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posted by janrinok on Friday December 20 2019, @06:31PM   Printer-friendly
from the keep-on-trying dept.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-50855395

The Boeing company is going to have to cut short the uncrewed demonstration flight of its new astronaut capsule.

The Starliner launched successfully on its Atlas rocket from Florida, but then suffered technical problems that prevented it from taking the correct path to the International Space Station.

It appears the capsule burnt too much fuel as it operated its engines, leaving an insufficient supply to complete its mission.

Starliner will now come back to Earth. A landing is planned in the New Mexico desert in about 48 hours.

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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 24 2019, @01:19AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 24 2019, @01:19AM (#935720) Journal

    Redundancies and redundancies for your redundancies have a negligible mass cost

    Nonsense, particularly when you get to engine systems and life support.

    and provide unimaginable value

    Sorry, I can "imagine" quite well their value. That's why I'm complaining in the first place.

    Many of these redundancies can be entirely implemented in software and with negligible scale hardware redundancies working as redundancies for your redundancies.

    Then they aren't redundancies. No amount of software can replace a bad engine or life support system.