lategamer
Banded Mongoose
The AI says the AE35 board just needs replacing. Get to it, Dave!
Dave. Can you pick up the newly printed AE35 board from the Utility Room and carry it to drone A13.
“Ccol. What else can I do?”
Return to the TV room, Dave.
The AI says the AE35 board just needs replacing. Get to it, Dave!
So not something you can do just by pressing a button and holding firm on the joystick...The Crew asked Mission Control to crunch the nubers for 4 hours and got a +2 by the Pioneer game mechanics for their Orbital Mechanics check,
I am not argueing your point, John Glen only had the joystick in his pressure suit and he and the rest of the Mercury crew flew on the maths done by NASA's "Computers" before NASA got *their* edit first IBM.So not something you can do just by pressing a button and holding firm on the joystick...
point being without the groundside engineers that burn could not have been performed by eyeballing it...
stick a modern AI computer on board capable of making the calculations necessary in the time and you may have a chance, going all Bruce Willis not so much
cinematic vs hard science..
Not as bad for Luna, with a few seconds communication lag, but Mars can be over 20 minutes. Once you get to the outer planets, you'd better hope your onboard computer is good.
The calculations probably aren't the issue, as much as the data. The mission may be more or less limited to calculating their own emephera and be relying on calculated ones for the bodies they'll be visiting. They may have limited ability to track an unexpected object.
And if an Apollo 13 situation happens on the Ceres mission, it's 15 to 30 minutes for them to tell Houston they have a problem, and another 15 to 30 minutes to get a reply. Ideally, the mission would be set to arrive when Ceres is closer to Earth than not, but the fuel usage situation may mean otherwise.
Yeah, this is what we are avoidingDave. Can you pick up the newly printed AE35 board from the Utility Room and carry it to drone A13.
“Ccol. What else can I do?”
Return to the TV room, Dave.
Not to mention highly trained versatile crew who have skill redundancy.The further away from mission control the more the crew will need to rely on their local resources.
Not as bad for Luna, with a few seconds communication lag, but Mars can be over 20 minutes. Once you get to the outer planets, you'd better hope your onboard computer is good.
Not to mention highly trained versatile crew who have skill redundancy.