The two astronauts will remain on the ISS until February 2025, when they’ll return with two astronauts on the SpaceX Crew-9 mission that’s arriving at the ISS next month.
If it’s boeing i ain’t going
Damb this is China’s fault.
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Our spacecraft is called the Starliner
Because it will transport us to the stars, right?
No. Because it’s going to be a huge fireball in space
this will somehow be good for Boeing stock
I’d actually bet on Boeing stock going up if/when they cancel the Starliner program. It means one less guaranteed money-pit on the books.
Apparently Boeing is looking for an out on this contract
they shit the bed incredibly badly and from what I understand everyone in industry is just rolling with it to claim this is why fixed price contracts aren’t feasible
That’s why it was so satisfying to hear all the NASA officials in the press conference be confident that Starliner would fly in the future. Those remarks weren’t some sort of praise for Boeing. Those remarks were NASA’s way of telling Boeing to live up to the fixed-price contract, or else lawyers will get involved.
If it lands on earth without problems, Boeing will claim that it had been maligned all along. If it blows up on reentry, Boeing will claim that NASA made them leave it parked in space much longer than designed.
Best option is if it ‘accidentally’ veers toward Mars and sends back a ton of useful telemetry.
It has nowhere near enough dV to go to mars
There’s a Lloyd Bridges movie from the 60s where a rocket mission to the moon accidentally lands on Mars instead, so surprisingly that it bewilders the astronauts as it happens and it looks like Mars is, like, just a little past the moon. It’s pretty awful, and has roughly the same “le feeemale go back to the kitchen” preaching that a modern Chris Pratt Jurassic movie has, but I couldn’t help thinking of it now.
All SF writers should be forced to play at least 1000 hours of KSP
Naw, it’s a shot in the arm when 2009Trek is so powered by the navigational force known as Destiny™ that a supernova threatens to blow up the entire galaxy/universe at a speed many times the speed of light (also known as speed of plot) unless Red Matter™® can make a black hole to sort of kind of stop it. Also, moons with enough gravity to walk on and atmosphere to breathe are so tiny that it’s super easy, barely an inconvenience, to get banished to one after a slapfight and, wherever you land, still be within sprinting distance of Leonard Nimoy’s shelter.
No joke! I was a lifelong classic sci-fi literature fan, the stuff that Clarke and his contemporaries were writing. But it wasn’t until I played KSP that I really understood the basics of spaceflight.
I found a YouTube link in your post. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy: