India just landed on the Moon for less than it cost to make Interstellar | The Independent::undefined

  • SGG
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    23710 months ago

    Why is this even a comparison? India only went to the moon, interstellar had to go to other freaking solar systems and a black hole to make their documentary!

  • @[email protected]
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    9210 months ago

    Cool.

    The average income in India is 25x ish less than that of the US. If we scale the $75 million cost to land on the moon by 25 times, we get $1.8 billion. The Perseverance rover’s cost is estimated at $2.75 billion and that thing landed on Mars.

    It’s incredibly impressive that India has landed on the moon on their 2nd try. Nothing should take away from that, and India should be very proud of their achievement. But geez this is a braindead article. Yes, poorer countries can pay people less do the same amount of work as someone in another country.

    • @[email protected]
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      4810 months ago

      I respectfully disagree with you. It’s a bit misleading to compare average incomes like that. I would assume the income disparity is nowhere near as large for valuable scientists and engineers working for a national space program. In addition, you are only comparing labour costs. Some materials can be cheaper in India, but certainly not by a factor of 25 and certainly not all of them. Therefore, I wouldn’t say the article is braindead.

    • @[email protected]
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      810 months ago

      This comparison is predicated on every part of the manufacturing process occurring in each country. As soon as India are buying parts from other countries they’re not paying India prices anymore

    • @[email protected]
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      310 months ago

      Some guy at NASA: “We estimate that the cost of this part should cost 1.8Million dollars. “

      Some guy in India: “You know, my cousin can make that part for 35 dollars”

  • @[email protected]
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    7610 months ago

    These titles are dumb.

    “NASA’s 1969 moon landing was with a computer that can’t even power Doom!”

  • @[email protected]
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    4210 months ago

    Aside from different approaches I think the biggest factor is salary difference. Still impressive though a good example for other Asian nations.

  • @[email protected]
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    2810 months ago

    Can we not have the hundred identical stupid jokes in the comment section like we did in reddit?

  • HikuNoir
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    1410 months ago

    Some houses cost less than Indian space agency spent on getting to the Moon? That must be a typo right?

    • @[email protected]
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      2010 months ago

      Yes and it’s incredibly annoying to me. More. Some houses cost more than Indian space agency spent on getting to the moon.

      • Decoy321
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        1010 months ago

        I mean, it’s still a valid sentence. Some houses do cost less. We’re just defining the word some so loosely it’s almost insulting.

    • @[email protected]
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      -1310 months ago

      Overrated movie. I’ll take real science and progress any day over imaginary nonsense that’ll never happen.

      • @[email protected]
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        3010 months ago

        A world with only “real” science and progress but without any entertainment would be quite boring.

        • @[email protected]
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          2910 months ago

          And fiction has been key to inspiring the next generation of scientists/engineers. So many NASA people have claimed to be inspired by Star Trek just to pick one.

          • @gentooer
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            910 months ago

            Hey, but I managed to write software to calibrate µCT-scanners! That is clearly way more inspiring than all this fictional stuff. Right! Right. Right?

            • @[email protected]
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              610 months ago

              You bet your bippy that’s inspiring! An un-calibrated scanner just doesn’t hit the same way.

              Based on the way specialized code is used, your calibration software will still be in use when they open the first scanning facility on the Moon.

              Hope you accounted for the Y10K problem!

              • @gentooer
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                210 months ago

                Thing is that AI can help. My SO worked in a firm that does skill extraction from CVs and job ads. They do really cool stuff to match job ads with CVs using EU skill tags! It’s a really good tool to do specific things, so I really hate all the latest articles about LLMs.

                • @[email protected]
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                  10 months ago

                  I do find myself ignoring this kind of article, too, usually. I really enjoy discovering a totally new domain where the technology is implemented in a totally new way, going well beyond language applications even.

                  I dream of a ‘language’ model that specializes in general machine to machine communication. It almost surely exists already, but in my line of work, machine interfacing is an endless nightmare. A ‘protocol droid’ would be such a help.

          • scmstr
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            110 months ago

            TOS ran 1966-june3rd1969, Russia first landed unmanned in 1959, and the human race through NASA and the Apollo program first landed on the moon on june 20th 1969

            Isaac Asimov was a biochemist born in 1920, started writing published sci-fi in 1939 and full on scifi novels in 1950 (seriously, this stuff was wayyyyy ahead of its time). Died in 1992.

            Gene Roddenberry was born in 1921, died in 1991.

      • @[email protected]
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        1110 months ago

        The black hole simulation for interstellar resulted in 3 highly regarded scientific papers.

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    But Interstellar had a box office of $715 million.

    The astronautics is a very expensive sector and with completely uncertain returns on earnings.

  • scmstr
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    10 months ago

    It’s almost as if doing this first, half a century ago, and, pardon my culturism, but probably less recklessly AND in a higher cost of living country would be substantially more expensive.

    But still, a genuine congratulations to India and everybody that worked on that project.

    Edit: I don’t know why I’m being downvoted, it’s a fact. “We did it for SO CHEAP” is not a brag or a flex.

    The cost to realtime process trajectories in 1968 was not the $10USD that a several year old, e-waste used iPhone is now.

    And the yearly salary of NASA engineers now is 100k-150k USD (glassdoor.com) while the Indian space program engineer median yearly salary (payscale.com) looks to be 200k-3M INR (median 800,000), which is $2,400USD-35K USD (median 10,000USD).

    So… Just on labor alone, that’s a factor of 5-50x. Then, take into account the improvements in materials and tech that can be basically gotten off the shelf. You don’t have to R&D reinvent tang anymore.

    Like, yeah, cool, you did it, that’s awesome. But then, trying to be like “oh we did it for so cheap” just makes me wonder how and then instantly realize that making me think about that undermines the very achievement it’s trying to brag about.

    And don’t get it twisted: money is fucked up in the world right now. Just leave it at: You did it, India. Congratulations, one of only four countries in the world have done it.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      You’re probably being downvoted because nobody is drawing any comparisons to the Apollo missions, except yourself. You’re defending a point nobody else is making.

      The only cost comparison to other space missions I’ve seen is a one liner from the article which compares it to a current day Falcon launch. Which is a reasonable comparison and data point.

    • @[email protected]
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      310 months ago

      They put a rover on the moon.

      This is much more similar to the Mars rovers than to Apollo. Those were still much more expensive than this was. Although for understandable reasons like cost of living in US vs India and salary differences.

      Manned missions are more expensive in part because humans and human life support is really heavy. The Saturn V is still the most powerful rocket ever launched. Those things were expensive.