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Navy Heard Implosion of Titan Submersible. OceanGate Accused of Exaggerating Design Partnerships (people.com) 157

Long-time Slashdot reader Zak3056 shared this report from the Washington Post: U.S. Navy acoustic sensors detected the likely implosion of the Titan submersible hours after the vessel began its fatal descent on Sunday, U.S. Navy officials said Thursday, a revelation that means the sprawling search for the vessel was conducted even though senior officials already had some indication the Titan was destroyed...

The acoustic detection was one significant piece of information, but the search had to continue to exhaust all possibilities, said Mark Cancian, a senior adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies... The United States has used a network of devices to detect undersea noises for decades. The fact that the Titan's implosion was detected this way isn't surprising, Cancian said. "I would be surprised if they hadn't heard it."

A Las Vegas financier had bought tickets on the ill-fated submarine for himself, plus his 20-year-old son Sean and a friend. The son now tells People that "The whole reason my dad didn't go was because I told him, 'Dude, this submarine cannot survive going that deep in the ocean.'"

OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush told the financier that their submarine was safer than crossing the street. "He was a good guy, great heart, really believed in what he was doing and saying," the financier tells People. "But he didn't want to hear anything that conflicted with his world view, and he would just dismiss it... He was so passionate about this project, and he was such a believer. He drank his own Kool-Aid, and there was just no talking him out of it." For Sean, the first red flag that alarmed him about Rush was his arrival in Las Vegas, where Sean, Jay and Rush were set to meet. He says they asked why Rush was landing at a North Las Vegas airport rather than the commercial airports like McCarran. "He's like, 'Yeah, I built this plane with my hands, and I'm test-flying it right now.' And we're like, 'What?' That was my first red flag," he explains.
OceanGate's CEO later even tried offering the financier a substantial discount on the three tickets, calling his son "uninformed."

OceanGate had also claimed their submarine was designed and engineered in collaboration with experts from NASA, Boeing and the University of Washington — but now ABC News says the company exaggerated those partnerships: OceanGate's founder and CEO Stockton Rush — who was aboard the missing vessel — made similar statements about his company's partnerships during an interview with CBS News correspondent David Pogue in 2022, who asked about the construction of the Titan submersible, which Rush said used some minor parts purchased from consumer retailers like Camping World. "The pressure vessel is not MacGyvered at all because that's where we worked with Boeing and NASA, [and] University of Washington," Rush said...

Kevin Williams, the executive director of the University of Washington's Applied Physics Laboratory, told ABC News the school and laboratory were also not involved in the "design, engineering or testing" of the Titan submersible. Victor Balta, a UW spokesperson, added that OceanGate and UW's Applied Physics Laboratory initially signed a $5 million collaborative research agreement, but the two entities "parted ways" after only $650,000 of work was completed. That research only resulted in the development of another OceanGate submersible, the shallow-diving Cyclops I submersible, according to Balta. The steel-hulled Cyclops I is only rated to reach 500 meters, compared to the Titan, which is constructed from carbon fiber and titanium to reach depths of 4,000 meters, the company said...

When asked about the details of those relationships with OceanGate, a Boeing representative told ABC News that the aerospace company was not involved in designing or building the deep-sea submersible. "Boeing was not a partner on the Titan and did not design or build it," a Boeing spokesperson told ABC News in a statement...

In a statement to ABC News, NASA confirmed it consulted on materials and manufacturing for the Titan submersible pursuant to an agreement with OceanGate. "NASA did not conduct testing and manufacturing via its workforce or facilities, which was done elsewhere by OceanGate," the statement said.

CNN reports that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are now exploring whether "criminal, federal, or provincial laws may possibly have been broken."
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Navy Heard Implosion of Titan Submersible. OceanGate Accused of Exaggerating Design Partnerships

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  • Of all the things... (Score:5, Informative)

    by gavron ( 1300111 ) on Saturday June 24, 2023 @11:12PM (#63630108)

    I realize that in grief, Captain Hindsight comes out, but the whole airport thing really seems to be more of an indicator that Rush had no idea how ot woo clients and investors. Traveling to meet them - yes. Showing up in your homebuilt airplane "... and I'm test flying it right now" -- no.

    That he had poor judgment is --at this point-- not really in question, same for how well he took advice, criticism, and ideas on inspections and safety.

    Where he flew into, in my mind, is not as relevant.

    P.S.
    I've piloted into North Las Vegas (KVGT) and there's nothing wrong with it. The landing fee is $0, it's closer to Summerlin, North Las Vegas, and in/out is minutes.
    Mccarran hasn't been the airport's name since February 2021 when it was renamed "Harry Reid Inernational Airport" (still ICAO code KLAS). Its landing fees depends on size/type of aircraft and are not cheap. It's also a long way to go to either a terminal or an FBO, and a long way to go to get out, and then you're stuck hoping to get to the 215 or the 15 and make it through lots of traffic in under 30 minutes.

    If you're flying a private aircraft, without celebrities (e.g. Kardashians) on board, and you're not going to be seen on The Strip, there are plenty of other choices. Henderson to the south is known for catering to private jets. North Las Vegas is known for being an easy-in easy-out airport. I've piloted to both.

    • by Turkinolith ( 7180598 ) on Saturday June 24, 2023 @11:24PM (#63630118)
      Honestly, depends. One could easily also say "Oh, you're a real adventurer flying your own plane." Sure, the guy made some bad choices but this particular line stands out to me as "well, that's subjective..."
      • by bloodhawk ( 813939 ) on Saturday June 24, 2023 @11:46PM (#63630154)
        What it stands out as is he took unnecessary risks in practically everything he did. That should immediately trigger alarm bells when you are going to place your life in someone elses hands.
        • What kind of risk counts as unnecessary? Aside from the obvious things like manned spaceflight, or manned submarine dives 2 miles deep, or trying to sail from Spain to India across what you believe to be a vast ocean.

      • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Saturday June 24, 2023 @11:47PM (#63630156)

        Honestly, depends.
        One could easily also say "Oh, you're a real adventurer flying your own plane."

        Sure, the guy made some bad choices but this particular line stands out to me as "well, that's subjective..."

        If you're trying to sell the adventure the test flying your own plane thing works.

        If you're trying to convince people that you take safety super seriously... then not so much.

        Fortunately for this family the son was more interested in the safety than the adventure.

        I do feel sorry for the passengers who got killed. Very few people would have the technical background to realize the sub was insufficient, and those claims about collaborations with very respectable institutions are almost impossible to check.

    • I realize that in grief, Captain Hindsight comes out, but the whole airport thing really seems to be more of an indicator that Rush had no idea how ot woo clients and investors. Traveling to meet them - yes. Showing up in your homebuilt airplane "... and I'm test flying it right now" -- no.

      On the contrary I think the only reason he was aboard his own ill fated mission was to schmooze with gullible billionaires.

    • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @09:00AM (#63630674)

      I realize that in grief, Captain Hindsight comes out, but the whole airport thing really seems to be more of an indicator that Rush had no idea how ot woo clients and investors. Traveling to meet them - yes. Showing up in your homebuilt airplane "... and I'm test flying it right now" -- no.

      That he had poor judgment is --at this point-- not really in question, same for how well he took advice, criticism, and ideas on inspections and safety.

      Where he flew into, in my mind, is not as relevant.

      Rush was the modern entrepenure that has sprung up. Certaintly these types have always existed, but today, in the cynical world where the utterly stupid can challenge time tested experts, there is a crop of them. What is that?

      A solipsits who believes they can bend reality by force of will, that they can simply "make it so". And of course, the social concept that if a person is wealthy, they must be right.

      So here we have Rush, who is so smart and so sure of himself that he simply knows that "safety is a waste", and that safety rules are destroying exploration, and that his vehicle doesn't need tested or certified.

      And in the age of reversed cynicism and weird beliefs like manifestation, where truth is summarily and offhandedly rejected for conspiracy and the idea that the universe rotates around me, Me, ME!. There will be people lined up to believe every word he spouts as if from god's lips to their ears. Witness Elizabeth Holmes, Elon Musk, and Donald Trump among others.

      But despite all of that, the basic facts are that you don't fool around with physics. Repeated compression and decompression. wrecks carbon composite structures, with each successive cycle weakening them until they fail. There was enough evidence that this Titan submersible was an accident waiting to happen. One person who wint on a dive in it called it something like suicide. Josh Gates from the show "Expedition Unknown", where a Titanic dive would have been a real spectacle on his show, went on a short trip and declared it unsafe. https://www.today.com/news/tit... [today.com] And he isn't afraid of much.

      But modern millionaire savant and smarter than the great unwashed CEO Rush knew better. He put it best ""We have heard the baseless cries of 'you are going to kill someone' way too often," he wrote. "I take this as a serious personal insult."

      Well, he doesn't have to worry now - the cries were demonstrably not baseless, and he doesn't have to year the naysayers nor get insulted by them any more. So he's got that going for him.

      I do feel badly for the people he murdered, except for the young guy who was properly frightened, but obeyed his father, they were just stupid and exercising bad judgement. Poor judgement is not a crime.

      But face it Rush taking himself out probably did the world a big favor.

      • by Strider- ( 39683 )

        It's just shocking to see the cowboy attitude compared to everything that was gone through to build and certify "Limiting Factor." The latter is an incredible feat of engineering, actually certified to go to the deepest part of every ocean in the world.

  • by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Saturday June 24, 2023 @11:12PM (#63630110) Homepage
    He hand built and test piloted his own plane? If only he crashed it, he could have saved four lives.
    • Lots of people do that. It's relatively safe----if you're using one of the "kits," it's still technically an experimental, but it's a proven design at least. Not to defend the guy or anything.
      • "relatively safe" is very relative.

        Amateur-built and other experimental aircraft were involved in almost 25 percent of U.S. fatal general aviation accidents over the past five years and account for an estimated five percent of total general aviation fleet hours.

        https://www.faa.gov/newsroom/g... [faa.gov]

        • by tragedy ( 27079 )

          That 5 times more likely to crash may sound a bit worse than it actually is since amateur-built and other experimental aircraft also tend to be on the much smaller end and small planes are more likely to crash in general.

    • by ufgrat ( 6245202 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @02:22AM (#63630296)

      Not that unusual. Now, if he'd built his own jet-engined plane, that would be unusual. Doing a quick check, there were 1200 homebuilt airplanes registered in 2019. You do have the odd incident like John Denver's death in a homebuilt airplane with a poorly implemented fuel tank selector, but by and large, a homebuilt airplane is not necessarily unsafe, and certification is required.

      • Correct, key point is not homebuilt or experimental, the key point is 'certification is required'.

        And the certification if required even it's just you. If you are going to haul passengers for money, then the certification ramps up again.

        • Correct, key point is not homebuilt or experimental, the key point is 'certification is required'.

          And the certification if required even it's just you. If you are going to haul passengers for money, then the certification ramps up again.

          I agree that's how it should be. Problem is in international waters, requiring certification is a different bag.

          • He's still operating a business out of some country and they can require inspections and certification of the craft. Unless he bases out of an abandoned oil rig in international waters, it's not hard for him to be subjected to someone's jurisdiction.
        • Correct, key point is not homebuilt or experimental, the key point is 'certification is required'.

          Well the thing is a very strict certification scheme exists for all aircraft. For submarines, less so. Sure there's certification, but for vessels like this they are more of an extrapolation of certification for a completely different type of sub going on a completely different kind of mission. I read an article only yesterday that pointed out that there were only 10 subs in the world capable of going down to the Titanic, and 9 of them were certified, but of those 9, they were certified to 7 different stand

    • You massively overestimate how complex it is to build a small plane. Heck 2 guys managed to do it over 100 years ago without the aid of any modern technology, materials, or how-to guides on the internet.

      Shit man there's whole magazines / social groups dedicated to building your own planes https://www.kitplanes.com/ [kitplanes.com]

      • Yup my uncle did this and makes sure to bring it up in random conversation to anyone and everyone.

        Hey do you know my Uncle Brian who runs that plant in Illinois, oh you mean the guy who has the plane and wont shut up about it, yeah.

      • You massively overestimate how complex it is to build a small plane. Heck 2 guys managed to do it over 100 years ago without the aid of any modern technology, materials, or how-to guides on the internet.

        Shit man there's whole magazines / social groups dedicated to building your own planes https://www.kitplanes.com/ [kitplanes.com]

        There are just some basic principles, and yeah, it's obvious it can be done well.

        You can decide if yourself if you want to take a spin in a homebrew plane put together by someone who was on record saying that safety is pure waste. But the world today is different, and entrepreneurs like Rush are proving the naysayers wrong, and adventuring boldly into a new future, showing they are the ones who know how it all works.

        Ohhh - wait.. what?

  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @03:53AM (#63630388)
    I hereby nominate Stockton Rush for a Darwin Award. I think he meets the criteria: https://darwinawards.com/rules... [darwinawards.com]
  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @04:06AM (#63630396)
    He's under a lot of pressure.
  • No the sub didn't implode because of a Logitech game controller. But the controller best exemplifies the laissez-faire attitude to safety that extended to other aspects of the submersible. If they cut corners by using an unrated, uncertified and unsuitable controller for such a hostile environment then they cut corners elsewhere.

    I bet when Canadian investigators have gone through all the correspondence and technical data regarding this sub and issue their findings it will be damning of Rush. If he weren't d

    • But the controller best exemplifies the laissez-faire attitude to safety that extended to other aspects of the submersible

      I don't know why you'd think that... military hardware uses game controllers for all kinds of stuff (although generally they use of the shelf xbox controllers). Submarine periscopes (US) Drones (US) Tanks (Isreal) etc etc. They choose this control formfactor because young people in the military are already have years of experience using them, they are easy to replace, and they withstand thousands of hours of abuse without problems. Much better to use a tool like this than to spend millions of dollars bui

  • "The pressure vessel is not MacGyvered

    On occasion I would have a conversation with someone I used to work with where our talk would veer toward words and phrases and objects which the youngins (we're both about the same age) wouldn't understand. How to use a rotary phone for example, or where the phrase, "Don't drink the koolaid" came from. McGyvered falls into that category. Without looking it up, it's a certainty there is a large portion of the population which doesn't know what that word means.

    • Re:McGyvered (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Petr Blazek ( 8018844 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @05:31AM (#63630440)

      well, those who don't know should make some effort...

      There are three options:
      1. continue using such phrases, not caring about those who might not understand
      2. provide a reference, just for convenience
      3. stupidize the writing, i.e., avoid anything beyond anyone's knowledge

      PLEASE, everyone, avoid the #3 option!!!

       

    • I recently looked up the origin of using "yellow" for "cowardly". Turns out nobody knows. Or, rather, there are a bunch of people who think they know, but they all have completely different explanations. At some point somebody knew; now, nobody does, but the usage goes on.
    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      "Doesn't know what the word means" and "doesn't know where the expression came from" are two very different things.

      Most people don't know where the majority of the idioms they use came from, or even think very hard about what they mean.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by kackle ( 910159 )
      That's funny, that exact scenario came up a few weeks ago at work: A 30-something guy from our group said "McGyvered" when a woman (mid-20s) was present. I, the oldest by decades, stopped the conversation to help her, saying that she probably didn't know what that meant. They were surprised she didn't know, but I'm a little surprised they even knew who he was.
  • by beforewisdom ( 729725 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @06:23AM (#63630484)
    It has already been said to death, but it deserves to be said again. A ship/boat just two weeks before this event was lost with hundreds of people. Those people and their story only received a fraction of the attention those 5 rich people did. Those people were no less human beings than those 5 billionaires.
    • It has already been said to death, but it deserves to be said again. A ship/boat just two weeks before this event was lost with hundreds of people. Those people and their story only received a fraction of the attention those 5 rich people did. Those people were no less human beings than those 5 billionaires.

      Those people weren't on a suicide mission however. They weren't blindly following a person who despised safety and ignored a lot of calls to abandon his suicide craft.

      Therein lies the difference, other ships lost were a tragedy. This was a tragey for the stupid people who believed him, and the adage of "Fuck around and find out for the hubris addled Stockton Rush.

    • President Obama made a similar statement:

      https://www.foxnews.com/media/... [foxnews.com]

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @10:34AM (#63630932)
      And? Are you saying this is in the news because they were billionaires? Because I can say with certainty if those refugees died on a deep sea sub it would have been all over the news. It's the novelty of the story pushing it up in the news, not the bank accounts of those involved.
    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Yeah, it's been said to death, so stop. All of the human smuggling boats that went down last week were in different jurisdictions, not attended by either the American or Canadian coast guards. There's been lots of stuff about them in the international and regional news where they happened, if you cared to look.

    • I think the issue is not the wealth but how technologically approachable the problem is. There is lots to discuss on the Titan sub: What caused it to fail, What regulations should be in place. Technical issues that lead to its failure. Before its destruction was known, how the people might be rescued if they were two miles deep with only a day's worth of air.

      In contrast its pretty clear what happened to the ship near Greece. What isn't clear is how to approach the problem. How to keep desperate peop
  • Hearing noise is one thing. Figuring out that it is from an imploding submarine is another. The people hearing it, at what point did they hear that a submarine was going missing, and figured out this could be related to the noise?
    • by Latent Heat ( 558884 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @08:22AM (#63630628)

      C'mon, man! It's common knowledge that the US Navy has the North Atlantic "wired for sound."

      Here's how this went down.

      The Navy right away knew that the sub imploded, but announcing that the people on board are all dead and calling off the search based on a signal-processed acoustic signature wouldn't go over well.

      This announcement set off a plan to get an ROV to where the sound came from to get a visual of the wrecked sub, which together with the acoustic evidence would be conclusive with respect to stopping the search for survivors.

      In the mean time, both the US and Canada sent out patrol planes, just on the off chance that the Navy signal was something else, however remote the possibility because the US Navy makes it their business to know what a sinking sub sounds like. Given the automatic ballast release system on the sub, if the sub hadn't imploded, it is most likely bobbing around on the surface, pushed along by winds and ocean currents, hence the search of a large area. Even if they were on the surface, rescuers had to get to them to unbolt the craft to let them out before their oxygen supply ran out.

      There was some urgency getting the ROV out to the site before the oxygen supply deadline on the off chance that the lost sub was stuck in the Titanic wreck or some such thing, although the chances of the ROV getting them free was especially remote. But soon in the search using the ROV, a "debris field" was sighted and the rescue operation was officially over.

      OK, this is hindsight, but remember the Coast Guard admiral's slight hesitation on answering a reporter's question on whether this was a "rescue" or a "recovery" operation and his carefully worded response that "this is definitely a search-and-rescue operation"? I think the navies of US and Canada and the US Coast Guard were doing everything they were supposed to do.

    • Hearing noise is one thing. Figuring out that it is from an imploding submarine is another. The people hearing it, at what point did they hear that a submarine was going missing, and figured out this could be related to the noise?

      The noise was heard at the right time - the suicide sub lost contact at that point, it was heard at the right depth, and the implosion was easily figured out - the wreckage of the suicide sub was directly below the location of the sub when it imploded.

      So it didn't take to long to figure out the source of the kaboom.

  • by sonoronos ( 610381 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @06:43AM (#63630508)

    On a televised interview, James Cameron seemed to provide the best, most coherent engineering explanation of why the submarine would fail: the use of a continuous composite fiber hull in compression puts the majority of the load on the composite matrix and not the fibers ( which are designed to have the majority of their strength in tension ). This means that the advantages of the carbon fiber are not realized in the design.

    • On a televised interview, James Cameron seemed to provide the best, most coherent engineering explanation of why the submarine would fail: the use of a continuous composite fiber hull in compression puts the majority of the load on the composite matrix and not the fibers ( which are designed to have the majority of their strength in tension ). This means that the advantages of the carbon fiber are not realized in the design.

      And no question that James Cameron would be a damn good authority on such things. I've worked with carbon fiber, but no expert. Excellent and light stuff for many applications. But not so much for pressure vessels.

      • Pressure from the inside, yes. Pressure from the outside, hell no. Carbon fiber has high tensile strength, but little compressive strength (that is, lots of mundane materials have a lot more.) That's why they use CF external reinforcement for many pressure tanks, including for hydrogen storage.

        • Pressure from the outside, hell no.

          Don't be so sure. There's enough published peer review literature that says you very much can use carbon composites to build submarines. It's a question of design and geometry though, and not just build a round tube roughly yay-big and hope for the best. That said it's still very much a subject under research.

        • Pressure from the inside, yes. Pressure from the outside, hell no.

          That's it in a nutshell.

          They often wrap various kinds of tubes with carbon fiber to create one hell of a strong pressure vessel, but that's pressure from the inside, not the outside. Tensile strength vs compressive strength is exactly the issue here.

    • Cameron may know more than most people, but that doesn't make his commentary any less peanut gallery. Actual proper material science has and is looking at the use of composites for building submarines and have found them perfectly viable both theoretically and under practical test.

      This is however an area of emerging research, which is the real alarm bells. There was a study published only 4 months ago talking about the viability for carbon fibre for deep sea diving and they found that with the correct geome

  • by zmollusc ( 763634 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @07:41AM (#63630582)

    I can see the point of carbon composites in aerospace, where you need lightness, but why use it for a sub when you need to add weights to make it sink?

    • 1. Lighter submersible means a smaller support vessel to lift it out of the sea.
      2. Smaller support vessels cost less to buy and operate.
      3. Profit increases.

      • Re:Why carbon? (Score:4, Informative)

        by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @09:37AM (#63630736)

        1. Lighter submersible means a smaller support vessel to lift it out of the sea. 2. Smaller support vessels cost less to buy and operate. 3. Profit increases.

        One thing about Titan that was good. It was deployed and retrieved on a floating and submergible sled.

        This made it deployable in heavier seas.

        But there was no really good reason to use CC for a pressure vessel. Weakens with each compression - decompression cycle, which tends to delaminate outer layers, and a possible big problem is that the fiber to joint locations were a potential failure point, as the carbon vessle changes in size, while the metal doesn't.

        A really horrible choice.

    • He got a deal on the carbon fiber because it was expired and couldn’t be used for aircraft anymore. Not even joking. https://www.insider.com/oceang... [insider.com]

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Apparently metal hulled submersibles are not buoyant when you dive deeper than a couple kilometres. I suspect that's because the density of the water doesn't really increase but the amount of metal required to enclose a given volume of 1 atm air does.

      So deep-diving submersibles require buoyancy aids. That's tricky too, because the material has to be something that can withstand the pressure. Syntactic foam is apparently the stuff they use, and it's expensive.

    • by Strider- ( 39683 )

      It was also to increase the interior volume of the submersible. There's a very good reason why every deep submergence vehicle, from the Trieste to Alvin to the Russian Mir subs to Limiting Factor are based around spherical pressure vessels that are limited to 3, maybe 4 personnel.

  • by beforewisdom ( 729725 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @09:45AM (#63630762)
    I loved James Cameron's "Titanic". I own a copy. I think his wonderful movie inspired people to go visit that wreck, though there are many other sunken ships to visit that are in safer locations. You can see the Arizona at Pearl Harbor and never even get your feet wet.

    This is where non-job-related education, or the lack of it, comes in.

    You can have $250,000 to spend for a seat on a tour.

    That doesn't mean you know what is out there to see and appreciate.

    Perhaps reading a book by one of the great thinkers would have meant as much or more to the lives of one of those 5 deceased billionaires. Maybe a trip to even a more impressive spot that you wouldn't need some arrogant rick fuck's defective tin can to see. Maybe taking a trip for a few months to a remote area to help people would have filled their lives with meaningful experiences.

    There are many more possibilities too that they those billionaires might not have known about because they considered things that are not money, STEM, business, or conspicuous consumption to be a waste of their time.

    • Going down to the Titanic was on their bucket list. They did it. Winners. They may have forgotten to add to their bucket list going back up.

  • Exactly (Score:4, Insightful)

    by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Sunday June 25, 2023 @10:18AM (#63630864) Journal

    OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush told the financier that their submarine was safer than crossing the street. "He was a good guy, great heart, really believed in what he was doing and saying," the financier tells People.

    Yup, and all that doesn't mean jack fuckin' shit to the ocean. It doesn't care what you believe or how great a guy you were.

    Physics rules the day from subatomic particles on up, and woe to those who ignore that simple fact.

  • Stupid military should not be bragging about this. Gives away info on location and sensitivity of sensors.

    • The Navy's sound surveillance system has been in place for decades. Its broad capabilities were declassified in the 1990's because disclosure prevented conflict. We wanted the Soviet Union to know that we knew where their subs were. I don't think the Navy has disclosed anything in the last week that our competitors didn't already know.

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