux space ride, $100 million, would have been sufficient to do this actual spacecraft program three to five times. Even rides of the NASA philisophy cost too much. Weblog: Caerdroia Tracked: August 5, 2003 09:07 PM
Comments
You'll get no argument from me. I'm one of those people who expected that the world of 2001: A Space Odyssey would be here by now, and I've got to tell you that I'm pretty disappointed that it isn't. Posted by Joshua Chamberlain at August 5, 2003 01:06 PMThat myth has got to go! Disney needs to get behind something like the X Prize, the $10 million build-your-own-spaceship contest. Posted by Phil Bowermaster at August 5, 2003 02:03 PMThat socialist indoctrination took many forms. I still recall going to General Electric's Carosel of Progress at Disneyland as a young boy in the '60s, and checking out Walt's vision for the "city of tomorrow". I couldn't help but think what a structured life it imposed on the residents. Posted by Kevin L. Connors at August 5, 2003 02:42 PMI think it is a little bit of a leap to suggest that a government funded expedition to Mars is "socialism." That sort of thing seems to me to be a far more appropriate expenditure of government space dollars than running a high tech, space tax service, a function which ought to be commercialized forthwith. Posted by Mark R. Whittington at August 5, 2003 04:10 PMIt's certainly not anything resembling capitalism, Mark. Posted by Rand Simberg at August 5, 2003 04:43 PMAhh the future...Where my Jetpack and Flying car DAMMINT! "space tax service" A little Freudian slip there, Mark? :) Nice site! Nice site! Post a comment |