Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Submission + - Russia To Rescue ISS Crew On Backup Rocket After Capsule Leak (reuters.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Russia said on Wednesday it would launch another Soyuz spacecraft next month to bring home two cosmonauts and a U.S. astronaut from the International Space Station after their original capsule was struck by a micrometeoroid and started leaking last month. The leak came from a tiny puncture — less than 1 millimetre wide — on the external cooling system of the Soyuz MS-22 capsule, one of two return capsules docked to the ISS that can bring crew members home.

Russia said a new capsule, Soyuz MS-23, would be sent up on Feb. 20 to replace the damaged Soyuz MS-22, which will be brought back to Earth empty. "Having analysed the condition of the spacecraft, thermal calculations and technical documentation, it has been concluded that the MS-22 must be landed without a crew on board," said Yuri Borisov, the head of Russian space agency Roscosmos. Russian cosmonauts Sergey Prokopyev and Dmitry Petelin and U.S. astronaut Francisco Rubio had been due to end their mission in March but will now extend it by a few more months and return aboard the MS-23.

"They are ready to go with whatever decision we give them," Joel Montalbano, NASA's ISS program manager, told a news conference. "I may have to fly some more ice cream to reward them," he added. The MS-23, which had been due to take up three new crew in March, will instead depart from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan as an unmanned rescue mission next month. If there is an emergency in the meantime, Roscosmos said it will look at whether the MS-22 spacecraft can be used to rescue the crew. In this scenario, temperatures in the capsule could reach unhealthy levels of 30-40 degrees Celsius (86-104 degrees Fahrenheit). "In case of an emergency, when the crew will have a real threat to life on the station, then probably the danger of staying on the station can be higher than going down in an unhealthy Soyuz," Sergei Krikalev, Russia's chief of crewed space programs, said.

Comment Re:There's nothing sudden about it (Score 1) 221

Geopolitics, an interesting subject

Yes, USA was the king and now is losing the throne, why ? demographics, USA imported too many idiots

Also Europe, plus, USA bribed Ursula and a few top people to ditch russia gas + oil for USA gas + oil + weapons, BINGO, jackpot, really

the result ? Europe will be a third world and USA is happy

All looks good, but, BRICS .... dammed

China + india + iran still trade with russia and russia has given the middle finger to europe

USA + europe cannot hold the line on russia + india + iran

we can have ww3, but that will have nobody happy, crap

so .... 2023, ukraina will be wasteland, russia will hold the russians republic and possibly also get odessa (so, no more sea for ukraina)

plus, poland, it seems interested on a piece of ukraina, it may as well

europe ? with the energy cost at least double of china + india + rest of the world ? doomed to nothingness (it will take at least 10 years, so, relax)

Hey, relax, you can disagree, we will see

Comment Re:How much radiation will be released? (Score 1) 141

it is all nice until you have cancer

then you think how to reduce the chances for it if not for you, for your children

have no children to care about ? then you could do something good for the environment that will make Greta happy

leave this world and go to the afterlife

Comment Re:Send it around again? (Score 1) 141

what a bold statement, I have no way to prove it is a lie but I can say that it is a lie

reality distortion field will work until you crash into reality

people that did not fall into the field, see reality for what it is, a common cold, that should be handled appropriately

we are pretty much relaxed and waiting for some possible sudden death, no need to hurry, we can wait

have a nice day

Comment Re:Too big (Score 0) 236

now, ask yourself, how come that ALL mayor distro switched to systemd ?

what is the chance of this happening without some "enhanced mediation support" ?

and WHO has such magical power in the IT world ?

Comment Find Open Source solutions (Score 3, Interesting) 263

Of the people I know only the worse have remained on Windows, and for the money.

A simple reason, you are just a slave of Microsoft, so, you just work for money.

It used to be that the changes where reasonable and bearable, but really, Win10 is sit

You really want to get better ? Start with replacing 1/10 of the computers that do menial work with Linux + Libreoffice.

It works, and the people dealing with it are better...

Submission + - SPAM: Why Switching Jobs Makes You a Worse Programmer

theodp writes: Forrest Brazeal explains why switching jobs or teams makes you, at least temporarily, a worse programmer. "When you do take a new job," Brazeal writes, "everybody else will know things you don’t know. You’ll expend an enormous amount of time and mental energy just trying to keep up. This is usually called 'the learning curve'. The unstated assumption is that you must add new knowledge on top of the existing base of knowledge you brought from your previous job in order to succeed in the new environment. But that’s not really what’s happening. After all, some of your new coworkers have never worked at any other company. You have way more experience than they do. Why are they more effective than you right now? Because, for the moment, your old experience doesn’t matter. You don’t just need to add knowledge; you need to replace a wide body of experiences that became irrelevant when you turned in your notice at the old job. To put it another way: if you visualize your entire career arc as one giant learning curve, the places where you change jobs are marked by switchbacks." He concludes, "I’m not saying you shouldn’t switch jobs. Just remember that you can’t expect to be the same person in the new cubicle. Your value is only partly based on your own knowledge and ingenuity. It’s also wrapped up in the connections you’ve made inside your team: your ability to help others, their shared understanding of your strengths and weaknesses, and who knows what else. You will have to figure out new paths of communication in the new organization, build new backlogs of code references pertaining to your new projects, and find new mentors who can help you continue to grow. You will have to become a different programmer. There is no guarantee you will be a better one."

Submission + - Alphabet's Cybersecurity Group Touts Its New Open Source Private VPN (digitalocean.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Alphabet's cybersecurity division Jigsaw has designed a new open source private VPN aimed at journalists and the people sending them data. "Their work makes them more vulnerable to attack," said Santiago Andrigo, Jigsaw's product manager. "It can get really scary when they're outed and you're passing over information."

Unscrupulous VPN providers can steal your identity, peek in on your data, inject their own ads on non-secure pages, or analyze your browsing habits and sell that information to advertisers, says one Jigsaw official. And you can't know for sure whether you can trust them, no matter what they say in the app store. "Journalists should be aware that their online activities might be subject to surveillance either by government agencies, their internet service providers or a hacker with malicious intent," said Laura Tich, technical evangelist for Code for Africa, a resource for African journalists. "As surveillance becomes ubiquitous in today's world, journalists face an increasing challenge in establishing secure communication in the digital space."

The new private VPN, dubbed "Outline", is specifically designed to be resistant to censorship — because it's harder to detect as a VPN (and therefore is less likely to be blocked). Outline uses an encrypted socks5 proxy that looks like normal internet traffic. Once the user chooses a server location, Outline spins up a DigitalOcean server on Ubuntu, installs Docker, and imports an image of the actual server.

It's been named Outline because in places where internet use may be restricted — it gives you a line out.

Slashdot Top Deals

"Indecision is the basis of flexibility" -- button at a Science Fiction convention.

Working...