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A Brief Pause From The Ordinary..., Demographics time--please just humor me
nasaman58
post Apr 18 2005, 01:52 AM
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I just joined this community last night, and I'm just curious about some of the people here. I'm only 19 years old, but I'm more interested in all things space than anyone I've ever met. Just out of curiosity, what are people's ages in this forum? biggrin.gif
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dilo
post Apr 18 2005, 05:34 AM
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QUOTE (nasaman58 @ Apr 18 2005, 01:52 AM)
I just joined this community last night, and I'm just curious about some of the people here. I'm only 19 years old, but I'm more interested in all things space than anyone I've ever met. Just out of curiosity, what are people's ages in this forum? biggrin.gif
*


Probably a complete database do not exist, but you will find some hints from this recent tread wink.gif :
http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.p...topic=44&st=105


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nasaman58
post Apr 18 2005, 11:47 AM
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QUOTE (dilo @ Apr 18 2005, 01:34 AM)
QUOTE (nasaman58 @ Apr 18 2005, 01:52 AM)
I just joined this community last night, and I'm just curious about some of the people here. I'm only 19 years old, but I'm more interested in all things space than anyone I've ever met. Just out of curiosity, what are people's ages in this forum? biggrin.gif
*


Probably a complete database do not exist, but you will find some hints from this recent tread wink.gif :
http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.p...topic=44&st=105
*


Thanks for the pointer. Interesting how a discussion of manned spacefight made it on UNmanned spaceflight! wink.gif It's cool, though. After reading some of that, I guess a lot of people are younger than I thought. wink.gif
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djellison
post Apr 18 2005, 12:06 PM
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I'm a sprightly youngster at 26, and I started this whole schbang smile.gif


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Marcel
post Apr 18 2005, 01:49 PM
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I'm a 36 year old dutch physical geographer (that also studied aeronautical designing), and find witnessing actual landings of hardware (and the science it produces) on other planetary surfaces one of the most fascinating aspects of my life, besides the existence of my wife and 2 year old twin girls...

Obsession ? No, it just IS great ! laugh.gif
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djellison
post Apr 18 2005, 02:05 PM
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Oh heck - careers as well - I'm a medical animator for www.ocbmedia.com smile.gif - I also begun to move into project management.

Doug
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odave
post Apr 18 2005, 02:21 PM
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I'm 36, a software engineer in industrial robotics. I'm also an amateur astronomer and space nut, so the MER missions are right up my ally!

One other thing I do is coach a FIRST LEGO League team at our local elementary school - FLL is an organization that has yearly challenges involving LEGO Mindstorms Robotic Invention Systems for kids aged 9-11. Our team did not compete this year, but we did play around with the 2003 challenge called "Mission to Mars".

One of the missions in that challenge involved building and programming the LEGO robot to clear "dust" in the form of small LEGOs from a model of a solar panel. When Spirit had its panels scrubbed by wind last month, it gave the kids a clear example of how important and applicable the problem solving they're doing can be.

Now if only we can get the funding to launch one of our LEGO robots... smile.gif


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Gray
post Apr 18 2005, 02:27 PM
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One of the lesser members (in number of posts), I'm a 53 year old paleontologist. Gray is the color of my hair.
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David
post Apr 18 2005, 02:53 PM
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I'm 36 (an Apollo baby!), my profession has nothing to do with space, but I've been following unmanned space flights with great interest since... um... Viking 1 & 2 in 1976. I come here to stare in awe at the technical skills and attention to scientific detail exhibited on this board. And to watch the maps of Titan and Saturn's other moons being assembled. And to look at pretty pictures. biggrin.gif
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aldo12xu
post Apr 18 2005, 03:16 PM
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I'm 43, worked as an exploration geologist in the 1980s but now I make short films and video promotions for punk bands. My day job is in the financial services industry but allows me to do my Mars research in between calls wink.gif


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tedstryk
post Apr 18 2005, 03:24 PM
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I am 26. When not playing around with space images, I am a professor of philosophy and English.


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DEChengst
post Apr 18 2005, 03:29 PM
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Nice. Presentation time smile.gif

I'm DEChengst, a 29 year old from The Netherlands. Yes, that's the country Hansje Brinker saved by putting his finger in the dike. Well not really as Hansje Brinker is just a story we tell to gullible tourists. Ofcourse after the tourists have gone the tourguide breaks down in laughter because they'll all believe it really happened. The city I live in is called Rotterdam and has the biggest seaport in the world. Other famous spots are the Erasmusbrug, the Euromast and ofcourse the Keileweg. If you're interested in the more liberal side of Holland you'll also find plenty of coffeeshops.

I earn my living by being a system administrator. The most important task I do is keeping all the UNIX boxen running. I'm also responsible for managing all Sybase database. Since a year or so I started supporting the OpenVMS boys. My final task is taking care of our SAN systems. It must be pretty clear now that my job is the geek's dream job. I get to "play" with huge and expensive enterprise class hardware while getting payed for it.

My first hobby is autosports. Ofcourse I like Formula One the most, with DTM being a good second. I'm totally not interested in American races that only drive on ovals. I really can't see what's so great about driving around in a circle. Ovals just pale in comparison with circuits like Spa Francorchamps. There is no greater sight than seeing the likes of Michael Schumacher and Senna drive a Formula One car at Spa in heavy rain. The car twisting and drifting at every corner as it's being driven around the track one or two seconds faster per lap than the entire opposition.

Ofcourse as a visitor of this forum I'm also a space geek. I like planetary missions the best. To be honest I always get nervous if an important event, like the MER landing, is about to take place. The night before the event I'll be so jumpy I hardly can get any sleep smile.gif If the mission is a success you'll find me checking the web every five minutes to check if the first results are in. As soon as they are I quickly download them and try to out Photoshop NASA by creating mosaics out of them rolleyes.gif

Another hobby of mine is computers. I own a nice collection of old server hardware. Most people consider them junk but to me they are my treasures. As you may have gathered from my nickname the systems I like most were made by the Digital Equipment Corporation.

I own a nice collection of DEC computers:

-Alphaserver 1000A 5/500 running Tru64 UNIX 5.1B
-MicroVAX 3100/80 running OpenVMS 7.3
-DECsystem 500/260 running ULTRIX 4.5
-Infoserver 100 NAS box

In my spare time I'm a high priest of The Holy Church of DEC. Some of the daily rituals I have to perform, are praying while I face Maynard and geeking around with my serverpark. During my preaching you can hear me rant about how holy DEC is and how evil Compaq and HP are. This is one of my prayers I say on a daily base:

There is but one true laptop !
It's called the Alphabook One!
Bow before it's divinity!
And thy shall not commit blasphemy against it and insult it by using any other device which acts like a laptop but is not a divine Alphabook One !

Here you can see me pointing out one of the objects I worship:



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PDP, VAX and Alpha fanatic ; HP-Compaq is the Satan! ; Let us pray daily while facing Maynard! ; Life starts at 150 km/h ;
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Deeman
post Apr 18 2005, 03:35 PM
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Age: 35. Profession: Cabinetmaker. biggrin.gif
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dilo
post Apr 18 2005, 04:28 PM
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My God! Is incredible to see all this non-specialist people so deeply spaceflight involved! laugh.gif
Anyway here my short presentation:
Age: 42 (definitely older than average!) huh.gif
Profession: Process Engineer in a WaferFab...


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Chmee
post Apr 18 2005, 05:26 PM
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I am 32 and a logitics manager at an electronics company in Kentucky. Though I went into business, I have always had a very keen interest in space and space exploration.
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SFJCody
post Apr 18 2005, 05:40 PM
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I'm a 23 year old ex-student and part-time lazybones living in Farnborough, Hampshire. In october I will be a grad student. ohmy.gif
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Roby72
post Apr 18 2005, 05:50 PM
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I´m now 33 and my interest in space mission goes back to Voyager 1 and its encounter with Saturn in Nov. 1980. I was only 8 by this time. This inspired me so much that I want to have a telescope to see this planet and the other ones with my own eye. My grandfather did fulfil my dream then !
In the following years I develop techniques in photographing the planets and stars (deep sky) with my telescope and camera (later digital) and have much success in it.
In normal live I construct parts for escalators as an engineer.
I live in Vienna/Austria and also like classical music.
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Guest_Edward Schmitz_*
post Apr 18 2005, 06:18 PM
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Guests






I'm a 41 year old software engineer. I write software to control chambers of various sorts. I have a keen interest in planetary exploration.

My biggest claim to fame (with regard to this group) is that I actually saw MER being assembled at JPL. I was there to automate another chamber that was in the high bay with MER. The chamber is being used for the SIM mission. It was one of the greatest thrills of my life. I was no more than 30 feet from one of the vehicles. In fact, one of the people working on the rover came over to my group and pointed to the back shell that was behind us. He said we were TOO close to it and asked us to move farther away. I was actually TOO close to MER.

I have been following the mission closely since then. I only recently discovered this forum after the article on spacedaily.com referrenced it. I am very impressed with the quality of the posts. Thanks to all of you.
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Jeff7
post Apr 18 2005, 06:48 PM
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As I hang my head in shame, I'll reveal my place of employment, and job.

Overnight stocker at Walmart.
There, I said it.

I do hope to get back to college this year for engineering, probably mechanical or industrial. I hope it's the right line of work; I've always been good at fixing things I know nothing about. And then there's my Scanner PC project. I don't know if that shows skill or a mental illness, but there it is.
I already did 2 years at a community college, for Cisco networking. It turned out to be programming though, just on routers. I can't stand programming. That, and I'm like Michael in Office Space, for those who have seen it. Always missing some mundane detail - and when you're working on securing a network, that's not a good thing. wink.gif
Oh yeah, I'm 23.
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Nix
post Apr 18 2005, 06:59 PM
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29, father of two children and two big displays; just to look at Mars and getting something out of it. I sleep about 4-5 hours a day between children and Mars. I do not work at this moment, I'm too busy with Mars.
Nice to meet y'all too!
Oh and I live in Belgium, that little country somewhere in Europe.
I'm having a beer in my hand right now.
Cheers!


--------------------
photographer, space imagery enthusiast, proud father and partner, and geek.


http://500px.com/sacred-photons &
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avkillick
post Apr 18 2005, 07:26 PM
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Age : 42 Occupation: SW Engineer
Location: Mesa, AZ
Online status: Lurker
Vision for Mars: Advanced robotic explorers paving the way for human explorers with
in-site resource utilitization, habitat construction and general infrastructure development.
If man goes to Mars - he should stay. I don't want a repeat of the moon missions. If someone
in 1972 said we would not visit the moon again before 2015, they would have been laughed at -
but it's a sad and true fact.


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DEChengst
post Apr 18 2005, 07:41 PM
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QUOTE (NIX @ Apr 18 2005, 08:59 PM)
Oh and I live in Belgium, that little country somewhere in Europe.
I'm having a beer in my hand right now.
*


Newton would have said:

"The size of Belgium is inverse to the proportion of the greatness of its beer."


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PDP, VAX and Alpha fanatic ; HP-Compaq is the Satan! ; Let us pray daily while facing Maynard! ; Life starts at 150 km/h ;
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mhoward
post Apr 18 2005, 07:43 PM
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I'm a 34-year old software engineer and occasional Zen student. I created some Mars viewing software because I wanted to see Mars in 3D, and because my day job is frustrating as all git-out (hi, guys!).

> As I hang my head in shame, I'll reveal my place of employment, and job.

No shame in having a day job.

Wow, there sure are a lot of software engineers on here.
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ilbasso
post Apr 18 2005, 07:45 PM
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48, red-headed MWF professional seeking... Oh, yeah, wrong forum.

One of my earliest memories: seeing Echo I (HUGE 100-ft. diameter mylar balloon) inflated a hangar in North Carolina in 1960, and then watching it fly overhead several months later. (see Echo I)

I was avidly interested in space ever since then. I remember watching Alan Shepard's flight, Ed White's spacewalk, and seeing the photos from the Mariners and Rangers come in on TV. I was in Okinawa in elementary school when Gemini VIII (with Neil Armstrong and Dave Scott) made its emergency landing near there.

On a 8th-grade school tour of the Smithsonian's Silver Hill aircraft restoration facility, I was introduced to a man at the Smithsonian who had heard from my teacher that I was one of the most space-savvy kids he knew. The guy had 4 Lunar Orbiter photos of the moon that he couldn't identify. To help him out, I earned money by doing odd chores (like chopping wood) so I could save up to buy what was then NASA's only book of Lunar Orbiter photos and thereby identify the pictures for the fellow. (Wish I had had the Internet and the helpful folks in this forum back then!!!) I asked him if he could recommend me for a tour guide position at the National Air & Space Museum, and I then became the youngest tour guide there. One of my favorite experiences there was watching the Apollo 16 moonwalks and film-retrieval spacewalk in the NASM library with Michael Collins, Apollo 11 Command Module Pilot, who was at that time the NASM director.

Went to Carnegie-Mellon for a year, hoping to become a physicist or astronomer, but I wasn't able to cope with being a good student but still not being able to get my mind around some of the weirdness of physics.

Had my first professional brush with the space program 11 years later as the Contracts Manager on one of Boeing's contracts with NASA for what was then called Space Station Freedom, the predecessor of what eventually became ISS. Worked on a project to design a mentoring process at NASA Headquarters last year, and had the pleasure of interviewing Orlando Figueroa, who was heading up the Mars program...so that was my closest brush with MER, shaking the hand of a guy who had touched MER hardware.

I work now as an organizational effectiveness consultant and leadership coach in multinational companies. I live in Reston, Virginia, 7 miles from the final resting place of Space Shuttle Enterprise, which I visit regularly. When I'm not surfing unmannedspaceflight.com, I am a semi-professional singer. I am president of The Washington Chorus and have been on two Grammy-winning CDs. Last night I sang in a program at the Kennedy Center and met Julie Andrews!!

Cheers,
Jonathan


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Jonathan Ward
Manning the LCC at http://www.apollolaunchcontrol.com
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dvandorn
post Apr 18 2005, 07:58 PM
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QUOTE (Jeff7 @ Apr 18 2005, 01:48 PM)
As I hang my head in shame, I'll reveal my place of employment, and job.

Overnight stocker at Walmart.
There, I said it.
*


Nothing to be ashamed of, Jeff. It's honest work. What else can you ask of someone?

I'm 49, going on 16... I'm a career technical writer / documentation specialist / training developer / what-have-you, and since a) the bursting of the dot-com bubble and cool.gif the continuing economic recession here in America (especially in the IT industry), I'm working as a manager at a Pizza Hut.

For now.

As I said, there's never any shame in doing honest work.

My first memories include astronauts, Mercury capsules and Sputnik satellites. I recall watching Ranger IX coverage on live TV -- for the *very first time*, you could watch on your TV as live pictures from the Moon flashed by.

I was hooked.

1969 was my favorite year. Of my entire life. Not just because of Apollo, but also because of Mariners 6 and 7.

I want to see new horizons, new vistas. I want to see what's beyond every horizon -- and I want to see all of the different horizons that are out there.

I guess I'm just a sense-of-wonder junkie... biggrin.gif

-the other Doug


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nasaman58
post Apr 18 2005, 08:42 PM
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QUOTE (nasaman58 @ Apr 17 2005, 09:52 PM)
I just joined this community last night, and I'm just curious about some of the people here. I'm only 19 years old, but I'm more interested in all things space than anyone I've ever met. Just out of curiosity, what are people's ages in this forum? biggrin.gif
*

Well, I started this discussion I never said what I do. I'm 19, like I said, and I'm a sophomore physics major. I'd like to go to grad school to earn a Ph.D. in astronomy or astrophysics. After some time racking up experience and maybe one or two master's degrees, I plan on applying to NASA's astronaut corp. Yeah, I know that sounds super ambitious, but I've wanted to be an astronaut since I was three, and I can't let go of my dream; I'm just too passionate.

It's been interesting to see what diversity we have in this forum. I'm actually a little surprised; I thought the ages would be a bit higher. The younger ages is encouraging, though; that means the inspiration of space hasn't been lost in the 1960s.
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imran
post Apr 18 2005, 08:52 PM
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I just turned 25 today (happy birthday to me smile.gif)
I am an Electrical Engineer working on projects such as JIMO/Prometheus, CEV, Space Shuttle, etc in an aerospace company near Chicago. Being a part of some of these projects is a wonderful experience.
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dot.dk
post Apr 18 2005, 08:58 PM
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21 years old from Denmark
It is us who made the magnetic experiments that are on the rovers. smile.gif

I finished High School last year and I'm now looking at what I can spend my future on rolleyes.gif

I'm very interessted in space and astronomy. I just started taking pictures with my telescope and digital camera. Need alot of practise though. smile.gif

nasaman58 - Hope you ends up beeing the first on Mars cool.gif


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- Steven Squyres
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nasaman58
post Apr 18 2005, 09:06 PM
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QUOTE (dot.dk @ Apr 18 2005, 04:58 PM)
21 years old from Denmark
It is us who made the magnetic experiments that are on the rovers. smile.gif

I finished High School last year and I'm now looking at what I can spend my future on  rolleyes.gif

I'm very interessted in space and astronomy. I just started taking pictures with my telescope and digital camera. Need alot of practise though.  smile.gif

nasaman58 - Hope you ends up beeing the first on Mars cool.gif
*

Thanks, dot.dk! Good luck in your future. Don't let up on your interest for astronomy/space!
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john_s
post Apr 18 2005, 09:09 PM
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Interesting to see all the masks coming off!

48 year old planetary scientist in Boulder, Colorado (but an enthusiastic amateur when it comes to Mars- the outer solar system is where I get paid). I've been a space nut since Apollo days. Actually even before that- I remember writing an essay about Jupiter when I was eight...
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djellison
post Apr 18 2005, 09:15 PM
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QUOTE (SFJCody @ Apr 18 2005, 05:40 PM)
I'm a 23 year old ex-student and part-time lazybones living in Farnborough, Hampshire. In october I will be a grad student.  ohmy.gif
*



Farnborough eh - you should try and make it up to the BAA meeting on Sat smile.gif

Doug
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Borek
post Apr 18 2005, 09:41 PM
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I got deeply interested in astronomy in my childhood after watching landmark TV series in (then) Czechoslovak TV. Since then I wanted to be an astronomer, but unfortunately I have no talent for maths, so I ended up with computers. I am interested in many other sciences ranging from biology to linguistics, but astronomy and unmanned spaceflight is my real passion. My other hobby, that consumes most of my time is photography.
I am 31, work as a network administrator for a Czech mobile operator.
BTW, my favourite space probe are the Voyagers.
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mhoward
post Apr 18 2005, 09:55 PM
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QUOTE (Borek @ Apr 18 2005, 09:41 PM)
  BTW, my favourite space probe are the Voyagers.
*


Had to add to my post: Probably my favorite memory is watching the raw images come in from the Voyager Neptune encounter, on cable TV, for something like three days as I recall. Just like Star Trek: exploring new worlds - except in real life. But I don't know, MER may be my new favorite.
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Nirgal
post Apr 18 2005, 10:04 PM
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yet another software engineer here.
Age: 37
living in Europe (south-west Germany, not far from Switzerland smile.gif

have been fascinated by and following all the space missions since childhood.
(One of those books I've read back in the early seventies predicted that
"by the year 1986, huge nuclear powered manned space ships will fly to mars and back" ... I've waited for it to happen ever since blink.gif
well ´... so the MERs are the next best thing to that wink.gif

I'm also interested in mathematics, philosophy, artificial intelligence and
writing image processing software ... also dabbling a bit in space art
(my Idol: Don Davis wink.gif

And apart from all the "head-stuff" I'm also doing quite a bit
sports like mountain biking/hiking (especially love the swiss mountains) and snowboarding smile.gif
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wyogold
post Apr 18 2005, 10:51 PM
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I am 34 I have an ex-wife and 4 kids. I work as an electrician. Wiring everything from houses to industrial plants. I've been interested in space forever. I used to lie in my back yard at night and stare at the sky to observe the rare passage of a satellite usually 2 or 3 a night. Oh how times have changed. I followed voyager with national geographic. I am an avid computer buff. I tend to fix computers after the "profesional" works on my friends computers. The pro gets the money and then i fix the problem after they leave go figure. I taught myself to program BASIC when i was 8 on a c64/tsr-80/apple. Oh how times have changed. I am a ham (amature) radio operator. I also prospect for gold and my most recent endeavor is Wyoming opal...Boy did i let the cat out of the bag... I love this forum and thank all involved for the wonderful intelligent stimulating discussions on here and the huge investment of time. bringing about the great pictures from mars that you can't get anywhere else. You guys rock. mmb rocks. This universe is a fascinating place.

It blows my mind to fathom we have a rover on another planet millions of miles away and here we are playing with the pictures, each in our little homes, and via the internet we are connected to each other and jpl and the rovers.

fascinating.

scott
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RedSky
post Apr 18 2005, 10:58 PM
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Hi all,

I'm 51, and remember in the early 60's, in elementry school, carrying our little wooden chairs from our classrooms to the All Purpose Room (i.e., the Gym) to watch the launch of the first few Mercury flights on a grainy Black & White TV. But what really got me interested in Space was when we did the same thing for a live Ranger moon (crash) landing. I recall seeing the images coming in as the craft closed in to its ultimate fate. I found out that all but the last 5 images were easily seen in a typical amateur telescope.... So at age 12, I saved up and bought a Criterion Dynascope... a 6-inch reflector with a clock drive popular at the time (for $195.00).

I wound up getting a degree in Physics & Astronomy at the Univeristy of Virginia.... (my father used to say I went to college to *take up space*) but while there, I saw too many astro grad students leaving in the early- to mid-70's with their their MS's and PhD's only to have to get jobs as *scientific applications programmers* (using FORTRAN and punchcards! for those of you who don't know the dark ages). Space interest had really slowed down in the mid-70's with Apollo 17, Skylab, and the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project.

So went to Gradschool and got an MS in Atmospheric Physics (i.e., meteorology), bringing the science from my astronomy days *down to earth*, so to speak. For the last 25 years, I've been working on Natural Hazards... developing models to estimate damage and losses from natural catastrophes (hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquake, etc). for an insurance research firm.

Also just wanted to say how lucky we are today (compared to the 70's and 80's) for the internet. Do you know how data-starved we were to find out anything about the Surveyors, Lunar Orbiters, Vikings, Voyagers, etc., back then? You might see a short story on the national TV news or NY Times for a day or two... then have to wait a month or two for Sky & Telescope magazine to come out to show a few good pictures and the real story. Today its sooooo fantastic with almost real time status and pictures.

I moved from Connecticut to central Florida a few years ago... and the first launch I ever witnessed in person (albeit 40 miles south of the pad) was the final flight of Columbia. I've made a point of watching almost every launch since then... including Spirit and Opportunity!

John (RedSky)
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PaleBlueDot
post Apr 19 2005, 12:06 AM
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hi, long time lurker came here from space.com forums, must say i like these better, im 24, 2 years into my phd in robotics, some of my work is done at jpl, but im too new to have worked on mer. i guess my claim to fame is that ive actualy tested some of my robots in the mars yard.
~mike
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jamescanvin
post Apr 19 2005, 01:21 AM
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Ok, so I'm 28 and come from the land of concrete cows and roundabouts. However I'm now living at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia (slightly differenent!) and 'sometimes' come into work, where I'm paid to try and understand extragalactic radio jets like this...





JC


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Bill Harris
post Apr 19 2005, 01:36 AM
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I'm 55-ish, geologist/hydrologist for the past 30-or-so years. I was a space-nut even back in the 50's. In my late teens I wanted to be an astronomer. By college (late 60's) I decided that I favored planetary "astronomy" most and went into geology with the intention of climbing the degree ladder. The economy tanked in the mid-70's and I got into geotechnical grunt jobs to pay bills instead of grad school. In the early 80's I started a career in environmental assessments and mitigation of the impacts of coal mining and reclamation in the southeast USofA, where I have worked for 25-or-so years.

I still like planetary geology, but have less of the Buck Rogers fervor that I had in the early years.

--Bill


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MizarKey
post Apr 19 2005, 01:55 AM
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It's been great reading about all of you...

I'm 42, my job is as a User Support Analyst for the Human Services Agency for a county in California...luckily I get a few hours each day at work to keep up on all things Mars / Space.
I became interested in astronomy around the age of 14, my first star map came out of a National Geographic. Somehow I managed to locate Saturn in the sky and it has finally gotten around to being is relatively the same spot in Gemini where I first saw it all those years ago with my department store 2.4" refractor.
Saturn was my first 'love', I even did a science project about it in 8th grade.
I became a Trekkie at age 15 and fully believe we are being prepared for eventual disclosure that we are not alone in the universe.
My interest in Mars actually started thanks to Richard Hoagland's book about the 'Face on Mars'. I have since discovered there are enough interesting things about Mars that you don't have to make stuff up about it. You could call me a reformed anomolist, much of it thanks to this board and it's practical level headedness.
While I wish our Space program was much further along (bases on the Moon and Mars by now...mining asteroids...that sort of thing), the Computer age is a great time to be alive. I've been able to say "Thank You" directly to people who have given me so much joy (Don Davis for his Space art, Gary Wright for his music, some authors for their books...), it's truly an amazing time!

Eric


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Eric P / MizarKey
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Bubbinski
post Apr 19 2005, 03:03 AM
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Hey all....I'm 34 and I worked as a tech support rep (over the phone) for 7 years before moving into a quasi-supervisory position (listening in on other techs and coaching them) and am now in training for a pre-sales position answering questions about networking equipment. I got hooked on the space program by the Voyager flyby of Uranus and the Challenger disaster when I was in high school. I'd hoped to become an astronaut and/or get into a career in space science, but I had too hard a time with calculus sad.gif

I live in Utah, but I've lived in some other places over the years as well. I've even been lucky enough to see a space shuttle launch in Florida (at night, no less, two miles from the launch pad) and I've seen the shuttle Enterprise in the Udvar-Hazy center. (Too bad the space hangar wasn't fully opened yet! I plan on going back to D.C. sometime and seeing that again, as well as lots of other spacecraft, planes, and things). And who knows, my dream of going into space may yet come true.

This board is awesome, and I enjoy keeping up on the Mars rovers, Cassini, and other space projects. I also enjoy building models of aircraft and spacecraft, and I built a paper model of the MER, which enjoyed a prominent place at my cubicle before I got transferred and sent to training for my current position.
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David
post Apr 19 2005, 03:30 AM
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As of the last post, the median age was 34 and the mean 35. There is quite a cluster of us in our mid-30s (birthdates 1968-1974). I wonder if being exposed to the Vikings and Voyagers at a young age had a lasting impact, or if it was something else. But none of us is old enough to remember the Apollo missions.

The 33 people who have answered so far fit neatly into 3 cohorts: eleven born before 1965; eleven 1965-1975 (actually 1968-1974, as above); and eleven born since 1975, who I guess are too young to remember Viking or even maybe Voyager at Jupiter. I wonder what differences in outlook that creates (if anything).
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Pete B.
post Apr 19 2005, 03:48 AM
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Dropping out of lurker mode:

Although I am absolutely incredulous over this fact, I’m 55. I work as a government technical information specialist with the library at NASA Goddard. I’ve mostly spent the last 15 years managing the book, journal, and database/search engine collections and resources. Before getting into the library field, I got an M.S. in geology, mainly dealing with planetary topics: impact cratering and lunar soils. Another grad student and I worked on soils from Apollo’s 15 and 17, including a portion of this sample from the Station 6 boulder: http://store1.yimg.com/I/skyimage_1839_1990028

I grew up in Huntsville Alabama. My father started working for the Von Braun team in 1954, moved over to NASA Marshall in 1960 and stayed until he retired in 1990. I think, but am not entirely certain, that he fabricated and assembled the mechanical solar system model (orrey) that was a prop in the short films on space exploration that Walt Disney produced in the mid-50’s. He also fabricated some parts for the rocket that launched Explorer 1. From one end of our yard we could look out some 10-12 km to the Saturn V engine test stands for the several hot firings that were conducted at Marshall. I’ve seen 3 launches: the second unmanned Saturn V from some VIP stands (but not at the VAB); STS 8, and as we were driving south on past the Cape during a family vacation to Florida, a rocket took off, catching us completely by surprise. I later found out that it was Mariner 7!

One final comment, to echo what RedSky said – I attended a number of the Lunar and Planetary Science conferences in Houston in the 70’s. One of them was the 1979 meeting, which happened a few weeks after Voyager 1 flew past Jupiter. The poster sessions were the first chance that many of us had to see better photos of the planet and satellites than the grainy half-tone images in the newspapers. So all of you “youngsters” with your fancy-schmantzy web and jpegs and tiffs of Mars and Saturn on your computer screens every morning, you don’t know how easy you have it. In my day we actually had to drive or fly to other places to see that kind of stuff! biggrin.gif

And PaleBlueDot – this may not be your kind of music but here is a clip of a song Pale Blue Dot http://vinylkings.com/palebluedot.htm .
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mike
post Apr 19 2005, 04:36 AM
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I'm 28, and I've always been interested in the exploration of space, anything interesting, really. Space is nice because it is vast, infinite maybe, and so anything you can imagine probably exists, or did exist, or will exist, and amazingly enough, we can even fly up there and take a look for ourselves.

I got my B.S. in software engineering technology (designing and implementing software, basically), but I lost interest in that pretty quickly. Writing business apps so someone else can maximize their profit margin is not for me. smile.gif And I have a sneaking suspicion that we'll run out of software to write, anyway.

I've moved on to fiction, turning my creativity to something a bit more human than an endless string of 1s and 0s, and I have a feeling my novel will soon be published, though I suppose it's technically feasible that there might possibly be some miniscule chance that I may be wrong, perhaps.

It's interesting to see the wide cross-section of people who peruse the boards.. oh yeah, and I vaguely remember seeing pictures from Voyager, I think, in National Geographic, but as far as remembering the actual events I only really remember Challenger. I had actually forgotten completely about Pathfinder until the MERs started getting coverage and the media brought it up. I doubt I'll forget about the MERs, though. smile.gif
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CosmicRocker
post Apr 19 2005, 05:28 AM
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Wow! When Nasaman58 started this topic, I never guessed it would reveal so much of the underlying fabric that makes this the best space forum on the web today. No wonder the quality here is so high. There is a huge diversity of people from all walks of life and from all over the planet, all with one deep-seated desire...to understand the universe around them and to communicate with like-minded individuals. What an amazing community this is.

I wasn't here when this forum started, but Doug created something almost magical here, and I feel privileged to have found it.

OK. I was thinking that I was going to win the oldest member award, at roughly 54.60239 years old. I shaved some of the precision off of that estimate, since I really don't remember the exact hms of my birth date, nor the exact time I will publish this. Regardless, it appears I am one of the older members.

I am a geologist by training and at heart, though I have been working for the past dozen years as an environmental engineer for a chemical company. I have been interested in space for as long as I can remember. I recall my father taking me outside to look toward the sky, hoping to see Sputnik after just turning 7 years old. I remember Dad bringing home a sample of the (I think aluminized mylar) material the Echo satellite was made from, and going out to look for it. I remember waking in the morning to run out to find the newspaper so I could (hopefully) find the close-up pictures of the Moon from one of the Ranger missions. You can't imagine how devastating the news was to my young self, when the newspapers revealed that yet another Ranger Probe had entirely missed the moon! sad.gif

Oh, but when they finally did hit it. I was hooked for life. As you can tell, I could probably go on for ages about this stuff, but I think this is getting long enough.

I chose my screen name (CosmicRocker) because of my love of rocks and the wonderful information they contain. Rocks from other worlds are even more interesting. Beyond that, my favorite rock band from my grad school years was the Moody Blues. They had a popular hit back then called "Veteran Cosmic Rocker."


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...Tom

I'm not a Space Fan, I'm a Space Exploration Enthusiast.
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deglr6328
post Apr 19 2005, 05:40 AM
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I am 24 and work as a technician on what is currently the world's largest ultraviolet laser fusion facility. (lab for laser energetics) smile.gif I have always been interested in spaceflight, especially the unmanned variety and the treats we've been afforded lately (MER, huygens, stardust etc.) are just ...well....indescribably beautiful to me. It's great to see so many of the varied backgrounds of other users here. I thought I was probably the only one here under 30 but I guess not!! That's great to see IMHO. BTW I love your icon PaleBlueDot!! I'm a huge fan of Carl Sagan too! biggrin.gif This site seems to have the most perfect blend of levelheaded skepticism and wide eyed wonder/optimism about the MER mission I've seen anywhere. Really a great place and I hope it can stay this way.
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arccos
post Apr 19 2005, 06:47 AM
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I am almost 30 and I work as a programmer. My disadvantage in this forum is English. My posts are often crude nad full of errors.
I'm from the Czech republic (former Czechoslovakia).
(nazdar Borku smile.gif
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dvandorn
post Apr 19 2005, 07:39 AM
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QUOTE (David @ Apr 18 2005, 10:30 PM)
As of the last post, the median age was 34 and the mean 35.  There is quite a cluster of us in our mid-30s (birthdates 1968-1974).  I wonder if being exposed to the Vikings and Voyagers at a young age had a lasting impact, or if it was something else.  But none of us is old enough to remember the Apollo missions.
*


It does bring up the possibility that one or more of those in the middle range were either conceived or born while Apollo astronauts were actually on the surface of the Moon, though... talk about a lunar influence, eh?

-the other Doug


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“The trouble ain't that there is too many fools, but that the lightning ain't distributed right.” -Mark Twain
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remcook
post Apr 19 2005, 08:43 AM
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hey there! another Dutch guy here. I'm 23 at the moment, did an MSc in aerospace engineering and now living in the UK to look at Titan with data from CIRS (and enjoying every bit of it!)

I always had a large interest in planetary space exploration, but unfortunately, there's no planetary science opportunities in Holland (except maybe ESA ESTEC in Noordwijk, but since the Dutch government only contributes a tiny amount to ESA's budget... sigh). Anyway, there was no planetary science education, so I did the next best thing, aerospace engineering (I don't like stars and clusters, etc that much). Turned out to be a little disappointing, expecially the first 3 years, since it was mostly aeronautics, and I don't really care a lot about airplanes...But I'm glad I did it (although I wouldn't have minded some more 'real' science) and I'm glad I'm doing what I am doing now.

That's my life story so far biggrin.gif
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TheChemist
post Apr 19 2005, 11:06 AM
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Nice meeting you all ! smile.gif
38 year old chemist here. I presently teach and do research at a university. Mainly working with NMR spectroscopy applications in analytical and food chemistry now, did a lot of polymers in my early days too.
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chris
post Apr 19 2005, 12:16 PM
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I'm 43, and yet another software developer. I live just outside London and currently work for a small software house in Soho square, right in the middle of London, doing Java and webapp stuff. I'm keen on XP and agile development methods.

Originally, however, I studied biochemistry. Did a PhD, then decided it wasn't for me. Been interested in space stuff for years.

Chris
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wyogold
post Apr 19 2005, 01:19 PM
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QUOTE (dvandorn @ Apr 19 2005, 07:39 AM)
QUOTE (David @ Apr 18 2005, 10:30 PM)
As of the last post, the median age was 34 and the mean 35.  There is quite a cluster of us in our mid-30s (birthdates 1968-1974).  I wonder if being exposed to the Vikings and Voyagers at a young age had a lasting impact, or if it was something else.  But none of us is old enough to remember the Apollo missions.
*


It does bring up the possibility that one or more of those in the middle range were either conceived or born while Apollo astronauts were actually on the surface of the Moon, though... talk about a lunar influence, eh?

-the other Doug
*




interesting..
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babakm
post Apr 19 2005, 01:54 PM
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41 year-old investment banker with a computer science background (don't ask). Hobbies still include programming and aerospace. 6" refelecting telescope.
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john_s
post Apr 19 2005, 02:41 PM
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QUOTE (Pete B. @ Apr 19 2005, 03:48 AM)
One final comment, to echo what RedSky said – I attended a number of the Lunar and Planetary Science conferences in Houston in the 70’s.  One of them was the 1979 meeting, which happened a few weeks after Voyager 1 flew past Jupiter.  The poster sessions were the first chance that many of us had to see better photos of the planet and satellites than the grainy half-tone images in the newspapers. 

*


Hey Pete B., was it you I was talking to about this exact topic at LPSC last month? I too got my fiirst good look at the Voyager Jupiter images, including the mind-boggling Io plume pictures, at the 1979 LPSC poster sessions- something I'll never forget.

I too am amazed at the wealth of talent on this board- folks with such a wide range of "day jobs" rivaling JPL in their image processing virtuosity. There have been talented amateur astronomers for centuries, but I think the generosity of the Athena team in making their raw data available to the public, and the Cassini project's decision to follow suite, is giving birth to a new breed, right here- the amateur planetary scientist. These are indeed exciting times!

John Spencer
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MahFL
post Apr 19 2005, 02:53 PM
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I am 42, living in the USA, I am British though. I operate an old Unisys Mainframe, and we will shortly be moving over to an Enterprise Server. I saw Armstrong step onto the Moon and have been interested in Space ever since. My father in law actually worked at Stennis Space Center, testing Apollo and Shuttle Main Engine's.
pancam.gif
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aldo12xu
post Apr 19 2005, 04:32 PM
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I actually vaguely remember watching a lunar landing as a 8-10 year old kid, but I can't be sure if it was the first landing. In high school I was right on top of the Viking landings, writing to NASA for photos and waiting 2 months to finally get the 8 x 10s. And then there was Pioneer -- remember the little craft before Voyager that kept on going and going and going? Astronomy, Sky & Telescope magazines were the sources back then (I still have a lot of those issues), plus NASA directly and certain companies that released slides of the mission photos (still have those somewhere as well).

We've come a long way, baby!


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azstrummer
post Apr 19 2005, 05:50 PM
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I'm a 51 year old programmer/analyst living in Litchfield Park, Arizona. My first foray into science and high tech, other than being a space nut in my childhood, was nuclear power training in the Navy where I was schooled in math, physics, thermodynamics, and electronics. I'm also a musician in my lack of spare time and am writing a political novel. I've just received an Associate's Degree and am going on to finish a bachelor's degree with ASU. It'd be very tempting to go for one in planetary geology and get intimately involved with the Mars programs but their westside campus does not offer that major and Tempe is far from my home.

Great divergence of people on here.

Art Martin
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argv
post Apr 20 2005, 12:48 AM
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43, electrical engineer, design high speed computer chips. grew up in florida and watched many launches from my parent's front yard.
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ElkGroveDan
post Apr 20 2005, 01:27 AM
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OK..

44, 5 kids, grew up in Los Angeles now living near Sacramento. Mechanical engineer who never worked in the field. Left college and decided to pursue other career avenues. Worked as an account excec for a medical manufacturer and then went into politics, been at it 15 years now. Now work in California's capitol as Communications Director for a Senator.


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If Occam had heard my theory, things would be very different now.
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Pete B.
post Apr 20 2005, 02:30 AM
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QUOTE
Hey Pete B., was it you I was talking to about this exact topic at LPSC last month? I too got my fiirst good look at the Voyager Jupiter images, including the mind-boggling Io plume pictures, at the 1979 LPSC poster sessions- something I'll never forget.


Yeah, that was me. As I said in Houston, I recognized the similarity of my experience with your reaction as decribed in your chapter in the book Our Worlds. The electricity in the air for those sessions was just incredible. Since you had recently posted on this thread a bit earlier, I tossed in the bit about having to fly. biggrin.gif

A similar, but less dramatic, experience was going to the AAS meeting in DC several weeks after verification that the first Hubble servicing mission repairs had worked and seeing a number of the new images, also in a poster session.
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skybum
post Apr 20 2005, 03:13 AM
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I'm a grouchy 28 years old, and an architect in Portland, Oregon. I first got into this whole "space" thing a bit over a decade ago, and at the time I always seemed to be the youngest person around, which was a distressing feeling. I can't say how thrilled I am to be feeling thoroughly middle-aged now! biggrin.gif
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MichaelT
post Apr 20 2005, 08:27 AM
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Wow, what an amazing community smile.gif I'm 30 years old and a meteorologist at the University of Hannover, Germany. I just finished a project on climate model validation, and I'm now working on air traffic safety.

Though, since more than 20 years I'm deeply interested in astronomy, and, especially, mars.gif biggrin.gif I'm also a member of the local astronomy club and regularly do public presentations on all kinds of astronomy-related topcis to share my enthusiasm with other people. Also, I very much enjoy observing the sky with a telescope and to do astrophotography.

I stumbled across this forum just a few weeks ago and I visit it almost every day. So far I'm more of a silent observer.

Michael
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tty
post Apr 20 2005, 05:10 PM
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Umm... I seem to be more or less the senior around here. I'm 57 and work as a software engineer in an aerospace company in Sweden. Have been interested in space since ´way back before Sputnik (Yesss, I remember when it was launched!)

tty
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remcook
post Apr 21 2005, 08:44 AM
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no females?
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Tesheiner
post Apr 21 2005, 11:57 AM
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I'm 39, systems engineer currently working on projects for ATC (Air Traffic Control) , 3 children.

My interest in space started reading National Geographic articles about the Voyager and Saturn flyby. What a BIG difference since then, at least in terms of access to information. On those older times you had to wait months just to see some pictures, and now we are able to look what those rovers have done just some ours ago.

Greetings from a Brazilian living in Spain.
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cIclops
post Apr 21 2005, 05:53 PM
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I'm about 13.7 billion years old, sorry i can't be more precise, it's not easy to keep track of all the years. Recently I've spent all my time on the surface of a rocky planet of a normal main-sequence G2 star located near Loop I of the Orion arm in the Milky Way galaxy.

smile.gif


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buddy1475
post Apr 21 2005, 06:09 PM
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I'm 9020 Days 11 hours 7 minutes and 41 seconds old.
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TheChemist
post Apr 21 2005, 06:10 PM
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QUOTE (cIclops @ Apr 21 2005, 08:53 PM)
I'm about 13.7 billion years old, sorry i can't be more precise, it's not easy to keep track of all the years.


Does this mean you were a teenager for 1 billion years ? blink.gif
I don't envy you tongue.gif
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volcanopele
post Apr 21 2005, 06:16 PM
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QUOTE (john_s @ Apr 19 2005, 07:41 AM)
Hey Pete B., was it you I was talking to about this exact topic at LPSC last month?  I too got my fiirst good look at the Voyager Jupiter images, including the mind-boggling Io plume pictures, at the 1979 LPSC poster sessions- something I'll never forget.

I too am amazed at the wealth of talent on this board- folks with such a wide range of "day jobs" rivaling JPL in their image processing virtuosity.  There have been talented amateur astronomers for centuries, but I think the generosity of the Athena team in making their raw data available to the public, and the Cassini project's decision to follow suite, is giving birth to a new breed, right here- the amateur planetary scientist.  These are indeed exciting times!

John Spencer
*

Hey John, nice to see you on this board!!

Anyways, to my bio info, my name is Jason, I'm 21, and I am a Geosciences major at the University of Arizona. I started out working on Io images taken by the SSI camera on Galileo in the later days of that mission. I used to have a website about Io until Fortunecity killed it 4 years ago. I am now work for the ISS imaging team on Cassini, processing Titan images (and occasionally other satellites as well, particularly Enceladus) and producing products for release. I also run a Titan website (that also covers the icy satellites as well) called Titan Today.

My main research interest is active geologic processes on outer solar system bodies (as opposed to passive geologic processes like cratering). My favorite is still Io (hense my handle) but Titan and Enceladus are starting to grow on me (and the possibility of active volcanism on Titan...potentially...is really exciting).


--------------------
&@^^!% Jim! I'm a geologist, not a physicist!
The Gish Bar Times - A Blog all about Jupiter's Moon Io
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paxdan
post Apr 21 2005, 11:59 PM
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Oh go on then. I'm a 25 year old space nut. Spent my childhood making Satun 5 rocket models. A Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate, I'm currently working as a production editor on a bunch of STM journals for a large univiersity press and i'm doing an Masters in International Relations. I take a lot of sky photos.

Always with my head in space books, I love the fact I can click on a link to see images of new horizons on the surface of Mars and Titan; and see whole new worlds come into focus courtesy of Cassini and the cometary missions. I really got properly hooked on this new worlds thing with Pathfinder and Sojourner on the internet in 1997 and i've been following all the unmanned space missions ever since.

Here is a picture I took of the recent venus transit with my digital camera selotaped to a pair of binoculars and a solar filter.
Attached Image
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dvandorn
post Apr 22 2005, 07:18 AM
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QUOTE (buddy1475 @ Apr 21 2005, 01:09 PM)
I'm 9020 Days 11 hours 7 minutes and 41 seconds old.
*


Not any more...

-the other Doug


--------------------
“The trouble ain't that there is too many fools, but that the lightning ain't distributed right.” -Mark Twain
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OWW
post Apr 22 2005, 09:27 AM
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QUOTE
I used to have a website about Io until Fortunecity killed it 4 years ago.


You mean this website?
http://members.fortunecity.com/volcanopele/i24.htm
Old bookmarks are Fun. laugh.gif Still the only place I know of with the recontructed Galileo I24 images! Great.

Anyway, back OT. I'm a 27 year old graduate in computer science from the Netherlands and obsessed with space stuff for as long as I can remember, although Voyager's Neptune flyby took care of the 'with worlds' part. tongue.gif
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djellison
post Apr 22 2005, 09:34 AM
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QUOTE (ObsessedWithWorlds @ Apr 22 2005, 09:27 AM)
QUOTE
I used to have a website about Io until Fortunecity killed it 4 years ago.


You mean this website?
http://members.fortunecity.com/volcanopele/i24.htm
Old bookmarks are Fun. laugh.gif Still the only place I know of with the recontructed Galileo I24 images! Great.

Anyway, back OT. I'm a 27 year old graduate in computer science from the Netherlands and obsessed with space stuff for as long as I can remember, although Voyager's Neptune flyby took care of the 'with worlds' part. tongue.gif
*



You forgot to mention your day job

Transcribing the director reports for us smile.gif

Doug
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Phil Stooke
post Apr 24 2005, 12:01 AM
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I suppose I ought to add my bit. I'm 53, grew up in England, and I think the oldest space event I recall was John Glenn's Mercury flight. I sat up all night watching live coverage of Apollo 11's EVA (after midnight in the UK). Now I teach cartography and some planetary science at a Canadian university. I've worked on asteroid shape modelling and mapping (data in PDS small bodies node), on locating the VL2 site on Mars, some historical work on lunar studies, and now I'm compiling an atlas of lunar exploration which has taken me to Moscow as well as Houston, Flagstaff and Tucson.

If you are near LPI in Houston, LPL in Tucson or USGS in Flagstaff (as some of you are...) you can see large format prints of my Surveyor pans in the respective data libraries/RPIFs. Flagstaff has the digital data and we will eventually get it out for everybody... but don't hold your breath.

Phil


--------------------
... because the Solar System ain't gonna map itself.

Also to be found posting similar content on https://mastodon.social/@PhilStooke
Maps for download (free PD: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/comm...Cartography.pdf
NOTE: everything created by me which I post on UMSF is considered to be in the public domain (NOT CC, public domain)
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edstrick
post Apr 24 2005, 08:01 AM
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For the record, I'm 53 also. I have trace memories of the post-sputnik days, and some real memories of Mercury, but I really started tracking with Gemini and Ranger and Mariner 4. (I wasn't really "sapient" before then....)

My dad was quality control manager at Bell Aircraft (later Aerospace) rocket division. His inspectors signed off on the Lunar Module Ascent Engines, among other things.

Oldest brother was a space-nut and he audiotaped live off TV the launch of Ranger *3* (Correspondent Walter Cronkite, reporting from Cape Canaveral) (Too bad the mission was a 95% failure) He also taped John Glenn's first two orbits (off NBC), most of Gemini 3, and the grand finale of Ranger 9: *** LIVE FROM THE MOON ***.... well.. it was approaching the moon... when it arrived, it was turned into shiny metal bits....

I started taping with Gemini 6 and 7, and have continued ever since. Video now.
My prize posessions include audio of live coverage of Surveyor 1 landing, the launch of the first Saturn 5.... (My *GOD*, THE BUILDING'S SHAKING... THE BUILDING'S SHAKING HERE!). I've also got a really good stereo recording of the launch of Apollo 16. The two networks (left and right channels) were synchronized (not one through a satellite and the other with landlines), both had outdoor microphones, and neither microphone died HORRIBLY.

I processed my first digital image in 1966: colored pencils and the numbers for a corner of Mariner 4's frame 11, published in Scientific American's article on the images.

I almost had a PhD doing Mars geology, but it finished me before I finished it and I ended up image processing in industry, and having fun "on the side".
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voracs
post Apr 24 2005, 07:57 PM
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Looong time lurker... first time poster (just registered... finally!). I'm 42, a lab technologist living in Vancouver, BC, CA. I've been perusing this board since finding it through #maestro on IRC, during those heady days of EDL. It's been an absolute delight to follow the subsequent happenings here. Big compliments to the frequent posters, forum leads and, of course Doug, for assembling such a fine place to keep up to date.

I've been a space enthusiast for as long as I can remember, early interest being fostered by the occasional space article in National Geographic. I couldn't wait for the next issue to come through the mail slot to see if there was an update on Voyager or some new story/pics from Apollo. What a difference the internet has made for the immediacy of information available. I recall during pathfinder/sojourner that I was keeping tabs on its status through the web at the same time as watching the live news conference on CNN. The first images were available on my monitor before they were even shown to the media! It's still fascinating to watch how some theories are hashed out here before their "official" release.

Keep up the good work. cool.gif
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Phil Stooke
post Apr 25 2005, 02:13 AM
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Hey, edstrick, I met you at LPSC quite a few years ago. I remember your Viking lander false color pans poster!

Phil


--------------------
... because the Solar System ain't gonna map itself.

Also to be found posting similar content on https://mastodon.social/@PhilStooke
Maps for download (free PD: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/comm...Cartography.pdf
NOTE: everything created by me which I post on UMSF is considered to be in the public domain (NOT CC, public domain)
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Guest_Myran_*
post May 7 2005, 10:05 AM
Post #78





Guests






Me? Forum lurker! tongue.gif

44 years. Real life job: Janitor.
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edstrick
post May 9 2005, 01:33 AM
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<waves belatedly at Phil Stooke>....
I'm around, spaced-out as always...
My PhD Dissertation finished me before I finished it, so I've ended up image processing in industry, more or less watching from the sidelines, CAT scanning space shuttle turbine blades and <couple times> Dinosaur skulls.
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garybeau
post May 20 2005, 01:25 AM
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Wow, I can't get over all of the talent here. What a great board. I'm humbled by all the professionals here.
I'm a 49 year old tool and die maker from Connecticut. Have been interested in science, rockets and space since before I could read. Grew up during the Apollo days, but my interest has switched from manned to un-manned over the years. A lot more science and a lot less politics. smile.gif My hero is Carl Sagan - loved his Nova special Cosmos. If there was ever anyone addicted to science and space news it has got to be me. When I'm done perusing all of the online sources, I'm putting myself to sleep with Astronomy, Sky and Telescope, New Scientist, Scientific American Planetary Report and on and on.............zzzzzzzzz
Glad to meet you all and keep up the great work.
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Patteroast
post May 31 2005, 10:30 AM
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Ahh.. hi! I'm new, and figured this would be as good a place as any to make my first post. Unlike other people who mentioned registering recently, I haven't been lurking, I just found out about this forum's existance approximately an hour ago. biggrin.gif Just reading around and seeing the passion for unmanned spaceflight that I have seen almost nowhere else... I couldn't resist signing up. It just looks like so much fun here! smile.gif

I'm an 18-year-old high school student (for six more days until graduation, anyway.) I've been interested in planetary astronomy since the age of four when I found a book about the solar system in a box somewhere... couldn't even read it, and I loved it. Sadly, being born in 1987, I don't even remember the Neptune encounter of Voyager. sad.gif Probably my earliest memories of any sort of spaceflight was something with Hubble.. not sure, really. But I've been glued to my internet connection for the entire duration of MER, and all of the last few years of Cassini.

Any knowledge of astronomy I have is self-taught, but I like to believe I have a rather good and detailed understanding of most of the topic (at the very least, much more than the majority of people tongue.gif ). I probably have a dozen notebooks lying around with some form of information in them, including constantly updated lists of all the vital stats for the moons. smile.gif

Okay, I should probably stop babbling (as I have a tendency to do). So, uh.. hello. smile.gif
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stillgoing
post Jun 8 2005, 10:30 PM
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Hello, all.
42, living in Aldergrove, BC, Canada. I'm a project manager for a company making GPS based products for tracking of offenders.

My earliest memories were watching the Apollo moon landings.

I'm a scout leader, and I periodically teach the kids what I know about astronomy; taking them outside for star-gazing and constellation identifying sessions. I usually try to coincide my sessions with a good Iridium flare. Really fires the kids up, as I explain what made the flash, and more importantly the knowledge and computation that is behind my being able to point to the sky and say look there in 5..4..3..2..1 (Wow!.. Cool!)

For those of you also into mountain biking: The North Shore is my playground.

This site is excellent, and I anticipate many hours of study.

Thanks!
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brianc
post Jul 1 2005, 08:02 PM
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I'm 46 and work for the UK Health Service as an Information Analyst, I have a wife and two girls. I live in a small village Holcombe Brook, just north of Manchester England, I got inspired by a book the Observers Book of Manned Spacecraft, this was bought for me by my parents when I was about 7 (1966), I remember seeing the moon landings on TV, I also remember vividly coming home from school on a lunch-time and seeing the Apollo 17 Astronauts walking about on the moon. I was hooked, in those day there was virtually no 'news' on space, I joined an obscure group called The British Interplanetary Society and got good coverage through their monthly publication called 'Spaceflight' - I've followed all the missions since then, obvious highlights being the Viking Landings (which I remember the live coverage of Viking 1 landing) and the Voyagers. It's just great to be able to actually participate in these missions now that Doug has launched unmannedspaceflight.com

I visit USA on a regular basis for vacations, I've seen two Shuttle Launches (one night launch which I guess will never occur again), I've also visited Smithsonian, KSC on a number of occasions, JPL, Vandenber AFB, Edwards AFB and Redstone Arsenal at Huntsville.

I play golf (badly) and am into mountain and road biking as well as Go-Karts
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glennwsmith
post Jul 2 2005, 09:44 PM
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Brianc, thanks for the post on "Take a Moment" that prompted Doug to send you (and me) here.

As I was reading through the other bios, I began to think, "God, at 56, am I the oldest member?!?" Then I hit TTY's post.

And while in the mode of referencing other posts in this section:

Mr. Chemist, I laughed out loud about being a teenager for one billion years!

And Red Sky, I too had a 6" Dynascope, which my Mom sold years later to another budding astronomer.

The threads running through this thread are fascinating in and of themselves. I too am a former software engineer (author of BLAST [blocked asynchronous transmission], the first sliding window protocol in the asynchronous/mini/micro arena) now making $10/hr. as an engraver (with PC based equipment), but that's OK as my real focus is kinetic sculpture.

I live now in New Orleans but grew up in Baton Rouge, LA.

Our 5th grade class had a set of introductory guide books (papmphlets, really) to the various sciences, and I was thereby able to become aware that astronomy was my particular interest -- my first real interest, actually -- the type of budding fascination you can look back upon as defining who you are. So hence the Dynascope, and of course I followed avidly all the early space shots -- Sputnik, Vanguard (!), Explorer, Echo (THAT was a thing to see in the evening sky!), Mercury, and so on.

The Apollo landings were something of a climax for anyone alive at that time, and my interest subsequently got turned down a notch or two, but without ever really disappearing.

Then, of course, has come the huge recent explosion in space science, coinciding with 1) something of a lull in the biological sciences, what with Dolly and so on holding the headlines, and 2) the advent of the Internet (and this wonderful site) which, as many others have remarked, allow us to share the data, and our response to them, in near real time.

There's LOTS more I could say, but will close with this: I am thankful to be part of this online community.
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elakdawalla
post Aug 8 2005, 07:21 PM
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This seems to be the place for introductions, so here goes smile.gif

I'm 30 and I work for The Planetary Society, doing whatever our fearless leaders ask me to do...which means I'm lucky in how varied my everyday job is. I cover space missions as "press," writing news stories for the website; maintain a weblog; write backgrounder material; run our various public involvement contests (art contests, guess the crater diameter, name the rovers, etc.); go on various enjoyable boondoggles, er, I mean, research trips; and do other stuff, like working as the image processing person in Cosmos 1 mission operations. (Too bad I never got any images to work on sad.gif )

I love my job. I'm doing exactly what I set out to do when I went to graduate school -- help connect the "interested public" with what's currently going on in space research. Everybody wins; the scientists I talk to are grateful when anyone expresses interest in actually understanding their research (rather than focusing on endless debates like "What is a planet?"), and a small but devoted sliver of the public appears to love digging deeper into the science behind the latest discoveries.

What's struck me about reading the replies to this topic is the youthful mean age of the people reading and posting to this forum. The mean age of Planetary Society members is much older than that, over 50. Some general trends match, though; both respondents to this topic and Planetary Society members come from a broad range of professional backgrounds, with relatively few directly involved in aerospace research or industry; and both groups are, sadly, mostly male!

Emily


--------------------
My website - My Patreon - @elakdawalla on Twitter - Please support unmannedspaceflight.com by donating here.
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4th rock from th...
post Aug 9 2005, 12:22 AM
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I've been on this forum for some time but never introduced!

So here goes:

I'm 28, live near Lisbon, Portugal, and presently work as a Webdesigner. I have a degree in Geography and worked for some time doing image processing with satellite images.
I'm also an amateur astronomer with a special interest on Mars ;-) (www.astrosurf.com/nuneshttp://www.astrosurf.com/nunes)


--------------------
_______________________
www.astrosurf.com/nunes
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ilbasso
post Aug 9 2005, 12:52 AM
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4th Rock, that is beautiful astrophotography on your website! Congratulations! It sounds like you have an observing site with remarkably good seeing.


--------------------
Jonathan Ward
Manning the LCC at http://www.apollolaunchcontrol.com
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dilo
post Aug 9 2005, 03:53 AM
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QUOTE (ilbasso @ Aug 9 2005, 12:52 AM)
4th Rock, that is beautiful astrophotography on your website! Congratulations!  It sounds like you have an observing site with remarkably good seeing.
*

Agree, planetary images are breathtaking and "Planetary Art" section is nice too!


--------------------
I always think before posting! - Marco -
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4th rock from th...
post Aug 9 2005, 10:44 AM
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Thank you for your kind words!

My site doesn't have that good seeing. There are some stable periods lasting a few minutes, usually just after sunset or at dawn. On general the weather is unstable with frequent fog and low clouds.

The trick is to use webcams or CCDs with very short exposure times on the best nights ;-) The rest is just carefull image processing.


--------------------
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Harder
post Aug 9 2005, 11:18 AM
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Enjoying going thru all these bio's the least I can do is add my own..

'Alo 'alo, I'll say this only once to quote a famous European:

I'm also 53 yrs, and in very good company here by the looks of it.
I work in plants were we liquefy natural gas, and since these plants are typically far away from its customers (population centres & good infrastructure) I had to make do with initially Compuserve text-based space message boards over patchy telephone lines with V24 modems if memory serves me right.

My origin lies in Holland, and I am subscribing to the Dutch magazine Zenith and the French Ciel et Espace. I have been pestering them for information about what is going on behind the "Kremlin Walls" of ESA - no offence to Russian members here- and I'll keep at it as much as I can. If I land a scoop then this community will be the first to know - promise.

I chose my screen name as a throwback to the days I was in a university rowing club and I'll try to add a related logo shortly.

To end: when I followed the launch of the Messenger probe I realised it was going to enter Mercurius orbit exactly on my planned retirement day. That set me back for a few seconds, ohmy.gif but space science & new discoveries goes day-by-day and that's the beauty of it!

Cheers,
Peter
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cozmsbrpng
post Aug 16 2005, 09:26 PM
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Hello all,

It's fun to hear what everybody else is like so it's only fair that I keep the treadmill going.

I am 29, and I work in a neurology research lab. My focus is in bioinformatics where I get to investigate the role of genetic variation in human diseases.

<rant> You should know that there is a really great law called HIPAA (hippah) that is keeping your genome safe from the insurance companies. If you ever hear about a bill that proposes to weaken existing HIPAA protections please fight to defeat it! </rant>

Space rocks! Pictures of rocks fill up a lot of space on my hard drive. smile.gif I started building mosaics and mosaic anaglyphs from the raw MER data and quickly got hooked. I feel fortunate to be among talented folks with similar interests, and I hope to learn a lot from the community.
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Rxke
post Aug 26 2005, 11:04 PM
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Wow, this board truly is a place of talents! smile.gif

I'm 35, and currently a student. Hopefully this will be my last (Thesis) year to become conservator/restorator of visual media.
In normal people speak: restoring old photographs, films and more and more : disaster prevention re: digital archiving, sigh. Stuff that's 100years old is ofthen in far better condition than stuff from the 70's either analog or digital. We're losing a tremendous amount of valuable information, that's only 20-30 years old...

Going back to full time studies is hard, when you did hard unskilled and temp work for more than ten years, I can assure you, but it's thrilling too. I do *not* regret it!

Oh, I'm from Belgium, and can't remember the days when i was *not* interested in the stuff outside our atmosphere, especially Mars, which I somehow consider as my lost homeplanet (yea, I'm weird...)

My best birthdaypresent was the landing of Spirit, friends that came visiting me were a bit frustrated I didn't spend any time with them, but was very close friends with my computer, occasionally jumping around like a lunatic, heehee!
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helvick
post Aug 26 2005, 11:51 PM
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Time to add a bit of a profile for myself I think.

I'm 39, work for a large American semiconductor manufacturer as an IT systems architect specialising in handheld devices. that means that I get to play with lots of gadgets but spend most of my time wishing I worked with stuff that used _real_ operating systems. It also means that I spend far more time than is healthy talking to people about "power budgets" and optimisation strategies for power consumption vs processing capability which might go some way to explaining my fixation with the solar panel's on Spirit and Opportunity.

I've been a space nut since my folks allowed me to stay up watching some Apollo 17 coverage late one night when I was 6, it's one of my earliest memories.

I'm an unapologetic engineer rather than a pure science or imaging buff - I love working over the numbers that trickle down to us to see how the real rocket scientists make all this stuff happen and what the explanations are.

And right now I'm about to take a well deserved break from work to spend two weeks relaxing in Malta, getting some sun (something rarely seen in Ireland) and enjoying something completely different. The timing is a bit bad what with all the excitement on Husband Hill but with a bit of luck all of the imaging gurus will have some amazing stuff for me on my return.
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Bob Shaw
post Aug 26 2005, 11:57 PM
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QUOTE (Rxke @ Aug 27 2005, 12:04 AM)
We're losing a tremendous amount of valuable information, that's only 20-30 years old...
*


You're right...

...but wrong.

And here I speak from personal experience. The psychology of photography has changed with the advent of Photoshop (etc). Firstly, the veracity of 'real' images has become important in a way that was always previously cryptic. Secondly, access to data is now far more free - especially with the trend (long may it continue) towards full datasets being available rather than (sparse) selections. Thirdly, in the past we archived badly, but now we acknowledge that it is almost a duty, so in future the actualite may be more-or-less preserved. In the past, prints were rubbish and negatives were a nuisance.

I recently (as an example) scanned slides I took at the STS-1 launch, and was horrified by their degradation. They are now digitally *fixed* and *do* represent that moment in time in a way that analog media simply can't. As a second example, I got married in 1980. The clown that took the wedding photos skimped on the bleach/wash and the pictures are now degraded beyond belief (and he never provided the negatives). Had those images been digital, then something could have been done with them centuries from now...

Hardware may go out of fashion, but there will always be either new technology or old enthusiasts who can read elderly media; if pressed, I could read Vic-20 tapes or C64 disks, RLL or MFM HDUs, Apple II data, and so on. And any serious data-archiving agency could do much more!

In fact, we're now at the start of the Golden Age of data, where everything will be available so long as our civilisation persists!

If you want *before* and *after* conservation images, let me know!


--------------------
Remember: Time Flies like the wind - but Fruit Flies like bananas!
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Rob Pinnegar
post Aug 27 2005, 05:20 AM
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When I was about four years old, I read the "How and Why Wonder Book" of astronomy, and decided that studying the planets was the life for me. So, to make a long story short, I ended up doing a bachelor's in astronomy and eventually a doctorate in geophysics. Most of my research has been in signal and image processing. I'm 35 now. Currently, like so many of the people on these boards, I'm working for a software development company -- but as a researcher, not a programmer, which keeps things interesting.

The closest I've managed to get to planetary research was about two and a half years ago, when I was still at U of Western Ontario, and almost ended up doing some work with Phil Stooke. Funding considerations got in the way as they always seem to, which was, in technical terms, a damned shame. I'm not done trying yet though -- 'one of these days. (Anyone got any Cassini images they want deconvolved cheap? For an extra ten bucks I'll do a no-frills wavelet analysis.)

In the meantime, I'm enjoying my current job, which has the plus of allowing me to sneak in the odd publication from time to time. So it's OK, really.
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Tesheiner
post Oct 30 2006, 10:55 AM
Post #96


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This thread was inactive for more then one year and a *lot* of people registered in the meantime.
Let's give this thread a little bump.

smile.gif
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ustrax
post Oct 30 2006, 11:42 AM
Post #97


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QUOTE (Tesheiner @ Oct 30 2006, 10:55 AM) *
This thread was inactive for more then one year and a *lot* of people registered in the meantime.
Let's give this thread a little bump.

smile.gif


Hey! I remember this thread...But never introduce myself... huh.gif

I'm 32, I was born in Lisbon but currently living at the "Glorious Eden" as Byron once called it.
I'm creative director on an advertising agency.
Space has always been an interest since childhood but more on a dreaming fashion than on a technical one.
Above all I consider myself a pilgrim. And space is the way...
Ultreya! smile.gif


--------------------
"Ride, boldly ride," The shade replied, "If you seek for Eldorado!"
Edgar Alan Poe
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angel1801
post Oct 30 2006, 11:53 AM
Post #98


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I am 36 and live in Adelaide, Australia. I'm on a DSP [2] pension and my interest is space stuff is solely from watching just one episode of Cosmos (Episode 13) on our national TV broadcaster (The ABC) on
August 25, 1982. I got to see the other 12 on a DVD box set in 2004.

I also liked reading about dinosaurs and asteroids when I was in primary school. [1] When I realised the two are connected, it formed 50% of my username. The other 50% is supressed here (for very good reasons!)

[1] In Australia, primary school is from the 1st grade to the 7th grade. High school is the 8th grade to the 12th grade.

[2] DSP = Disibility Support Pension (since November 1995)

And this in my 100th post here too.


--------------------
I call heaven and earth to witness against you this day, that I have set before thee life and death, the blessing and the curse; therefore choose life, that thou mayest live, thou and thy seed.

- Opening line from episode 13 of "Cosmos"
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tasp
post Oct 30 2006, 03:03 PM
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Retired aerospace worker bee.

Now I 'dabble'.
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ngunn
post Oct 30 2006, 03:29 PM
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QUOTE (Tesheiner @ Oct 30 2006, 10:55 AM) *
Let's give this thread a little bump.


Good idea. I'm definitely one of the oldies at 54. I remember the excitement in our family when Jodrell Bank picked up the signal from Sputnik 1. As a boy I was thrilled by the first blurry pictures of the lunar far side and by that classic Lunar Orbiter panorama of Copernicus Crater. Apollo unfolded during my time as an undergraduate. I missed a lecture (just one) to watch live TV from the Moon. Revelations from the outer solar system punctuated my later student years (research in palaeomagnetism).

Currently I teach maths, physics and astronomy in a further education college. Before that: oil exploration consultant (marine seimic surveys), postman, amateur landscape painter (including astronomical subjects).
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