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In space, nobody can hear you call a situation update meeting
It's Steve manning the editorial desk this month, your Uncle Geoff
taking a little time off to catch up with writing his own fiction,
not to mention going through the growing pile of manuscripts submitted
to the Crowsnest's book publishing imprint.
While pondering my TV watching habits of the last few weeks, I
have come to realise that apart from repeats from the past - classics
like Trek, BattleStar Galactica and the X-Files, there's not a lot
of SF/F passing through the box.
And even less original material.
I have made up for this, though, by watching the fascinating documentaries
that British television seems to turn out with such regularity.
You might have seen them yourself if you too inhabit Cool Britannia.
One was about the problems mankind will face sending the first
human mission to Mars … which NASA plans to do around 2030. The
second was about the tragic loss of the Challenger Space Shuttle
and her crew, late in the last century (doesn't it sound odd writing
that … the last century).
What both underlined for me was the complete frailty of human life
in space, and how far we still are away from the gleaming, spacious,
antiseptic corridors of a Voyager, Enterprise or Defiant.
Seeing footage of the crews of the Mir space station and NASA Shuttle
missions, life on the three year trip to Mars started looked more
like spending three years swimming around the inside of a camper
van with heavily exposed plumbing.
Stir crazy doesn't even cover what humans would experience getting
to Mars. Then there's the problem of the fact that by the time our
brave explorers reach Mars, even with a state-of-the-art exercise
regime and rotational gravity system, their bones would have atrophied
to the degree they'd be hard pushed to walk again … ever.
Even more scary was astronauts describing how they'd go to sleep
in orbit, then suddenly wake up seeing fireworks streaking across
their closed eyelids … turns out particle storms can get really
vicious & visible without six miles of atmosphere to protect you.
Getting sick isn't something you want to do either. Three years
away from hospital, the standard practice in space is to amputate
- no matter what the severity of the problem (no bugs to cause gangrene,
you see).
And the other documentary?
The one on the Challenger disaster made me realise that the massive
organisation called NASA is, really, little different from the screwed
up corporations many of us work for.
Politics, idiots in command, mountains of meaningless paperwork
and procedures, and the reflex response to any problem being the
calling of a meeting, or setting up of a committee.
Of course, when the muppets who run things in your firm &^%$ up,
a wave of lay-offs and a drop in share price is normally the result.
For NASA, unfortunately, it was a group of PR-conscious middle management
- in a Dilbert contractor company, apparently - ignoring the engineers'
reports that they were about twenty degrees underneath the shuttle's
safe launch temperature.
They did this because the launch had been put off too many times
already, and was carrying a media-friendly teacher, in the first
launch of a US civilian into space.
The managers' response was to send a couple of janitors with brooms
to knock ice off the shuttle rockets before launch. It would have
been hysterically funny, if the consequences of their 'launch or
bust' attitude hadn't been the loss of such a brave group of astronauts.
It seems that for a while longer, the likes of holodecks and onboard
cafes like Ten Forward will remain more the stuff of fantasy than
science fiction.
If there's one silver lining from all this, it sure does make you
appreciate the beauty of the cold winter days down here on Earth
all the more.
Maybe even long enough to forget the fact that we're all clinging
onto a tiny mote of rock, sling-shotting through a universe that's
more akin to a cosmic shooting gallery than a peaceful & silent
void.
But that's a BBC documentary called Universe, and another tale.
Your fellow traveller through space and time Steve H. .
Steve H.
Hologram Tales e-mail: gfwillmetts@REMOVE.FOR.SPAMhotmail.com
terrestrial address:
74 Gloucester Road,
BRIDGWATER, Somerset TA6 6EA, UK.
SAEs (International Rates: include at least 2 IRCs or enough to
cover return of manuscripts if sending in material) will always
get replies.
Geoff Willmetts
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