Leibson's Law: It takes 10 years for any disruptive technology to become pervasive in the design community. This blog is about the disruptive technologies that either have or will win over electronic engineers, some that won't, and why. Written by Steve Leibson, Tensilica's Technology Evangelist. See my history site at www.hp9825.com. You can email me by taking the first letter of my first name, appending that to my last name, then the magic email symbol, followed by the name of the company I work for, and then a dot followed by com.
Aug 6 2008 11:55PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (0) |
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Yesterday, SpaceX announced the third launch failure of its Falcon 1 orbital rocket, launched from the U.S. Army's Reagan Missile Test Site on Omelek Island in Kwajalein Atoll. Also announced yesterday was the loss of the multiple satellite payloads. Today, SpaceX announced the cause of the failure: timing error. After first and upper stage separation, the first-stage’s engine continued to run while the second-stage engine had yet to start. As a result, the rocket’s first stage bumped back into the second stage and the mission was lost.
SpaceX also reported that the launch included the ashed remains of 200 people including actor James Doohan. That would the guy who was responsible for making many of us decide to be engineers because of his role as Commander Montgomery Scott, in the original Star Trek television series.
Aye, we miss ye Scotty.
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