Archive for category Technology

National Engineers Week

Not that most of you are aware of it, if only because there are no Hallmark Card for the occasion, but this is National Engineers Week, colloquially known as a celebration of all things geek. As I am an engineer, you can send me a homemade card (enclosing a check is optional) anytime this week. If that doesn’t grab you, tomorrow is Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day, so named because, completely in keeping with stereotypes, there aren’t enough women in engineering. I understand marketing (as per usual) overruled the engineers who wanted it to be called Engineering Needs Women! Day.

Actually, I’ve found engineering (turning ideas into reality) to be a rewarding career. Going into college, I was going to be a scientist, but you can’t do much real science without a PhD, and I quickly discovered I didn’t have what it took to stay in an academic setting for more than four years. So I went into aerospace engineering and have had a ball making things happen ever since.

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Whither NASA?

The demise of the Space Shuttle Columbia with seven astronauts onboard has raised important issues about NASA and space exploration. I once worked designing launch trajectories for Delta – I worked on the launches for IRAS, EXOSAT, and LANDSAT-D’ before moving on to smaller, more deadly aeronautical programs. I almost went to work at Rockwell in their Shuttle Ascent group.

Rand Simberg (among others) at Transterrestial Musings has made many important points about space exploration. The space shuttle has been an engineering failure – it hasn’t achieved, and will never achieve, it’s cost, turnaround, and safety goals. The problem is, the replacement programs, such as X-33 (VentureStar) have been even worse failures. The problems with the shuttle date back to decisions made from the dawn of the program, both in terms of engineering and cost. Columbia wasn’t destroyed by lack of near-term safety funding, of failure to pay heed to safety guru’s demanding more money, but by the inherently risky nature of space travel and design decisions made thirty years ago. 

And he’s right to say we need to go back to first principles when it comes to space exploration. The problem has been we’ve never really had any, and so as time has gone on, we’ve tended to let the programs drive the goals, rather than goals drive programs. So the proper response should be to figure out what we want to do, assign priorities, realistically figure up the cost, and go to it. Will that happen? I doubt it. But here are a few of my ideas anyway.

The space program should do the following:

(1) Provide a permanent human presence in space,

(2) Explore the cosmos, and

(3) Exploit the unique environments beyond earth.

We need humans in space. But that doesn’t mean we need to put humans in space when we don’t need them. Before Challenger blew up, NASA made Space Shuttle it’s only launch vehicle, eliminating expendable rockets, in an attempt to reach cost goals for the shuttle. So we were risking people to put up satellites, which we don’t need to do. And we were also putting all our launch eggs in one basket, which blew up in our face. I think there will always be a place for unmanned launch vehicles — they’ll be cheaper because the safety requirements will not have to be as stringent. 

Which brings us to safety and risk. One of the safety problems with the shuttle is that it represented a bunch of new technology. We now risk humans on the beta version of technology (sadly 30 years out of date now). Frankly, that’s not acceptable from a safety standpoint. People shouldn’t be risking their lives until we’ve tried out the technology on an unmanned vehicle, learned from the inevitable mistakes, and made improvements. While 100% safety is impossible, certainly we can use some common sense.

NASA has done a pretty good job when it comes to exploring the cosmos, but a lousy job when it comes to providing a permanent human presence and exploiting the unique environments beyond earth. There are many who seem to feel that NASA is standing in the way of these goals, and if they would just somehow get out of the way, private initiative would take care of them. I’m not so sure. The example of civil aviation is often cited, but while I think it provides a great notional roadmap, too many of the details don’t match. NASA should develop the technology that can be transitioned to private industry, just as it did for civil aviation, but is the technology mature? A lot of aviation pioneers died from accidents; society has become much more intolerant of fatal accidents. Capital costs are orders of magnitude greater as well, with uncertain payoffs. There is no denying that aviation technology received huge boosts from military investments in the world wars, but there hasn’t been any military interest in humans in space since MOL (Manned Orbiting Laboratory) was canceled in 1969. A couple modestly successful businessmen (AKA the Wright Brothers) could fund the development, design, construction, and test flights of the first aircraft. Can the same be said of launch vehicles, let alone space stations? That leaves tourism, so far the only money maker in manned space efforts. Is Disney ready to spend the billions required when the risks are large and the return uncertain? Is any company with the pockets deep enough ready to roll the dice on space? In short no. NASA needs to make the eventual privatization of space a goal (OK, make it number 4 up above) so that it’s programs support that goal, but I don’t think we’re there yet.

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Shuttle Aerodynamics

NASA now says that the drag on the left wing of Columbia is consistent with asymmetrical boundary layer transition, which it has seen on about a dozen prior occasions. The boundary layer is the part of the airflow where it changes from the freestream velocity somewhere above the surface to zero at the surface of vehicle. Boundary layers are either laminar or turbulent. In laminar boundary layers, the flow moves smoothly along lines which are essentially parallel with no mixing as you move away from the surface; in turbulent boundary layers, which are thicker and have more drag, there are eddy currents within the flow, so there is mixing and therefore increased heat transfer. 

The P-51 Mustang famously had a laminar flow airfoil. For airplanes, the flow over the wing and body is typically laminar initially and then transitions to turbulent – and one of the factors that determines where that transition occurs is surface roughness. One part of wind tunnel testing is to make sure that the boundary layer transitions on the subscale model in the same location as it would on the full scale, full Reynolds number vehicle. Transition strip, which is a strip of high surface roughness, is placed in the location where this occurs so that aerodynamics measured will correspond to the flight vehicle. Apparently the flow over the space shuttle wing starts outs totally laminar, and then later transitions to mostly turbulent. What happened with Columbia (and other flights) was that one wing was rougher than the other, and thus that wing transitioned from laminar to turbulent much sooner, leading to higher temperatures and higher drag on that wing. The drag meant that the control rockets had to be used more to correct for the induced yaw, and in the past NASA’s worry was that the control rockets would run out of fuel before the shuttle landed. So could the asymmetric transition itself have led to to the loss of Columbia? NASA doesn’t think so, and I have to believe the engineers who designed it wouldn’t have let a predictable occurrence like that have caused a vehicle failure. Of course, combined with another failure, it could have been a contributing factor.

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The Best Defense Is An Offense

No, this isn’t about what the Rams need to do in the off season. Tim Mullen, computer security expert, has proposed that if a malicious process on another computer is attacking your computer, you should be able to go and kill it on the other computer — what Mullen calls “strike back”. It sounds like a good idea to me – and oddly enough, Mullen has found that most of us outside the security business think so too. It’s the security experts who are having a hard time with it. The trouble with common sense is that it isn’t common.

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Steve Case Leaves AOL

Steve Case has apparently left AOL Time Warner of his own free will. There are a lot of people who dislike Case and AOL, but I’m not one of them. I joined in 1991 (give or take, the memory grows hazy with time) and left only recently to go to broadband when Charter made me a deal I couldn’t refuse. I was dissatisfied with AOL when I left, but after our long association, I was more sad than upset. And I think the AOL Time Warner merger was ego in search of justification, and Case got in over his head. Kind of like HP merging with Compaq, but that’s another story. Also like a lot of us who thought we were pretty savvy investors, but discovered a rising tide lifts all boats. I have a similar discussion with my brother (who works for Cisco) about the evaluation of management when a market is growing at 30% or more a year — how do you tell the great from the ordinary? You can’t, everybody looks great. I think a lot of the internet hype will eventually come true, just not as soon or by the then players.

When I first signed up, few people would have thought AOL would turn out to be the largest ISP — heck, it was a dial up service and there weren’t any ISPs then. I think the interesting thing is that in those days, AOL was quite Mac like. Not only the interface, but the focus on the customer experience. I considered CompuServe, which was the leader, but between a notoriously awful interface and high prices I went with GEnie instead. But GEnie was cheap for a reason. So then I saw an ad for AOL, and I decided to give it a try. The user experience did deteriorate with time, and the porn spam got to be downright scary in quantity (It was amazing how many mega babes I was getting all hot and bothered). But in the early days, it offered plenty of product, a simple and usable interface at a reasonable cost. 

In my opinion, when PCs got big, Microsoft wound up grabbing IBM’s monopoly via the IBM compatable route (Yes Virginia, IBM was a monopoly, and Microsoft is a monopoly). Apple lost out in the enterprise market because IBM was nowhere associated with it. For the BBS’s, dialups and then ISPs, there was no prior monopoly leader, and AOL won based on user experience, which the home market was sensitive to. Same strategy, different results. 

Steve Case did an admirable job at growing a dial up service, at transitioning to an ISP, and in getting ISP customers. But when it came to running a giant ISP, he wasn’t as good. And it turns out he wasn’t any good at all at running a media giant, but I’m not sure Time Warner has had good management for some time. Somehow I can’t find it in my heart to hate or consider evil businessmen who’s sin is not doing a good job, or losing sight of the customer. That makes them a lousy businessman, not a lousy person.

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The Demise of the Sonic Cruiser

The Seattle Times is reporting that Boeing is planning on stopping work on the Sonic Cruiser and instead focus on a plane that is cheaper to operate. The selling point of the Sonic Cruiser was to be its speed – a cruise speed of Mach 0.95. With the airline business in the tank, Boeing will instead work towards a plane that is 15-20% cheaper to build and operate. Cheaper operation will come primarily improved performance from weight reductions; lower drag and better engine performance will no doubt be part of the equation, but there isn’t a lot of improvement to be made there.

Fastest Supercomputer

Japan now has the fastest supercomputer in the world now. It’s five times faster than next fastest supercomputer, so now we’re behind in a supercomputer race with Japan. It’s used to perform weather modeling. I’m not expecting local weather forecasts to get any better (for instance, the rain that yesterday was supposed to arrive late tonight was here when I woke up); the computational results are still only as good as our understanding. All computers are the same – they do exactly what you tell them to do, not what you want them to do.

Google

We all know and love Google. Wired has an interesting article about the king of internet searches. It nicely covers some of the issues that Google has had to confront – lawsuits by the Church of Scientology, a ban in China, site blocking in Europe. Google hasn’t stood on principle, but conformed to what many in the tech community considers bad law, or worked with China. And I think rightly so — they have to work inside the law, and freedom in China is probably better served through a politically limited internet than no internet at all. But interestingly enough, Google will accept ads from porno sites, but not from liquor or tobacco sites. Some businesses are more equal than others.

Internet Bloodied But Unbowed

Monday afternoon, the internet came under attack according to this AP story. A person or persons unknown launched a coordinated denial of service attack against the 13 root DNS servers worldwide. When “defensive measures” were taken, the attack stopped. Fortunately, no one but the root server administrators noticed. The FBI is investigating. Is it Al-Qaida, a German hacking club, or a couple of bored teenagers in Encino? Who knows.

The problem is that the internet was designed to be a network between DOD computers that could survive nuclear attack, and security is consequently an afterthought because it was assumed based on the DOD having possession of the networked computers. This same assumption stayed with us when the internet was set up as a network between university computers. Now that any bozo can run an internet server from anywhere, we need a less trusting system.

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The Space Station, Globalization, and Baptist Ministers

It’s sad, but the thrill of space exploration seems to have departed from the world. We’re building a space station in cooperation with the Russians, astronauts are living there now, and, well, the response is ho hum. I hate to admit it, but when I read this article, I was surprised that the space station was crewed (OK, PC of me, but there it is). And the explosion of a Soyuz once would have been a big deal. When I was a kid, I remember watching the Apollo launches on TV in my elementary school gym. Now, I doubt my kids even know we have a space program. The crowd that once would have been happy that we’re cooperating with the Russians on endeavors designed to help all humanity have moved on to protesting “globalization”, whatever that is, or warning against the horrors of a new Vietnam with more fervor than a Baptist minister warning against the horrors of fire and brimstone, although in similar terms.

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