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17 Dec 07:46

nubbsgalore: photos by scott h. murray from australia’s...











nubbsgalore:

photos by scott h. murray from australia’s northern territory. note the arcing bolt in the third photo, which appears to travel upwards before looping down and to the foreground.

17 Dec 07:46

Why NASA Needs a Programmer Fluent In 60-Year-Old Languages

by brandizzi

UPDATE: The Voyager team is not yet hiring anybody to fulfill the role. The retirement is not anticipated until next year. "I go down the hallway and I meet people and I say, 'Wow, Voyager was the best project I've ever worked on. I wish I could get back on it again.' Those are the kind of people that I seek out when I have to replace people," Dodd said in the previous interview.​

​Larry Zottarelli, the last original Voyager engineer still on the project, is retiring after a long and storied history at JPL. While there are still a few hands around who worked on the original project, now the job of keeping this now-interstellar spacecraft going will fall to someone else. And that someone needs to have some very specific skills. 

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Yes, it's going to require coding, but it won't be in Ruby on Rails or Python. Not C or C++. Go a little further back, to the assembly languages used in early computing. Know Cobol? Can you breeze through Fortran? Remember your Algol? Those fancy new languages from the late 1950s? Then you might be the person for the job. 

"It was state of the art in 1975, but that's basically 40 years old if you want to think of it that way," Suzanne Dodd, program manager for the Voyager program, said in a phone interview. "Although, some people can program an assembly language and understand the intricacy of the spacecraft, most younger people can't or really don't want to.​"

you have a few tasks ahead of you and about 64 kilobytes of memory to work with

More From Popular Mechanics

As the new engineer, you have a few tasks ahead of you and about 64 kilobytes of memory to work with. The Voyager twins sport NASA's earliest on-board computers, a step away from the sequencers used on projects like ISEE-3. A sequencer uses radio or audio tones to turn on an instrument but with an onboard computer, more functions can be automatic, which is especially helpful if your spacecraft is more than 12 billion miles away—17 hours by radio—and only certain antennas work with it. Voyager 2, now moving downward from the ecliptic of the solar system, can only be reached by the Canberra antenna of the Deep Space Network. 

The last true software overhaul was in 1990, after the 1989 Neptune encounter and at the beginning of the interstellar mission. "​The flight software was basically completely re-written in order to have a spacecraft that could be nearly autonomous and continue sending back data to us even if we lost communication with it," Dodd said. "It has a looping routine of activities that it does automatically on board and then we augment that with sequences that we send up every three months.​"

Both spacecrafts are "very healthy for senior citizens" Dodd says and they have enough power left to run for another decade, though beyond that the future is uncertain. To try and prolong their lives, a new engineer would have to help figure out a way to make a sort of "energy audit" from afar, check to see the energy requirements of remaining instruments, and help institute shutdown procedures that make the most of what's left of the onboard energy. 

"​[The original engineers] said, 'This subsystem takes 3.2 watts of power.' Well, it really took 3 watts, but they wanted to be conservative when they built the spacecraft," Dodd says. "Now, we are at the point in the mission where we are trying to get rid of the margins and get the actual numbers."

The clock is ticking.

That's when it's time to turn back to old documents to figure out the logic behind some of the engineering decisions. Dodd says it's easy to find the engineering decisions, but harder to find the reasoning. This means combing through secondary documents and correspondence hoping to find the solution, trying to get in another engineer's head.

The last resort is picking those engineers' brains directly. Many are retired, and are working on 40-year-old memories. Still, the small team working on Voyager today has a list of engineers and others on-hand to call in emergencies. Dodd herself has worked on the spacecraft off and on since 1984, just before the Uranus flyby.

"​People's memories 40 years later aren't always accurate," Dodd says. "It's good to have that data point, but you can't guarantee 100% that that was the correct rationale when somebody's trying to recall it.​"

The clock is ticking. It's time to find a new engineer as Zottarelli prepares to retire. There will be six months to a year of on-the-job training, but that's about it. Dodd isn't holding out hope for some up-and-coming young coder who work on the project for decades to come. She says instead its closer to walking up and down the halls of JPL, hoping to nab an experienced someone slightly younger than the retirees with enough of a basis in assembly languages to keep the spacecraft going. 

"​I'm typically not getting a fresh college grad, but people in their early 50s as opposed to people in their 70s."

"​I'm typically not getting a fresh college grad, I'm more or less getting people in their early 50s as opposed to people that are in their 70s," she says. 

Just a warning for would-be programmers: these languages aren't on code academy. 

Join the Conversation!

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22 Nov 10:04

TBT



TBT

22 Nov 10:03

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Simulations

by admin@smbc-comics.com

Hovertext: C'monnnnn well thought-out hatemail.


New comic!
Today's News:

Thanks everyone for making that kickstarter our most successful SMBC book launch ever!

If you just missed it and still want in, we will briefly be offering pre-orders.  

22 Nov 09:58

(photo via BeyondMusing)



(photo via BeyondMusing)

22 Nov 09:57

sandandglass: World leaders – including Barack Obama and...





sandandglass:

World leaders – including Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin – met for the G20 summit in Antalya, Turkey. So too did some cats, apparently.

[video]

22 Nov 09:56

graf-spectre: moonuncle: doritofu: here we can see that...



graf-spectre:

moonuncle:

doritofu:

here we can see that Florida is actually a poorly written artificial data matrix, as evidenced by this poorly rendered police vehicle clipping through the environment due to similation processor loads being too high during the rainy season.

Bethesda programmed Florida

22 Nov 09:52

Faig Ahmed Creates Glitched-Out Contemporary Rugs from Traditional Azerbaijani Textiles

by Kate Sierzputowski

rugs-1

Faig Ahmed distorts the patterns of traditional Azerbaijani rugs, dimantling their structure in order to build compositions that trick the eye by appearing to melt off the wall. By rearticulating the original design, he creates contemporary sculptural forms that look like digital glitches, patterns flatlining halfway through a tapestry or gradually morphing into a digital mosaic.

Ahmed explains that his fascination for textiles stems from their historical value, humanity utilizing fabric for nearly the entire length of human history. “Another thing that interests me is pattern,” says Ahmed. “Patterns and ornaments can be found in all cultures, sometimes similar, sometimes very different. I consider them words and phrases that can be read and translated to a language we understand.”

Ahmed lives and works in Baku, Azerbaijan and graduated from the sculpture department of Azerbaijan State Academy of Fine Art in 2004. The artist previously focused on painting, video, and installation, but now currently focuses on textile and sculpture. Ahmed recently had a solo exhibition with Italian gallery Montoro12 titled “Omnia Mutantur, Nihil Interit,” and is currently in the group exhibition “Crafted: Objects in Flux” at The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston until January 10, 2016. (via Booooooom)

rugs-1-1

rugs-2

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22 Nov 09:44

obviously













obviously

22 Nov 09:44

booksofadam: RIP lil’ blob



booksofadam:

RIP lil’ blob

22 Nov 09:38

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Bacon is Literally Cancer

by admin@smbc-comics.com

Hovertext: Weinersmith vs. WHO reporting, Round 1.


New comic!
Today's News:

 Our latest book did wildly better than expected. Thank you for your generosity and support! 

22 Nov 09:30

Let's Make Coffee!

by Grant

Poster prints of this comic (and your other favorite Incidental Comics) are available at my shop.
22 Nov 09:28

Comic for November 18, 2015

by Scott Adams
The Generic Graph - Dilbert by Scott Adams

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service - if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.

22 Nov 09:28

Fleeting

by Lunarbaboon

22 Nov 09:27

Photo



22 Nov 09:26

Anésia # 250

by Will Tirando

ninguém merece Anésia Dolores dia ensolarado amigas banco reclamação

17 Nov 01:21

Our Mission

by Doug

Our Mission

It’s good to have goals.

17 Nov 01:21

Adam 2.0

Adam 2.0
17 Nov 01:20

That’s right, I draw ducks really well. image | twitter |...









That’s right, I draw ducks really well.

image | twitter | facebook | patreon

17 Nov 01:19

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - P/R

by admin@smbc-comics.com

Hovertext: I mean, maybe a sense of one's place in the universe also leads to happiness, but power is pretty great.


New comic!
Today's News:

Only 48 hours left to go get a signed copy of the new book! 

 

15 Nov 20:19

(via Andy H.)



(via Andy H.)

15 Nov 20:19

Pay to pitch to randoms, the next big idea!

by CommitStrip

15 Nov 20:09

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - A New Discovery

by admin@smbc-comics.com

Hovertext: Actually, you don't collapse anything. You just observe one of a multitude of flavorverses.


New comic!
Today's News:

To get a signed Weiner!

 

13 Nov 00:31

batsvsupes: bombed









batsvsupes:

bombed

13 Nov 00:29

Linguistics Club

If that's too easy, you could try joining Tautology Club, which meets on the date of the Tautology Club meeting.
13 Nov 00:29

Nocturnal Ideas

by boulet


13 Nov 00:28

Comic for November 11, 2015

by Scott Adams
Two Choices For A Project - Dilbert by Scott Adams

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service - if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.

13 Nov 00:28

Wyvern

by Raphael Salimena

13 Nov 00:23

Bond, James Bond

by Wes

bond_b

13 Nov 00:22

Série de zumbis

by Will Tirando

zumbis série TV televisão the walking dead câmeras cinegrafistas