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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Feb 23, 2024 16:12:08 GMT -8
And then the lander tips over. You had to jinx it, didn't you? I didn't see anything on it tipping over..I know the Japan machine landed on it's nose They screwed up and did not send out the cameras before the landing, so they do not know why or how it tipped over, but it is not oriented correctly. They are supposed to send out the camera soon to basically see what the damage is.
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Post by irimi on Feb 24, 2024 7:56:51 GMT -8
And then the lander tips over. You had to jinx it, didn't you? I didn't see anything on it tipping over..I know the Japan machine landed on it's nose The nose of the man in the moon?
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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Feb 27, 2024 12:08:45 GMT -8
I didn't see anything on it tipping over..I know the Japan machine landed on it's nose The nose of the man in the moon? And now it appears that Odysseus is going to lose power by tomorrow. The Japanese lander survived the two-week lunar night, though.
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Post by kersting13 on Feb 27, 2024 13:00:24 GMT -8
Hopefully, they'll learn from all of these little failures.
Doesn't make you too confident if you're an astronaut, though.
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Post by wilkyisdashiznit on Feb 27, 2024 21:30:30 GMT -8
Hopefully, they'll learn from all of these little failures. Doesn't make you too confident if you're an astronaut, though. The beauty of the Apollo program was they let the astronauts land the lander themselves. Neil Armstrong, Pete Conrad, Alan Shephard, David Scott, John Young, and Eugene Cernan each successfully landed on the Moon themselves. No fancy landing program loaded with glitches and bugs. It is probably almost impossible to try and program a computer program that is as good as a pilot, who has spent most of his life flying. I think that less of a reliance on computer programs and more of a reliance on trained astronauts is the answer. Most often, the simple solution is the best solution.
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Post by lebaneaver on Feb 27, 2024 21:39:48 GMT -8
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