It was twenty years ago, today...
Actually it was 36 years ago, tomorrow, when an 8 year-old smart-arse sat down in front of a grainy B&W tele and was fascinated by images of a bloke walking on the moon. I found out many years later that Michael Collins didn't have a tele in the command module, and didn't see the moonwalk until he got back home. Time to watch my DVD of The Dish.
Google Maps show all the landing sites! Zoom right in-- you'll be amazed at the resolution.
Google Maps show all the landing sites! Zoom right in-- you'll be amazed at the resolution.
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You are indeed a jolly good fellow! :)
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As for the Moon landing, I was alive but a baby - literally. I was 45 days old. My mom remembers pushing me in my stroller, looking up at the Moon, and thinking, "My god, there's people up there."
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My mother watched it from the hospital after I'd been born. :)
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(Anonymous) 2005-07-20 12:59 pm (UTC)(link)no subject
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You're making me feel old.
No one seemed to be able to talk about anything else for days afterwards.
Somewhere in the semi-housetrained Black Hole I use as a storage system I have a lot of old papers and magazines which were stuffed with articles about the mission, including the "gee whizz" stuff. For example:
1. The second stage of the Saturn Five had a skin efficiency (ie strength/thickness) which matched the average egg.
2. If tyres were made to the same standard of airtightness as the fueltanks of an S5, they would take 50 years to go flat.
3. One extra blob of solder on every joint, or one quarter of an inch too much wire in every run, and the total weight increase would exceed the fully fueled weight of the lander.
And those are just the ones I can remember off hand.