Crowdfund a Moon Monolith Mission? 199
Jamie found a somewhat amusing little essay on putting together a crowd-sourced mission to
put a monolith on the moon. The author estimates it would cost half a billion dollars, which is a sum he thinks could be raised. Although personally, I think a half a billion dollars could be put to better use, it's a fun thought exercise.
Raise the Stakes (Score:3)
Let's raise the stakes. I propose raising half a trillion dollars to develop a time machine and put a monolith in Olduvai Gorge three million years in the past to influence Astralopithecus Afarensis evolution. Our very existence might depend on it.
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With the RIAA lawyers that will come forward to ask for licensing money for "Also sprach Zarathustra".
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Re:Raise the Stakes (Score:4, Funny)
The switch from Mayan to Gregorian was hard on us all.
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that's why I never switched. But Mayan Almanac Helpdesk says my calendar's long term support contract will be end-of-life in less than two years without option of renewal
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http://www.pbfcomics.com/?cid=PBF111-Reset.jpg [pbfcomics.com]
Re:Useless Piece of Crap (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Useless Piece of Crap (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, lots of people seem to enjoy masturbating. But I am sure you don't. You spend every penny towards bettering the world and helping your fellow man, right?
What do pennies have to do with... wait... it isn't free? I'm supposed to be paying a licensing fee or something to someone?
Well, that explains about half of the national debt... sorry guys.
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Well the kitten isn't going to bury itself ya know
I don't think he [wordpress.com] needs burying yet.
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Ironic, coming from a username pronounced "man goo" ;-)
Be afraid, be very afraid of who [wikipedia.org] you make fun of...
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I take it that essentially every moment of your time is devoted to preventing people from dying, since the $1.66 that this would represent if you spread the expense over every person in ths U.S. (neglecting the other 6.6 billion people in the world) is less than a half hour of a net minimum wage.
While we're at it, let's get rid of those pesky cultural arts, since that's virtually all "masturbation" as well.
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And anyone who spends their time reading slashdot instead of working the shelter downtown is... what?
Re:Useless Piece of Crap (Score:4, Insightful)
Let's waste half a billion. Why not crowdfund for something meaningful and useful to the world? There are people dying and these jerks, anyone who supports this with effort or funding, are masturbating.
This sort of project would provide a fair number of jobs and is voluntarily financed, what's non-meaningful and useless about that? The government isn't confiscating the money from you so why are you complaining? Start your own crowd sourced project to halt death or whatever it is you think is more meaningful and useful.
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You're assuming that this has absolutely zero redeeming benefits to society. In reality, such a project could go a long ways towards lowering the cost to LEO and beyond which of course has the potential to benifit everyone.
open source ipad (Score:2)
Why not crowd-fund a completely open-source (thus nothing magical) tablet computer?
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And they essentially failed, the goal of OpenMoko if I recall correctly was to make a multi-purpose Linux distro that everyone could flash on their phones while being about as good
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OK, the difference between a for-profit and a non-profit is that the non-profit does not pay anybody dividends. A non-profit is legally forbidden to reward its investors (who are called "donors"). So, actually, it's completely different, since the entire purpose of a for-profit is to pay dividends to the investors.
A monolith on the moon certainly isn't going to pay anybody dividends in proportion to their investment. Either no investors get paid, or everybody gets the same "dividend" (even those who did
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Tell that to Apple, they are really in trouble if imitation is doomed to fail, after all, almost every major brand had a tablet computer well before Apple.
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Were any of those tablets wildly popular? Was anyone falling all over themselves trying to imitate those tablets? Is the iPad a clone of any of those products?
It would greatly support your point if you could link us to any example of a tablet that resembles the iPad but was announced before the iPad was.
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Wikipedia mentions many examples of tablet computers, some looked much like the iPad, but generally they ran Windows, so were actually useful:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tablet_PC [wikipedia.org]
Though they were not wildly popular in the consumer market (though incidentally I know many people who prefer them), they were very popular in certain commercial markets. The computers many delivery people use are tablets; UPS, Fedex, beverage distribution companies.
Incentives. (Score:2)
On the Monolith or the Moon?!? (Score:2)
Wasn't that an episode of "The Tick" when Chairface etched his name on the moon?
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He only got as far as CHA
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He only got as far as CHA
...and then the C got erased.
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American Maid was hot... ;-)
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My, and my families, name is on mars and on a comet. so the moon? meh.
That said, I think it should be solar powered and give off a faint freq.so if some other species in the earths future goes to the moon, they will have evidence of a previous race. I would put a variety of information for communicating ideas, and I would put stuff IN the monolith.
Better Use? (Score:4, Insightful)
Although personally, I think a half a billion dollars could be put to better use
You can play that game forever though. Did you east breakfast this morning? That food could have been put to better use, as could the water from your shower, or the resources it took to make the shoes you put on your feet.
In fact I can think of no better use for a tiny drop in the total sum of money floating around the planet, than a mass exercise in artistic expression. It's kind of the ultimate way of saying, here we are.
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With some people, even the oxygen they use when breathing could be to better use...
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This is the question isn't it?
Certain activities are excess, certain are essential. You can't play the game forever: the food people eat is essential to their survival. Art is not, and as excess, it exists only in a situation of abundance of the essential.
The only reason excess can be derided, right
Art is the most essential thing (Score:2)
the food people eat is essential to their survival. Art is not,
Art is not essential to survival; it is essential to existence. That's why it's not a waste of money.
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You can play that game forever though. Did you east breakfast this morning?
I'm sympathetic to the suggestion that we could fund this and not be terrible people, but you're being absurd. There's a huge difference between... er... easting breakfast and spending a billion putting a pointless thing on the moon.
In fact I can think of no better use for a tiny drop in the total sum of money floating around the planet, than a mass exercise in artistic expression. It's kind of the ultimate way of saying, here we are.
I can. For one thing, an -actual- artistic expression rather than just an expensive tribute to a book/movie.
For another thing, the moon has been done decades ago. True, we planted a flag, and it was more a show of nationalism, but a monolith to say "we are here" is still redu
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I'd be more inclined to fund another "bottle in the cosmic ocean" as Carl Sagan put it, similar to the Voyagers even though it would be the third. After all, there are a lot of directions to send probes, right?
I'd be willing to compromise on that as long as we sent out a lot of them, they were all shaped exactly like imperial probe droids, and they included copies of Star Wars along with various body parts of George Lucas.
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Infact lets ban all forms of fun and interest if it isn't directly helping disadvantaged children somewhere.
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Right, because not agreeing to fund something is the same thing as banning it.
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Awesome (Score:2)
I especially like (Score:2)
I especially like the artist's rendition of what the Monolith would look like! :-)
Spend half a billion on helping people on Earth (Score:2)
Surely somebody can get geeks excited in something more useful than putting a non functioning block of stone on the moon.
There's plenty of non-functioning human created hardware sitting on the moon already. Put your hundred dollars to better use, help people here, help planet Earth, whatever good cause you believe in. Some of them even give you credit, if your goal is getting your ego stroked / your name for immortality etc.
Plenty of IT related good causes down here.
Or at least match your moon-donation wit
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Fuck you.
Better use? (Score:2)
Why, is there a bank left that needs a bailout? Do you get a bank bailout for just half a billion anyway?
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"No banker left behind" sure is a good name for a program involving a moonshot.
Mind if we add a few lawyers?
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Toss in most politicians and I'll have paypal at the ready.
Whats the point (Score:2)
"$500M could be put to better use" (Score:4, Insightful)
Then get out there, raise it, and put it to that "better use".
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no no no no no.
You misunderstand. He wants to control what you want to do with YOUR money, not what he wants to do with HIS money.
How about just getting back there first? (Score:2)
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the reason money exists, is to purchase time/work from somebody. $500M would potentially allow hundreds of people to earn a living for a time, stimulate an economy that globally is stagnating, and would produce results that people would for hundreds of years be able to say "we accomplished that" or "we helped fund that".
the reason the world's in an economic slum, is because people like you think that spending m
I know! I know! (Score:2)
And how exactly is this anything close to the same thing as "throwing cash into a fireplace"
It does nothing useful for almost anyone (well... a small number of people would get a very expensive heating system) and all it does is produce pollution.
the reason money exists, is to purchase time/work from somebody. $500M would potentially allow hundreds of people to earn a living for a time, stimulate an economy that globally is stagnating, and would produce results that people would for hundreds of years be able to say "we accomplished that" or "we helped fund that".
Those people will not starve without this project.If anything, this project would take away their valuable time and resources.
Also, idi... I mean author of the "article" pulled all of the numbers from his as... I mean thin air.
You want a project you could say "we accomplished that" about? Get your buddies and go plant some trees.
it's "saving money" that ends up hurting the current system, not spending it.
Actually... no. It's spend
TPB might want in on that. (Score:2)
I'm sure they'd love to contribute something to the project if the monolith could be used in a distributed link technology. even something dumb like just a solar powered signal repeater would be awesome.
It was a joke (Score:2)
Well trolled sir, well trolled.
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This project already exists! (Score:4, Interesting)
http://crossonthemoon.com/ [crossonthemoon.com]
Religious Zeal-sourcing?
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I am Catholic, and I just can't support this if it is real. Only a true religious zealot would want to put a cross on the moon. Why not a symbol from every religion?
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We could put a monolith with science formulas.
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Some Design Issues (Score:2)
Deployment: Having a large, long, skinny rectangle (probably hollow to save mass) bolted to a launch vehicle is a bad idea. Rockets shake the ever living shit out of their payloads and that monolith is going to be one big wiggling moment arm unless the basic internal frame is super rigid. That said, it seems like making the monolith some form of deployable, maybe a telescoping
Monolith facts (Score:2)
Diagram incorrectly caption (Score:2)
The article needs a minor correction, the diagram is labelled as showing the front of a monolith but it is clearly a rear view.
Advertising space (Score:2)
Another one? (Score:4, Funny)
Premature Optimization (Score:3)
Let's see if we can land a golf ball on the moon for $1 million and perfect our technique before we go wasting half-billion dollar boosters that might explode on launch.
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Let's see if we can land a golf ball on the moon for $1 million and perfect our technique before we go wasting half-billion dollar boosters that might explode on launch.
The half-billion dollar booster is part of that "technique".
Thought Experiment (Score:2)
Cost In Todays Dollars Of 1960's moon program: $170,000,000,000
# of Saturn V rockets in Moon program: 15
Maximum Payload of Saturn V rocket: 272,000
(170,000,000,000 / 15) / 272,000 = $41666 per lunar pound
1.62oz golf ball = $4218 to get a golf ball on the moon using 1960's technology.
Fund research in Prosthetic Bodies... (Score:3)
That way we can get immortality and live long enough to visit the monolith they place there.
not a waste (Score:2)
If we just describe Apollo 11 as "sent Neil Armstrong to the moon for an afternoon giggle," that would of course sound like a waste of all of those resources. Instead, America collectively spent those resources by choice.
Ask the facebook kid (Score:2)
what this really means (as a skeptic) (Score:2, Insightful)
As a skeptic, what this really means to me is: this guy is looking for a way to fund his retirement.
Half a billion? That's 500 million. Sure, it might cost that much to perform the actual operation, but consider: management and administration costs. Surely there will be a significant portion of that set aside, particularly for the fund management. Say, as a non-profit, it's a 'relatively modest' $175k/year for such a position (if he's fitting in with current gov't standards, at least), and surely that sum w
About as likely to succeed as cyber begging (Score:2)
A half a billion? (Score:2)
Couldn't we just pull another "Capricorn One" and pocket the other $450,000,000?
I'd be happy to just put a webcam up there. (Score:4, Interesting)
With telemetry back to Earth. Seriously... NASA could do that with their eyes closed.
Lunar Cam 2011. That's MY crowd source mission.
Stupid waste of money (Score:2)
I'm all for funding a project to put something on the mood. But make it something constructive, not some stupid, pointless tribute to a novel and movie. I like the movie and novels, but not so much that I was to see untold millions wasted on this nonsense.
How about spending a few thousand bucks and having one erected somewhere on Earth?
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May I suggest some Bolero? Or maybe Luther Vandross.
Large-scale excavation lasts longer (Score:2)
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The somewhat easier way than sending one. (Score:2)
1. Use existing survey data to find spots on the moon where peaks are likely to contain good, solid rock.
2. Launch laser into LEO.
3. Carve monolith using precision control of the laser.
4. ???
5. Profit!
I don't think we can do this now. We'd probably learn a lot building the control systems to target and move the laser. Some of the results of that research might really be profitable.
How about something more useful? (Score:2)
Like analogs to the Martian rovers? I watched a documentary a while back where there were was still information to be gleaned from surface rocks the Apollo astronauts never had a chance to collect.
Half a billion? (Score:2)
That estimate seems very low. We probably couldn't restart the Shuttle programme for half a billion, and as it stands there are no rockets ready to lift anything to the moon.
IANARS but my out-of-the-blue unqualified know-nothing-about-it guesstimate would be around 4 billion dollars. Maybe that's too low too.
Re:Dear lord!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, but you only have to buy this monolith once. The hungry will just be hungry again tomorrow... Unless you stop feeding them, then it eventually solves itself.
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Get cracking, apes, the universe will last billions of years but you won't! Act now!!!!!!!!!
Indeed. If we could extend lifespans to thousands of years, then waiting a few decades until you can launch a monolith to the moon with a rocket you built in your garage would hardly be a problem.
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Says the man with a 7 digit UID, we're over 20% there on /. alone!
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How many /. users do you think have extra money to spend on this?
If you aren't an underpaid IT worker than you are a student in debt. We don't have any extra money to spend, we're already starving as it is.
Unless you are a Linux Guru, who gets to demand any price he wants for his services and sleeps on piles of money.
Re:Blogger's Failed Logic: (Score:4, Interesting)
Let me make a few comments here...
1. I'm neither under paid as an IT worker.
2. A student (in our out of debt)
I do have extra money to spend, but I wouldn't waste it on this.
I don't consider myself a guru, just a mediocre linux/windows sysadmin, and a passable LAMP programmer.
Oh, and I don't know if it helps or hurts that my UID is only 4 digits. For reference for all you 7digit peeps, I'm 34, and I'm guessing I got this UID somewhere around '98 or 99.
Here's some news from that era
http://slashdot.org/search.pl?threshold=0&op=stories&sort=1&start=105690 [slashdot.org]
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I stopped using my initial UID because people where giving my opinion too much weight based on the UID.
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Draw a weiner and you have my $5.
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Nope, most likely a quite frozen carcass until it gets hit by a micro meteorite or something.