<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/utility/FeedStylesheets/rss.xsl" media="screen"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"><channel><title>General</title><link>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/27.aspx</link><description>Everything else.</description><dc:language>en</dc:language><generator>CommunityServer 2008.5 SP2 (Build: 40407.4157)</generator><item><title>Re: Google Offers $20 Million X Prize to Put Robot on Moon</title><link>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/thread/3730.aspx</link><pubDate>Sun, 18 Nov 2007 06:09:19 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">944abf2b-d1be-4bf2-990d-438cb0e377e9:3730</guid><dc:creator>Dynamix</dc:creator><slash:comments>0</slash:comments><comments>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/thread/3730.aspx</comments><wfw:commentRss>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/commentrss.aspx?SectionID=27&amp;PostID=3730</wfw:commentRss><description>&lt;p&gt;This is the best news I&amp;#39;ve heard in the last half decade.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;div style="clear:both;"&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description></item><item><title>Google Offers $20 Million X Prize to Put Robot on Moon</title><link>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/thread/3655.aspx</link><pubDate>Sat, 17 Nov 2007 16:09:57 GMT</pubDate><guid isPermaLink="false">944abf2b-d1be-4bf2-990d-438cb0e377e9:3655</guid><dc:creator>Inquisitor</dc:creator><slash:comments>0</slash:comments><comments>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/thread/3655.aspx</comments><wfw:commentRss>https://archive.freecapitalists.org:443/forums/commentrss.aspx?SectionID=27&amp;PostID=3655</wfw:commentRss><description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;div&gt;Editor&amp;#39;s Note: Google will award $20 million to the first private team
&lt;br /&gt; to put a robot on the moon, the company and the X Prize Foundation
&lt;br /&gt; announced at Wired NextFest in Los Angeles Thursday. Members of the
&lt;br /&gt; public will also get the chance to send digital mementos to the moon.
&lt;br /&gt; In this advance from the October issue of Wired magazine, contributing
&lt;br /&gt; editor Spencer Reiss explains what&amp;#39;s behind the Google Lunar X Prize,
&lt;br /&gt; and what it will take to win it.
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Maybe it was the edible wafer-paper-and-soy-ink menus or the
&lt;br /&gt; &amp;quot;sustainable&amp;quot; blue-cheese mousse whipped up by Google&amp;#39;s chefs. Maybe
&lt;br /&gt; it was the full-size replica of the indie commercial spacecraft
&lt;br /&gt; SpaceShipOne suspended overhead. Or Robin Williams&amp;#39; jokes. Whatever
&lt;br /&gt; the reason, the hundreds of Silicon Valley grandees who packed the
&lt;br /&gt; Googleplex one Saturday evening last March were in an expansive mood.
&lt;br /&gt; They had dropped $1,250 or more a head to benefit the X Prize
&lt;br /&gt; Foundation, the nonprofit dedicated to spurring innovation through
&lt;br /&gt; public competitions that promise big payouts to the winners. Supersize
&lt;br /&gt; possibilities hung in the air.
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;A morning brainstorm featuring Google&amp;#39;s Larry Page and Virgin&amp;#39;s
&lt;br /&gt; Richard Branson had already turned up scores of possible new X Prize
&lt;br /&gt; targets, from early cancer detection to ultracheap solar energy.
&lt;br /&gt; During a break for lunch, Page dropped one more on X Prize chief Peter
&lt;br /&gt; Diamandis: He and Google cofounder Sergey Brin had been &amp;quot;kicking
&lt;br /&gt; around&amp;quot; the idea of sending low-cost robotic landers to the moon.
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Diamandis, who has been launching extraterrestrial enterprises since
&lt;br /&gt; he was an MIT undergrad in the 1980s, grabbed his laptop and
&lt;br /&gt; disappeared, returning half an hour later with a freshly minted
&lt;br /&gt; PowerPoint deck. Page looked it over, then said, &amp;quot;Talk to Sergey.&amp;quot;
&lt;br /&gt; That evening, as the guests sipped cocktails in the shadow of the
&lt;br /&gt; little white spaceplane, Diamandis cornered the Google technology
&lt;br /&gt; chief and pitched. Brin loved it. &amp;quot;Some endeavors are too speculative,
&lt;br /&gt; even for venture capital,&amp;quot; he says. &amp;quot;If they&amp;#39;re really worth doing,
&lt;br /&gt; you try to find some other way.&amp;quot;
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Thus was born the Google Lunar X Prize, the latest and, well, farthest-
&lt;br /&gt; out of the foundation&amp;#39;s efforts to bolt competitive afterburners onto
&lt;br /&gt; some of mankind&amp;#39;s signature quests. Three years ago, SpaceShipOne won
&lt;br /&gt; the first X Prize -- officially the Ansari X Prize, named for the
&lt;br /&gt; family of software entrepreneurs that underwrote it. Microsoft
&lt;br /&gt; cofounder Paul Allen and serial aeronaut Burt Rutan collected $10
&lt;br /&gt; million for building the world&amp;#39;s first privately funded reusable
&lt;br /&gt; manned spacecraft. Since then, Diamandis has announced competitions
&lt;br /&gt; for ultra-rapid gene sequencing and hyper fuel efficient vehicles.
&lt;br /&gt; This latest challenge: Put a robotic lander on the moon, take a spin
&lt;br /&gt; across the lunar landscape, and beam back visuals -- with minimal or no
&lt;br /&gt; government assistance. Pull that off before anyone else and the
&lt;br /&gt; galaxy&amp;#39;s richest, most audacious Internet company will hand over $20
&lt;br /&gt; million. You can win up to $5 million more for extras like traversing
&lt;br /&gt; greater distances, visiting historic landing sites, and surviving the
&lt;br /&gt; lunar night. There&amp;#39;s a $5 million consolation prize if you come in
&lt;br /&gt; second or land safely but fail to complete the rest of the mission.
&lt;br /&gt; (No prize for guessing the name of the competition&amp;#39;s official Web
&lt;br /&gt; video service.)
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The challenge goes beyond merely reaching the lunar surface. Pound for
&lt;br /&gt; pound, putting anything on the moon -- let alone sending back panoramic
&lt;br /&gt; photos and YouTube clips -- makes even manned suborbital flight look
&lt;br /&gt; like a walk on the Mojave runway. Winning will require the biz-dev
&lt;br /&gt; skills to muster funding and the technical savvy to manage squirrelly
&lt;br /&gt; orbital mechanics, remote-control robotics, and bring-your-own
&lt;br /&gt; bandwidth. Sure, the Russians made the first soft lunar landing more
&lt;br /&gt; than 40 years ago, using Cold War era hardware. And yes, today you can
&lt;br /&gt; fire up an iPhone and check the view from NASA&amp;#39;s rovers on the Red
&lt;br /&gt; Planet, another 90 million or so miles farther out in the cosmos. What
&lt;br /&gt; you can&amp;#39;t do -- at least for now -- is go off-planet without the kind of
&lt;br /&gt; boondoggle budget that only governments can cough up. &amp;quot;How cool would
&lt;br /&gt; it be,&amp;quot; Diamandis says, &amp;quot;to do what NASA does at a tenth the cost? Or
&lt;br /&gt; a hundredth? The technologies are there. What we need is a competitive
&lt;br /&gt; model that can make it happen.&amp;quot;
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;In fact, X Prize-style competitions tend to be less about the
&lt;br /&gt; technological bleeding edge than busting down cost barriers. Charles
&lt;br /&gt; Lindbergh&amp;#39;s famous Spirit of St. Louis, the gold standard for prize-
&lt;br /&gt; driven innovation, was adapted from a stock production plane, after
&lt;br /&gt; all. The Ansari X Prize required a tremendous feat of aeronautics, but
&lt;br /&gt; its real accomplishment was making it cheaper to get into space -- and
&lt;br /&gt; thus opening a flight path to space tourism. The Google Lunar X Prize
&lt;br /&gt; aims to do the same for Earth&amp;#39;s nearest neighbor, transforming what
&lt;br /&gt; has been a combination celestial junkyard and stone-dead nature
&lt;br /&gt; preserve into a viable human frontier. &amp;quot;Today, Earth&amp;#39;s economic sphere
&lt;br /&gt; extends out to geosynchronous orbit -- 22,000 miles,&amp;quot; Diamandis says.
&lt;br /&gt; &amp;quot;We want to increase that by an order of magnitude.&amp;quot;
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Two dozen registered teams took a crack at the original X Prize,
&lt;br /&gt; though few of them made it off the ground. Will the higher stakes of
&lt;br /&gt; the lunar challenge pull a bigger, wealthier crowd? One likely
&lt;br /&gt; participant, Paul Allen, won&amp;#39;t comment. Neither will Idealab chair
&lt;br /&gt; Bill Gross, whose bubble-era startup, Blastoff, had a strikingly
&lt;br /&gt; similar lunar mission -- and a CEO named Peter Diamandis. Google, in
&lt;br /&gt; particular, hopes to see a global pool of challengers; China, India,
&lt;br /&gt; Japan, Russia, and plenty of European countries boast the requisite
&lt;br /&gt; technical skills, pride, and billionaires. (An international judging
&lt;br /&gt; committee will watch for under-the-table government aid.) Launch costs
&lt;br /&gt; alone could burn up tens of millions of dollars, so the foundation is
&lt;br /&gt; hoping to lure high-profile corporate sponsors.
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Of course, it took almost a decade to award the Ansari X Prize; the
&lt;br /&gt; winner emerged only after a midcourse adjustment dropped the altitude
&lt;br /&gt; requirement from 100 miles to 100 kilometers. (&amp;quot;Thank god we did,&amp;quot;
&lt;br /&gt; Diamandis says. &amp;quot;Or we&amp;#39;d still be waiting.&amp;quot;) Aiming to bring the lunar
&lt;br /&gt; showdown to a conclusion by 2012, Diamandis and company spent last
&lt;br /&gt; summer debating how high to set the bar. &amp;quot;It&amp;#39;s audacity versus
&lt;br /&gt; achievability,&amp;quot; says Will Pomerantz, the foundation&amp;#39;s space prize
&lt;br /&gt; director. &amp;quot;Too hard, and you won&amp;#39;t have a winner. Too easy, and you
&lt;br /&gt; don&amp;#39;t drive breakthroughs.&amp;quot; Then there&amp;#39;s the question of
&lt;br /&gt; affordability: The $20 million grand prize probably won&amp;#39;t cover the
&lt;br /&gt; cost of getting something up there, and losers will likely spend at
&lt;br /&gt; least that amount with no return on investment.
&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Which raises the question: What&amp;#39;s in it for Google? Lunar data
&lt;br /&gt; centers? Google Maps Street View for Tranquility Base? For the record,
&lt;br /&gt; Mountain View&amp;#39;s corporate feet are planted squarely on terra firma.
&lt;br /&gt; &amp;quot;Companies today spend more on stadiums and sailboat races than we
&lt;br /&gt; will spend on this,&amp;quot; says Brin, who was barely out of diapers back in
&lt;br /&gt; Moscow when the last -- Soviet, as it happens -- moon lander, itself a
&lt;br /&gt; robot craft, sent a scoop of soil back to Earth three decades ago.
&lt;br /&gt; &amp;quot;Expanding science and technology is a far better way to reflect
&lt;br /&gt; Google&amp;#39;s values,&amp;quot; he says. Plus there&amp;#39;s the possibility of putting a
&lt;br /&gt; Google logo on the moon.
&lt;/div&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;br /&gt; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.wired.com/science/space/magazine/15-10/ff_moon" target="_blank" rel="nofollow"&gt;http://www.wired.com/science/space/magazine/15-10/ff_moon&lt;/a&gt;
  &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;div style="clear:both;"&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description></item></channel></rss>