Sky news is pretty behind other links
It did hope they're okThat seemed like a hard landing
As if years (or decades) of training, experience, and an actual job to do is the equivalent of spending cash for a ride as a passenger.
They crossed the Kármán line......rules are rules......I don't care how you got there. It qualifies.I rode in a 747, I'm a qualified pilot.
I worked in a hospital, I'm a doctor.
So many people are going "Don't be pedantic" in other threads.
As if years (or decades) of training, experience, and an actual job to do is the equivalent of spending cash for a ride as a passenger.
Blood, sweat, and tears vs. buying your seat.
They crossed the Kármán line......rules are rules......I don't care how you got there. It qualifies.
They crossed the Kármán line......rules are rules......I don't care how you got there. It qualifies.
To qualify as commercial astronauts, space-goers must travel 50 miles (80km) above the Earth's surface, which both Mr Bezos and Mr Branson accomplished.
But altitude aside, the agency says would-be astronauts must have also "demonstrated activities during flight that were essential to public safety, or contributed to human space flight safety".
The Kármán Line was established in the 1960s by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (also known as the FAI) in honor of physicist Theodore von Kármán........where did you hear they changed it for tourism?They changed the rules specifically because of space tourists on the day Bezos launched to differentiate between tourists and astronauts. If "rules are rules" then they *still* aren't astronauts according to the official FAA designation.
The commentary on the livestream is so terrible. It's like if a movie was doing a parody of a private companies space launch, but it's real. It's so over the top "All hail Bezos & Blue Origin & Amazon" that Paul Verhoeven would find it a little much.
Also, stop calling them astronauts, commentators. They're not astronauts. They're space tourists. The FAA actually went out of its way to specify that they're not astronauts when Bezos' went on his first trip - an Astronaut has to be a member of the crew and actually *do something* on the mission. Not just pay/be given a free trip as a(n admittedly great) PR stunt.
I rode in a 747, I'm a qualified pilot.
I worked in a hospital, I'm a doctor.
So many people are going "Don't be pedantic" in other threads.
As if years (or decades) of training, experience, and an actual job to do is the equivalent of spending cash for a ride as a passenger.
Blood, sweat, and tears vs. buying your seat.
Whew, he didn't blow up.
You need a kitten.I'm honestly not sure if Shatner is acting here or not. He's such a performer, everything public he does is so prepped and prepared and scripted but when he was going on about death - seems like real lines & emotions slipping in with the prepared lines
The Kármán Line was established in the 1960s by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (also known as the FAI) in honor of physicist Theodore von Kármán........where did you hear they changed it for tourism?
NASA is the only body that places it HIGHER:
Federal Aviation Administration, the U.S. Air Force, NOAA, and NASA generally use 50 miles (80 kilometers) as the boundary, with the Air Force granting astronaut wings to flyers who go higher than this mark. At the same time, NASA Mission Control places the line at 76 miles (122 kilometers)
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