Democratization of Space: Difference between revisions
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[http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2012/05/14/how-nasa-led-tech-to-the-cloud/ ''How NASA led tech to the Cloud / WSJ - May 2012''] | [http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2012/05/14/how-nasa-led-tech-to-the-cloud/ ''How NASA led tech to the Cloud / WSJ - May 2012''] | ||
''Robbie Schingler, a co-founder of Planet Labs, met Worden in Houston, TX. | |||
''“For five hours we were yelling at each other across the table,” recalls Robbie Schingler, now 33, who was then between master’s degrees at the International Space University and the Georgetown University McDonough School of Business. “The next day he said, ‘Let’s write a paper together on the pros and cons of weaponizing space. You write the cons, I’ll write the pros.’”'' | |||
''The paper never materialized, but an unusual friendship and mentoring relationship did. When Worden became director of the NASA Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley four years later, he recruited the group of Houston 20-somethings, along with a handful of their friends. Included were Schingler and Chris Kemp, then 28, who would become Ames’s director of business development and later its chief technology officer.'' | |||
[http://jerrypost.com/MBAMIS/Case2.html NASA review] | [http://jerrypost.com/MBAMIS/Case2.html NASA review] |
Revision as of 21:10, 8 March 2015
- Democratizing "New Space"
Planet Labs democratizing space / Forbes - April 2014
How NASA led tech to the Cloud / WSJ - May 2012
Robbie Schingler, a co-founder of Planet Labs, met Worden in Houston, TX.
“For five hours we were yelling at each other across the table,” recalls Robbie Schingler, now 33, who was then between master’s degrees at the International Space University and the Georgetown University McDonough School of Business. “The next day he said, ‘Let’s write a paper together on the pros and cons of weaponizing space. You write the cons, I’ll write the pros.’”
The paper never materialized, but an unusual friendship and mentoring relationship did. When Worden became director of the NASA Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley four years later, he recruited the group of Houston 20-somethings, along with a handful of their friends. Included were Schingler and Chris Kemp, then 28, who would become Ames’s director of business development and later its chief technology officer.
Worden told SpaceNews that the nine years he spent at Ames were the most enjoyable of his 40 years of public service.
“In the last nine years we have launched dozens of small, low-cost satellites – and helped ignite a major new industry in this area. Ames people have revitalized space biology and begun to apply the new field of synthetic biology,” Worden said via email Feb. 26. “Ames has provided entry technology for the emerging commercial space launch sector. We have helped launch small satellites working with a number of nations. And we’ve hosted and inspired thousands of students.”
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• OpenStack strategy
OpenStack "Cloud in a Box"
• “New” model of Citizen Science
Micro-satellites, Nanosats
OTS components