Archive for November, 2004
Taking the plunge
As some of you may know, my day job is with VeriSign R&D. Over the past year or so most of my work has been focusing on standards development and product deployment within the EPCglobal Network framework. Essentially its all about the confluence of RFID and Internet based B2B standards for frictionless supply chain management.
Well, I’ve decided to go off and do my own consulting and software startup that will target the smaller companies out there that have never been able to take advantage of the supply chain management techniques that Wal-Mart and P&G use to remain competitive. But it’s not about EDI. It’s about using the Internet as a platform for providing radically cheaper solutions that will disrupt the current supply chain management marketplace. The company is called Refactored Networks, LLC and will be open for business around January 1.
I’m still doing space stuff in my spare time though! And I’m still parttime at Masten Space Systems.
Comments are off for this postSlowly recovering….
Things are slowly coming back together after being hacked last week. Rocketforge is back and the wiki should be back later this evening. This is the default postnuke theme which I’ll change soon.
I hope the deepest level of hell is reserved for those who crack and deface websites…
Update: Apparently they got in through the twiki. I received the security notice yesterday which does me a fat lot of good now. Oh well, live and learn….
Comments are off for this postEmergency Legislative Action !!!!
Update From James Muncy:
The House Leadership just announced that there would be no more votes tonight. The House of Representatives will convene at 9am on Saturday morning to consider outstanding votes plus the Omnibus approps bill, etc… so phonecalls, faxes, and emails to House Members, especially House Democrats, should continue until at least mid-morning Eastern Time on Saturday. Remember: HR 5382 is a *bipartisan* bill that was developed as a compromisebetween the House-passed HR3752 and the Senate Commerce CommitteeÂ’s DemocraticStaffers. So nobody should think it is a partisan issue or a pro-Republican bill.
Oberstar’s number is (202) 225-6211
DeFazio’s number is (202) 225-6416
Comments are off for this postFriday, November 19, 2004
Dear Space Advocates & Correspondents:
This afternoon the House of Representatives had a 40 minute debate on
legislation designed to advance the U.S. commercial human spaceflight industry. It was a good and spirited debate, with bipartisan supporters speaking in favor, and two partisan Democrats speaking against HR5382.Unfortunately, the opponents’ arguments reflected the same misunderstanding of this issue that so many people have. Their presumption is that the federal government needs to set standards to protect the safety of the early adventurers who wish to buy a risky ride into space. Even before the vehicles that would fly them are designed, let alone built and flying. Frankly, Mr. Oberstar and Mr. DeFazio, the Ranking Minority Members of the House Transportation & Infrastructure Committee and its Aviation Subcommittee, seem to believe that we need to regulate spaceflight as if it were just another approach to Aviation.
But rockets are not airplanes, and the Commercial Space Launch Act and the U.S. commercial space transportation industry are not under the jurisdiction of the Aviation Subcommittee. Space is a new sphere of economic activity, and the House’s experts on these issues are members of the House’s Committee that is focused on America’s future, the Science Committee.
More importantly, the House worked for several months with the Senate to develop a compromise version of the original HR3752, which was passed by a vote of 402 to 1 in March of this year. It is important to note that HR3752 told the Secretary of Transportation to promote and license the carrying of “space flight participants” for compensation, i.e. to make money, under an “informed consent” regime. In other words, the rocket company had to tell the passenger how likely it was they might crash, and then the passenger could choose to take the risk or not. All regulation was focused on making sure the rockets didn’t hurt anyone on the ground. The Secretary was not given any authority – and has none under current law – to regulate in order to protect people riding on the vehicle.
And I might just point out, Mr. Oberstar and Mr. DeFazio both voted for HR3752 in March, along with every other Democratic member of the Transportation Committee who showed up to vote. (The only vote against HR3752 in March was by a libertarian Republican who didn’t think the government had any right to regulate rockets at all !)
So today’s choice on HR5382 is a choice not between one level of safety and another. It’s between Congress telling the American people they have a right to go into space and an expectation that, over time, it will become more affordable and more reliable to do so… and saying “we can’t be bothered to write legislation to help enable this new industry”. Fortunately, the American people *already* have the right to go into space. And the American free market will make it ever-more-affordable and ever-safer, even without the help of federal regulators. But it would be a good thing if this bipartisan legislation were enacted into law to help accelerate the process.
Ironically, the two members speaking in favor of higher safety today
will actually leave the industry free to do whatever it wants under current law, with no process by which the Secretary could, let alone would, start to set safety standards. So perhaps they are more committed to stopping legislation – and a new industry – than safety, after all.James Muncy
Consultant to several Commercial Human Spaceflight companies
703-370-4539
james.muncy@polispace.com
Defaced….
Yep. I got hit by that defacement contest that’s currently running. I’ll be recovering over the next day or so. Stupid kiddies…..
Comments are off for this postAmerica’s Space Prize Rules Announced
Leonard David has an article on space.com about Bigelow’s “America’s Space Prize”:
a spacecraft capable of taking a crew of no fewer than five people to an altitude of 400 kilometers and complete two orbits of the Earth at that altitude. Then they have to repeat that accomplishment within 60 days.
While the first flight must demonstrate only the ability to carry five crew members, the winner will have to take at least five people up on the second flight.
And one more thing. They have to do it by Jan. 10, 2010.
Some other details include:
- limited to American companies/individuals only
- in addition to the $50 million, Bigelow is also prepared to offer $200 million in “conditional purchase agreements for six flights of a selected vehicle” to non-first place finishers that, due to various reasons, may have a highly qualified product but just had bad timing or bad luck
- an additional $800 million in options contracts for 24 flights will be available over a period of about four to 4.5 years, Bigelow said.
- the conditionals include a) if the government regulates it to impossibility and b) if Bigelow doesn’t have anything to launch to.
Go read the whole thing.
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