Vaguery + space   5

Flying the SR-1 Blackbird
"One moonless night, while flying a routine training mission over the Pacific, I wondered what the sky would look like from 84,000 feet if the cockpit lighting were dark. While heading home on a straight course, I slowly turned down all of the lighting, reducing the glare and revealing the night sky. Within seconds, I turned the lights back up, fearful that the jet would know and somehow punish me. But my desire to see the sky overruled my caution, I dimmed the lighting again. To my amazement, I saw a bright light outside my window. As my eyes adjusted to the view, I realized that the brilliance was the broad expanse of the Milky Way, now a gleaming stripe across the sky.…"
flying  aircraft  history  memory  technology  space 
april 2010 by Vaguery
The Great Brazilian Sat-Hack Crackdown
"To use the satellite, pirates typically take an ordinary ham radio transmitter, which operates in the 144- to 148-MHZ range, and add a frequency doubler cobbled from coils and a varactor diode. That lets the radio stretch into the lower end of FLTSATCOM's 292- to 317-MHz uplink range. All the gear can be bought near any truck stop for less than $500. Ads on specialized websites offer to perform the conversion for less than $100. Taught the ropes, even rough electricians can make Bolinha-ware.
"I saw it more than once in truck repair shops," says amateur radio operator Adinei Brochi (PY2ADN) "Nearly illiterate men rigged a radio in less than one minute, rolling wire on a coil.""
satellite  hacking  radio  security  government  ownership  owner-builder  disintermediation-targets  space 
november 2009 by Vaguery
NASA - Cave Skylights Spotted on Mars
One is reminded of the sinkholes of northwest Kentucky....
areology  geology  space  Mars  Martian  exploration  planetology  imaging 
september 2007 by Vaguery

Copy this bookmark:



description:


tags: