Google's Brin Books a Space Flight 170
coondoggie writes "Google largely conquered the Earth — now it is taking aim at space. At least co-founder Sergei Brin is. Brin today said he put down $5 million toward a flight to the International Space Station in 2011.
Brin's space travel will be brokered by Space Adventures, the space outfit that sent billionaire software developer Charles Simonyi to the station in 2007. Computer game developer (and son of a former NASA astronaut) Richard Garriott is currently planning a mission to the ISS in October 2008. Garriott is paying at least $30 million to launch toward the space station aboard a Russian Soyuz spaceship according to Space Adventures." Make sure to wave when you are over Michigan, man. I'll be the one on my lawn, green with envy.
give him more than that (Score:5, Funny)
In Michigan? (Score:5, Funny)
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Its Florida, it deserves more credit than that.
(Disclaimer: I'm from Florida)
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Rather too risky for me (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Rather too risky for me (Score:5, Insightful)
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Yes, but if the dead could feel regret they probably would, as in, "Christ, that was stupid. What the hell was I thinking?" That's because most people don't bother to think very hard about their own mortality. If they did, they wouldn't do things like smoke and drive SUVs at a hundred miles an hour with a cell phone jammed in their ear. It's always the other guy that will get smeared. AT least,
Re:Rather too risky for me (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Rather too risky for me (Score:5, Insightful)
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Chill out man, he's not asking you to go, he's planning to go himself.
Not knowing the guy personally I can't say for sure, but there's a high probability that he's big enough, old enough and ugly enough to make these choices for himself.
IIRC, he was a graduate student when starting
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one step closer (Score:5, Funny)
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Green Space Adventures (Score:5, Funny)
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Suppose that the cash goes toward planting trees, research, efficiency upgrades -- something like that. Then it might make sense. But cutting out the middle man might make a lot more sense. I suppose it depends on how much you trust your carbon offset broker.
Personally, I've yet to hear a compelling case as to why (and to whom) I should be making this sort of donation.
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Oh, and the hole-in-the-ozone thing, caused by CFC propellants, is very "eighties". Yes, it's real, and yes, it probably going to be giving penguins cancer for many years to come -- but the crisis that in the headlines these days is the greenhouse effect aka global warming aka global climate change. No weird chemicals involved, just regular "harmless" CO2.
This is part of the reason that global warming took a while to catch on as something to panic about. It's easy to condemn nasty things like sulfur, le
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I buy offsets because I think it's the right thing to do to work towards a solution regarding climate change. Eventually, it'll either be legislated (i.e: required, via a tax on fuel) or the price of oil will go so high that consumption will drop drastically on it's on (i.e. the current situation in the US).
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Re:Green Space Adventures (Score:4, Interesting)
More like buying an indulgence (Score:2)
Theory of carbon offsets: somebody somewhere is doing good, you've got money, why don't you buy a bit of excess "good" with your money.
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I'm right there with you. My more in-tune-with-yuppiedom friends spoke feverishly about how they 'buy carbon offsets', yet I noted they still drive 10-15mpg vehicles and have poor insulation with all the glamorous wall sized windows to maximize the view of the lake outside their place.
Paying a 'non profit' to plant a tree will not reduce the amount of energy they consume. Level of consumption is the problem, not just additional trees.
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I've reduced my carbon emissions as much as possible in my home, at the business I own, and with my vehicles (2 hybrids and an all electric on the way). Carbon offsets let me offset that last
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Carbon offsets do indeed effect the amount of carbon in the atmosphere:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_offset#References [wikipedia.org]
I mean, really, how hard is it to spend some time to research a subject with such profound implications? An hour or two reading
carbon offsets (Score:2)
Carbon dioxide is a globally well-mixed gas. Hence, removing CO2 from the atmosphere at any point on the planet balances out adding CO2 to the atmosphere at any other point on the planet. How, and even if, that CO2 removal is accomplished is where the duplicity & deceitfulness comes into play.
CO2 physically removed
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Now the SRBs probably do produce some CO2 but I am not sure of the exact chemistry of the binder.
Now Soyuz isn't carbon free at all but then it will probably burn less full than Brin burns in private 767 in a year.
It is good to be the king.
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How do we calculate MPG? (Score:5, Funny)
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Goodbye Tesla.
Hello Lamborghini!
2nd Generation of the Space Age (Score:1, Interesting)
Google landscaping (Score:2)
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Now THAT is a vacation - I for one am jealous (Score:2)
I hope to follow the same path someday and pay for myself to float around for a few days in space
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His little toy trip into space is not going to benefit mankind, unless he is explicitly going to perform dangerous experiments that could put his life at risk other than just riding along or pressing a few buttons at the direction of an astronaut, in which case perhaps I could feel a need to encourage him.
Or on a more greedily humorous note, he could just
Re:Now THAT is a vacation - I for one am jealous (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not like the money just vanishes into thin air, you know. Sergei gives it to someone else, who ends up giving it to someone else, who gives it to someone else, who gives it to someone else... and so the economy rolls on. You could argue that spending the money does a lot more good for society than just leaving it in the bank.
BTW, why are you sitting there reading Slashdot when you could be volunteering at your local homeless shelter?
Trickle Down (Score:2)
Ah yes, the trickle down Reagonimics [theonion.com].
The inverse of this is how a $600 check from the government to all tax payers will revitalize the entire US economy.
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In contrast, Brin has just done the opposite. He's volunteered to take $5 million out of his own pocket and give it to someone else. That's not trickle-down economics, that's plain ol' ordinary economics.
BTW, even if you don't believe that spending $5 millio
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Now, at the same time, the ammount of peop
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Do you know how many people you could HELP with $5 million, like real bonified food on the table for dinner kind of help?
You don't understand what motivates humans.
Dreams and Hope.
The hope that there is more out there to find that just my little space. The dream that someday my kids or my grandchildren can visit the stars.
Wonder.
The wonder of the vastness of the universe. The awe that inspired at the power required to cross such vast distances and the beauty of orbit.
Love.
N/A for this one.
Greed.
Space has huge quantities of resources. Unfortunately there are staggeringly large distances to cross get to them.
Envy.
Envy that
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Re:Now THAT is a vacation - I for one am jealous (Score:4, Informative)
Call it whatever makes you feel warm and fuzzy, but it's a Russian rocket, piloted by a Russian commander, launched out of a Russian spaceport. I guarantee you communications are run through Korolev. Space Adventures purchased a flight, not the flight hardware. This is not privatized space travel. Look to small companies in the southeast US - SpaceX, XCOR, Armadillo, Blue Origin if you want to see "private spaceflight"
Smart Guy (Score:2)
A lot of energy and CO2 for one guy's amusement (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess he has the right to pollute all he wants, but launching yourself into orbit dwarfs the effect on the environmental most people would ever cause. People get the value of protecting the Earth from viewing it from space. Usually that perspective ends up happening afterward. I hope Brin gets it beforehand.
"...From up there, it looks finite and it looks fragile and it really looks like just a tiny little place on which we live in a vast expanse of space. It gave me the feeling of really wanting us all to take care of the Earth. I got more of a sense of Earth as home, a place where we live. And of course you want to take care of your home. You want it clean. You want it safe."
-- Winston Scott, two-time shuttle astronaut
"You change because you see your life differently than when you live on the surface everyday.
-- Eileen Collins, first female space shuttle commander.
I'm sure he has friends who read Slashdot. If you are one of them, could you ask him to think and do something about how his actions will affect the rest of us?
Re:A lot of energy and CO2 for one guy's amusement (Score:5, Insightful)
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So because he's going up it's bad, even if the rocket were headed up anyway? By that logic the space program should be ended entirely. Never mind that he'll probably do it once in his life whereas millions of cars keep dumping crap into the atmosphere every day at an order of magnitude more per day.
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Besides, Google has spent more money already on alternative energy research & other environmental friendliness than Brin is spending on this space flight.
http://www.google.com/corporate/green/energy/reducing.html [google.com]
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launching yourself into orbit dwarfs the effect on the environmental most people would ever cause.
The technological advancements achieved from space programs alone offset any sort of emissions chemically powered rockets emitted in order to get us into orbit (and that's not to mention the potential for human unity that trans-national space programs have nor any other human benefits technological advancements space programs have introduced). If we (as a human race) had never engaged in the challenging exercise of optimizing existing technologies or creating new technologies in a way that is necessary for
Front lawn (Score:2, Funny)
Risky business. (Score:5, Informative)
I'm jealous and also quite in awe of how brave people are to venture into space. Some sobering stats on manned space flight: 18 of the 430 people who've ventured into space didn't make it back alive. Of course, quite a few astronauts and cosmonauts have flown more than once, but I calculate that the shuttle's overall fatality rate is running at around 1.8%. IOW, the chance of dying is about the same as my chance of winning $10 in this week's 6/49 Lotto. I hope he has a fantastic trip and that he blogs about his experience.
Would I be willing to venture into space if given the chance? I'm not sure. I'd love to have the opportunity to consider it, though.
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If you spoke this out loud, you'd be interrupted by billions of people who would be willing to go into space at the drop of a hat.
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*If you spoke this out loud, you'd be interrupted by billions of people who would be willing to go into space at the drop of a hat.*
I think you're significantly overestimating. Merrill Lynch estimated that there were about 95,000 people in the world with personal fortunes of $30 million or more in 2006. If even 1% of those people wanted to book a trip to the ISS, Space Adventures would have almost 1000 applications piled on their desks. But they don't.Re: (Score:2)
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I suspect that for the people who can financially afford it, the concern isn't so much the $30 million fee. It's more the several months of dedicated training in Russia you have to do, is
similar to Everest stats (to year 2000) (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Risky business. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Huh? (Score:2)
I know he's booking through a separate agency, but the Russians are still hauling the meat in the seat.
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They had previously announced that they would no longer sell individual seats, but it looks like in this case Space Adventures is booking the entire capsule.
And so it comes to this.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Earth or not, the geek are sure inheriting space!
Should have sold out (Score:2)
Well Taco, you should have sold your VA stock right after the IPO then.
(I keed. I Keed.)
If I had the money... (Score:2)
The space hotel my tax dollars built (Score:2)
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Better that than a Web server.
Google Earth Budget Cuts? (Score:2, Funny)
NASA's guest astronaut program based on merit (Score:2)
Boy, is he going to be dissapointed (Score:2)
$5 Million Is Just The Beginning, Though (Score:4, Funny)
For instance, now you get only one carry-on bag free of charge. Any extra bags cost $100,000 apiece.
You no longer get free beverage service on the shuttle. Soft Drinks are $3,000 each, beer and wine $5,000 and mixed drinks are $10,000.
If you want an in-flight magazine, that'll be an extra $4,000.
Pretty soon, only the really wealthy or business customers will be flying to the ISS, at these prices.
The real credit goes to.... (Score:2)
Nice. He won't even have to learn Russian (Score:2)
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Re:What a waste. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:What a waste. (Score:5, Insightful)
Realize that his $30 million is going to be spent by the Russians; on the development of new technology, on fuel (and hence, on employees of the energy companies), on paying engineers and scientists; on all the things required to maintain a space program.
If you want to support an industry - and most people on slashdot probably believe the space industry is one worth supporting - the best thing you can do is to buy their product. That's exactly what he's doing.
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Fixed your post.
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Re:What a waste. (Score:5, Informative)
According to google.org [google.org] Google has donated $33 milion from AdSense adverts to more than 850 nonprofit organisations in 10 countries throught the world.
The Make-A-Wish [wish.org] foundation has received more than 25% of all the online donations from Google.
Google has given more than 30% of all the yearly donations to the Doctors without borders program.
Google has also donated to the Grameen Foundation [grameenfoundation.org] located in the US and $2 mils to the OLPC [mit.edu] project...
Read more here [blogspot.com]Re:What a waste. (Score:4, Insightful)
Sergey Brin's net worth is reported at $18.7 billion dollars. That $30 million ticket is 0.16% of his net worth.
If you have a $200K net worth, e.g. investments, home equity, etc..., that space flight ticket is the equivalent of you buying a PS3.
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As long as I don't have to hear him say how people need to save energy while he zips around in his private 767.
But yes if you yourself are not donating money to charity then you have no right to speak. Every little bit counts.
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