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http://gizmodo.com/5819368/watch-the-last-space-shuttle-flight-ever-updating-live?popular=true

Thoughts:

1985. That whaletennisshoebird has been hurled into space at supersonic speeds on shaky fireballs, bumped around in vacuum, and dropped into the trash of earth with a had landing at the end for 25 YEARS. Wow.

Houston control center: big screens, consoles, clutter, and flatscreens sitting on the desks. We're 25 years advanced in computer technology--look how far it's come. How far could control come if we built it today? The shuttle pushed advanced ceramics research, what could we do today with modern materials?

I was struck by how old some of the astronauts were.

The missions that are current for NASA are very much scientific and satellite based
http://www.nasa.gov/missions/current/index.html
Some very fascinating ones.

I have a friend who promotes space tourism. There's 410 people who have put down deposits to Virgin Galactic, according to wikipedia. http://www.virgingalactic.com/ You can hear a lot more about this at any Yuri's Night Party and Moffet throws a good one.

A large amount of the next gen of work in space will be robotics (talk to Vytas) and especially telepresence with robotic behavioural backup. We won't see a lot of humans up there until some particularly pernicious biology problems are solved.

BTW, you can check out some of Vytas' thoughts--mostly on living in a cube--at
http://www.magicalrobot.org/BeingHuman/
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