ISRO lose contact with Chandrayaan-2 lander during final descent
Following a historic July 22 launch on a GSLV Mk-III rocket from the east coast of India, the Chandrayaan-2 spacecraft – the robotic lander and rover, specifically – attempted a soft landing on the surface of the Moon on Friday. All was proceeding to plan until just 2km above the surface when telemetry was lost and the vehicle will have likely crashed into the lunar surface.
[...] The Vikram lander was aiming to softly touch down about 350 kilometers (218 miles) away from the South Pole-Aitken Basin rim on Friday evening. However, with all proceeding to plan, including the braking phase of the mission ahead of final descent, telemetry was lost.
[...] Although no explanation was provided, it is clear the mission has failed.
Also at NYT and India Today.
Previously: Chandrayaan-2 Updates: Lunar Orbit Insertion and Lunar Orbit Maneuver
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 08 2019, @03:21AM
As an India let me just teach you so you don't overthink it and strain your brain noodles. India produces shit code because that is what is expected of them. The western 'outsource' 'managers' are under the impression that people in India are all relaxing, dreaming of becoming a manager (or god forbid, "owner") so they in all my experience every single time, give ridiculous deadlines with poorly explained requirements. The general perception that everyone there is just incompetent doesn't help either, creating a chicken and egg problem. Close to 99% of the work that comes to India is UI development. I hope you get the picture. Plus the competition in India... let us just say that if you don't know anything about it. Damn Frenchmen go to strike on rising petrol price, and Americans elect Trump. Meanwhile, half the people in India don't earn enough to buy a liter of gas each day.
And one more thing - the managers get paid a decent salary, software developers get treated like a cattle in an imported American culture of shitting on nerds. You get what you pay for.