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America's Journey in Space Is About to Face Its Most Consequential Moment in Half a Century. Everyone Agrees: It's a Complete Disaster.
America's great journey in space is about to face its most consequential moment in half a century. Everyone agrees: It's a complete disaster. I. Artemis, We Have a Problem As you may have heard, NASA plans to send a crew of astronauts around the moon in early 2026, followed by a lunar landing in 2027. Or maybe you haven't heard. When I told one of my daughters about this plan to send people to the moon, she said, after a long silence: "But I thought we already sent a bunch of people there a long time ago." This is a standard response when I quiz people about Artemis, NASA's program to return to the moon, and this time to stay . It's named for Apollo's twin sister and the goddess of the moon and the hunt. The other day, I was in a gaggle with six neighbors, all highly informed professional people--two of them with long careers at the National Science Foundation--and none knew anything about Artemis except one thing: It's a plan to send people to Mars. Artemis is a moon mission. There is no Mars mission NASA has no Mars rocket, no Mars capsule, no Mars mission crew. What it does have is a very troubled moon program. Artemis faces fundamental engineering challenges that have called into question the program's basic architecture. Reconfiguring a mission this important is hard in the best of times, but the agency is being forced to do it during a year of unprecedented internal turmoil. A new administration always means turnover, but NASA has been in an uncontrolled spin every bit as alarming as the one Neil Armstrong famously pulled out of during in 1966. More than a year ago, President-elect Donald Trump nominated a billionaire entrepreneur and Elon Musk ally, Jared Isaacman, to become NASA administrator. It was an unconventional choice, but Isaacman drew support from many quarters in the space community. Then, right before Isaacman was poised for confirmation by the Senate, Trump and Musk had a nasty falling-out, and Trump yanked Isaacman's nomination. Since Inauguration Day, NASA had been run by acting administrator Janet Petro, a veteran agency official, and with Isaacman out, she remained in charge until one day in July when Trump suddenly named Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy as interim administrator.
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Why Do Trump's Favorite Tech Bros Look So Sad?
The Industry Trump Gave the Tech Bros Everything. Why Are They Still Crashing Out? This was supposed to be their year--but a historically unpopular president and fears of an A.I. stock market crash loom large over Silicon Valley. Enter your email to receive alerts for this author. You can manage your newsletter subscriptions at any time.
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Where Does the Buck Stop on Killing Boat Strike Survivors?
The "Kill Them All" Edition US officials debate who to blame for the military killing of shipwrecked alleged drug smugglers; Democrats celebrate despite losing a special election in Tennessee; and the future of self-driving cars. Please enable javascript to get your Slate Plus feeds. If you can't access your feeds, please contact customer support. Check your phone for a link to finish setting up your feed. Please enter a valid phone number.
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Conspiracy Thinking Is Flourishing. Some of Our Most Popular Franchises Aren't Helping.
Gaming may be turning players into conspiracy theorists, but so is everything else. For nearly 20 years, the video games have presented themselves as sprawling works of historical fiction. They cast players as noble assassins during big inflection points in history--the French Revolution, Ptolemaic Egypt, the end of Japan's Sengoku era--and give them freedom to romp around stunning re-creations of these eras, interacting with historical figures along the way. You can do secret missions for Cleopatra, you can get Socrates out of a jam after he pisses a mob off, that sort of thing. They're extremely popular to the point of being taken for granted, the way a ubiquitous CBS procedural might be.
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I Just Realized Where I Know the Man I'm Dating From, So I Told Him. His Response Stunned Me.
How to Do It I Just Realized Where I Know the Man I'm Dating From, So I Told Him. As an outlet when I'm not having regular sex, I enjoy sexting with strangers on Reddit. I don't share pictures of myself, but men on there are more than happy to show me whatever I want to see. A few months ago, I started dating a man I met online. We clicked right away, wanted all the same things, and both agreed we could see a future with each other.
According to Friedrich Nietzsche, Which Was "God's Second Mistake"?
Please enable Javascript in your browser to view Slate interactives. Which Girl's Name Can Mean a Sudden Charge Against the Enemy? Slate is published by The Slate Group, a Graham Holdings Company. Slate relies on advertising to support our journalism. If you value our work, please disable your ad blocker.
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Google Wants to Power Their Chatbots By Filling Our Skies With Garbage
The space data-center wars are coming--and they're going to be ugly. Earlier this month, Google researchers released a paper about "Project Suncatcher," the company's research "moonshot" to build data centers in space. The paper's authors don't mince words when it comes to the challenges the tech giant is facing from A.I.'s energy demands, and their planned solution is to launch "fleets of satellites" into space and harvest energy from the sun. Google's space-based data centers won't be gigantic monolithic buildings like the data centers we have on Earth, but a "constellation of solar-powered satellites" carrying tensor processing units (the processors used to power Google's A.I. systems). The paper boasts that the company's data center fleet "will be significantly larger than any previous or current satellite constellations" in orbit.
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