[ale] xkcd on NPR

Lightner, Jeff JLightner at water.com
Wed Nov 21 14:14:24 EST 2012


I lived in Huntsville back in those days and don't recall ever having heard and felt the Saturn V being tested even though Werner Von Braun and his  team were based there then.   I do recall being mightily impressed by the huge Saturn V they had laying on its side at the Alabama Space and Rocket Center museum.   The boosters' diameters were each large enough for a full grown man to stand in them without bending.   They also had the rocket for the Gemini actually standing up and it was quite tall itself and always made me wonder how tall the Saturn V would have been if they'd tried to stand it up.

Last time I went several years back they also had a space shuttle there.





-----Original Message-----
From: ale-bounces at ale.org [mailto:ale-bounces at ale.org] On Behalf Of Ken Cochran
Sent: Wednesday, November 21, 2012 11:57 AM
To: Atlanta Linux Enthusiasts
Subject: Re: [ale] xkcd on NPR

So I guess we now know where The Plans (to what just might be The Most Awesome Machine Mankind Ever Built) wound up?  :)

Ok, for completeness I guess, here's NPR's article/blog URL:

http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2012/11/19/165469300/why-not-say-it-simply-how-about-very-simply

(Trying to remember, my info may be very incorrect - bet someone here knows The Facts. :)  Seems I read sometime back
(comp.dcom.telecom?) that the computer "ring" was built by IBM, cost around $14 *million* and took something like 4 feet of vehicle cross-section & weighed a few TONS (!?!) and had roughly the computational power of a modern-day cheap wristwatch.

For our youngsters around here who might not know, it's my understanding that the plans to the Saturn V booster have long disappeared.  :(  Folks I was in school with long ago (who lived around Huntsville) told me they could hear & *feel* it when the manufacturer tested just ONE of its engines - it would shake & thunder most of north Alabama.  Yup "lots of fire comes out of here..."  And lots of kilo-Newtons.

Essay well worth reading:  "Camelot on the Moon"
(Google it - I'm sure it'll show up somewhere.)

Sorry to blather...

-kc

> Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2012 10:21:20 -0500
> From: Jim Kinney <jim.kinney at gmail.com>
> To: Atlanta Linux Enthusiasts <ale at ale.org>
> Subject: Re: [ale] xkcd on NPR
>
> On 11/21/2012 12:31 AM, Ken Cochran wrote:
> > Ok I just *gotta* post this (sorry)...
> >
> > http://xkcd.com/1133/
> >
> > Back to our Regularly Scheduled Programming...  -kc
> > _______________________________________________
> > Ale mailing list
> > Ale at ale.org
> > http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
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>
> Totally NAILED it!
>
> --
> James P. Kinney III
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