I had to google what "Goodnight Oppy" was. After googling, I am somewhat confused, as it is a "documentary" about a bit of defunct NASA equipment, how would that make a person cry?
It is notable though as the only piece of government hardware ever made that worked better than expected.
Not trying to be difficult, but why did it make you cry?Be ase humans were involved.
Not trying to be difficult, but why did it make you cry?
What about Goodnight Oppy made you cry?It has nothing to do with my arse that was a typo.
What about Goodnight Oppy made you cry?
Understandable, just the thought of human made objects that far out is a staggering thought. Voyager I and II in the same vein for me, Voyager - Mission Status - https://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status/.Mainly the emotions involved.
Was Oppy alive? Well, all the people who poured their sweat and tears into it were, working to achieve something that seemed impossible not that long ago. Speaks to me about how inanimate objects hold this energy of interconnectedness.
NASA has had a number of missions that went better than expected.I had to google what "Goodnight Oppy" was. After googling, I am somewhat confused, as it is a "documentary" about a bit of defunct NASA equipment, how would that make a person cry?
It is notable though as the only piece of government hardware ever made that worked better than expected.
I bet you'd weep a bit if you smashed one of your 100+ year old pipes..............Emotional for an object? Nope.
Nope. Not at all.I bet you'd weep a bit if you smashed one of your 100+ year old pipes..............
Yea, these people who like to piss on NASA are likely unable to even figure out how to calibrate a tricorder.NASA has had a number of missions that went better than expected.
Roughly 60% of all Mars missions fail before either getting to Mars or completing their objectives once on the surface.
Oppy was designed to last 90 sols (one sol = one Mars day).
It ended up surviving and providing fantastic science for 5111 sols. Mostly through the ingenuity of very bright people at NASA.
That’s pretty cool.
The creativity of the teams was fun to watch.Yes, I think the engineering involved for the two rovers to land safely was an astounding achievement in itself.
If you would upgrade to a TR-560 (Mk.VI) or a TR-580 (Mk.VII) you wouldn't need to worry about calibration as often. Not too expensive, it's the data plan that'll cost you.Yea, these people who like to piss on NASA are likely unable to even figure out how to calibrate a tricorder.