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CBS goes dark on DirecTV Now, other AT&T services in price dispute

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AT&T has maintained that it not only offered CBS an “unprecedented rate increase,” but that the broadcaster wouldn’t let it sell All Access as a separate option and thus give customers the choice of subscribing to basic TV bundles without CBS included. CBS was allegedly trying to turn a free-to-air station into a premium channel while “leaving cable and satellite customers holding the bag.”

To no one’s surprise, CBS has provided a very different version of events. It characterized the blackout as the result of a “long and clear track record” of AT&T using “aggressive tactics” to underpay networks, pointing to recent disputes like those with Nexstar (still ongoing) and Viacom (avoided with a last-minute settlement in March). AT&T’s competitors have agreed to these terms, it added.

CBS is warning that the blackout could last a long time, although we’ve seen how this sort of dispute typically plays out — the two sides vow never to compromise until they suddenly do. As it stands, both have an incentive to reach a deal quickly. The football season gets underway in September, and CBS’ fall season is right around the corner. If there’s no new contract by then, customers may jump ship for other TV providers and channels — and there are plenty of both thanks to internet video.

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Neil Armstrong’s Buzz Aldrin photo is unparalleled in art

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When the first manned missions started, NASA had more to worry about than photography. In fact, the first US astronaut to orbit the Earth, John Glenn, picked up a $40 Minolta Ansco Autoset 35mm camera himself from a Florida camera shop. The third man in space, Walter Schirra, did the same thing, but went upscale by purchasing a $500 Hasselblad 500C medium format camera, recommended to him by Life and National Geographic photographers.

NASA grasped the promotional benefits of space photos, and liked what they saw with Schirra’s Hasselblad. Engineers modified the camera to reduce weight and make it easier to handle, while equipping it with a custom side-finder that could be easily used with a helmet and visor.

For the Apollo missions, the 500C was replaced with a more advanced, motorized Hasselblad 500 EL (below). NASA also added a “Réseau plate” — responsible for the faint crosses in the photo above — that would allow for distortion correction in post-processing. That model was subsequently used by Apollo 8 astronaut Bill Anders to take Earthrise, a photo that’s at least as famous as Armstrong’s shot. (To save weight, all 12 Hasselblad 500 ELs were left on the Moon’s surface.)

Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Armstrong, 1969.

Neil Armstrong with a customized Hasselblad 500 EL

Armstrong was well-equipped and in the right place. If that was all there was to it, though, everyone with enough cash for a fancy camera would be taking great photos (spoiler: they’re not). To that end, NASA embarked on surprisingly comprehensive photography training program for astronauts.

According to NASA,”over the several years prior to the Moon missions, scientific and photographic training was provided. The crews visited geologic sites in Nevada, Arizona, and Hawaii… completely outfitted with sample bags, checklists, simulated backpacks… and Hasselblad EL cameras similar to those they would use on the Moon. The astronaut would point his body in order to aim the cameras. Films taken during the practice exercises were processed and returned to the crewmen who would study the results.”

Armstrong clearly mastered the lessons. The photo conveys what Aldrin called the “magnificent desolation” of the surface, while capturing the wonder and gravitas of the occasion. It paints both astronauts as anonymous explorers, coming in peace to an unconquerable black and white world. In the place of Aldrin’s face, there’s a reflection of the spaceship and nearly everything the astronauts brought, as well as Armstrong himself — one of the few images in which he appears.

Apollo 11 anniversary at Engadget

NASA apollo 11 lander illustration


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The race back to the Moon

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Bound for the Moon: Apollo 11 preparation in photos
Alan Taylor,
The Atlantic

Sure, this more Recommended Looking, but this photo essay is a fascinating look at the process of prepping Apollo 11 for its historic mission.

‘We did the impossible’: What it was like inside Apollo 11’s Mission Control
Ashley Strickland,
CNN

A look inside Mission Control during the Apollo 11 moon landing? Yeah, you’ll want to read this one.

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The sneakers inspired by Apollo 11 and the Moon landing

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Nike Air Max Lunar90 SP “Moon Landing”

Air Max 90 Lunar

Five years ago, on July 14th, 2014, Nike introduced what are arguably the best Moon landing-inspired sneakers to date: the Air Max Lunar 90 SP “USA.” The sportswear giant took one of its most iconic models, the Tinker Hatfield-designed Air Max 90, and donned it with midsole graphics that mirrored the Moon’s surface. To complement that, Nike put two American flag badges on the back of the shoes, which were designed to represent those found on Neil Armstrong’s space suit.

The sneakers became so popular that they now resell for as much as $1,000, compared to their $145 retail price.

Nike PG3 “NASA,” “Apollo Missions” and “NASA 50th”

Nike PG3 NASA

Aside from his excellent basketball skills, NBA superstar Paul George is known for his PlayStation-themed Nike sneakers. But video games aren’t the only element he’s used to deck out his signature basketball shoes. He also loves space exploration. And since the introduction of his PG3 this past January, Nike has made him three different sneakers influenced by NASA, Apollo 11 and the lunar landing. The PG3 “NASA” and “Apollo Missions” feature the agency’s traditional orange-and-blue colors and American flags, while the “NASA 50th” has an all-silver, reflective upper with NASA and Apollo 11 badges throughout.

While they each look different in terms of color, they do have a couple of things in common. One is a quote from Paul George that reads, “Don’t tell me the sky’s the limit when there are footprints on the Moon,” and the other is that the outsoles all have details meant to resemble lunar footprints.

Adidas NMD HU Trail “CLOUDS MOON”

Adidas NMD Cloud Moons

Unlike the NASA sneakers Nike made for Paul George, these Adidas NMD Hu Trail “CLOUDS MOON” aren’t an official collaboration with the space agency. Still, nothing says lunar inspiration more than having the word “MOON” plastered across an entire shoe. Beyond that, the pair features a black-and-grey color scheme that’s reminiscent of the Moon. And in case you had any doubt where the design cues for these NMD Hu Trails came from, just know that their designer, Pharrell Williams, is part of NASA’s festivities for the 50th anniversary of its historic Moon landing today.

New Balance x Ministry of Supply “MOS NB 574”

New Balance x Ministry of Supply GIF

The “MOS NB 574” sneakers are right up there with Nike’s Lunar90 SPs for the title of Best Moon Landing Sneakers. For these, New Balance partnered with clothing store Ministry of Supply on a pair that takes plenty of visual cues from the Apollo 11 lunar mission. The companies said the idea was to “take advantage of the radically engineered technologies that power our clothing to take a small step forward in sneaker design.” That’s why you’ll see a grey silhouette made out of “Lunar suede” that’s intended to represent the way Neil Armstrong described the surface of the Moon: “Fine and powdery… like powdered charcoal.”

Better yet, the MOS NB 574 shoes (which launched last year) came in a sealed packaging that automatically makes you think of those freeze-dried astronaut meals.

Vans x NASA SK8-Hi “Space Voyager Black”

Vans x NASA SK8-Hi

You can’t talk about sneakers without mentioning Vans. And to honor Apollo 11, the brand created a special edition of its high-top SK8-Hi sneakers, featuring an all-black leather upper with patches paying homage to NASA, the Apollo 11 mission and astronauts who walked on the Moon during the expedition. Vans took it a step further by making an entire collection out of its “Space Voyager” theme, which had sneakers, apparel and accessories with appreciation to the Voyager 1 and 2 outer planetary space missions.

Mercer “W3RD NASA Apollo 11”

Mercer NASA

Mercer Amsterdam may not have the same brand recognition as Adidas, Nike, New Balance or Vans, but the brand came up with one of the sleekest Moon landing-themed sneakers. The “W3RD NASA Apollo 11s” were designed with Armstrong and Aldrin’s space suits in mind, as shown by the white, blue and red accents that made the shoes feel vibrant. Those details were complemented by a small NASA logo on the upper, along with a silver mesh fabric that ran all across the sneakers. But the best part may just be the subtle coordinates written near the toe box, 28.5729° N, 80.6490° W, which point to Kennedy Space Center — the launch site for Apollo 11. So, so lovely.

Adidas Kobe Two “space Moon boots”

Adidas Kobe Two

The Adidas Kobe Two, which were designed for former NBA superstar Kobe Bryant, had nothing to do with NASA or Apollo 11. Well, aside from the fact they became known as the “space Moon boots” among sneakerheads, due to their chunky, futuristic and silver-colored nature. Out of all the models we’ve talked about so far, these are definitely the ugliest ones of the bunch. And yet, somehow the simple fact that they became the Kobe “space Moon boots” makes them interesting. That shows you the cultural pull of NASA, Apollo 11 and, of course, the Moon. Maybe Adidas should bring them back and see what happens.

General Electric “The Missions”

GE Missions

In 2014, General Electric decided to honor Apollo 11 with “The Missions,” a pair of limited-edition, high-top sneakers that could easily pass off as Moon boots. GE played a key role in NASA’s 1969 lunar expedition, and the company wanted to commemorate its contributions with gray-colored shoes that had a translucent, thermoplastic sole. According to GE, The Missions featured materials made from the same lightweight carbon fiber that was used in “bad ass” jet engines, as well as a hydrophobic coating akin to the one that keeps wind turbine blades from freezing in cold temperatures.

To celebrate the 45th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landing, GE created only 100 pairs, which were sold for about $200 each. If what you wanted were high-tech, Moon-inspired sneakers, The Missions are it.

Nike “Moon Shoes”

Nike Moon Shoes

And the pièce de résistance goes to Nike’s “Moon Shoes,” which were created in 1969 by the company’s legendary co-founder Bill Bowerman. Nike says that the sneakers got their name thanks to the distinctive marks they left in dirt, which is said to resemble the footprints made famous by Armstrong and Aldrin when they took their first steps on the Moon. That imprint was a result of a now-iconic waffle iron-inspired outsole pattern, which was invented by Bowerman the same year as the Apollo 11 mission. Not only was this the first shoe to sport the technology, but it was Nike’s first-ever shoe as a brand.

There are only about 12 of these in existence, and their cultural significance is so deep that a pair is expected to collect more than $100,000 in a Sotheby’s auction. The starting bid is only $80,000, if you’re looking to own a piece of Nike (and Moon) history.

Images: Nike (Air Max 90 Lunar, PG 3 NASA, Moon Shoes); Stadium Goods (Adidas NMD HU Trail “CLOUDS MOON”); Ministry of Supply (New Balance x Ministry of Supply “MOS NB 574”); Mercer Amsterdam (Mercer NASA Apollo 11); Kith (Vans x NASA SK8-Hi “Space Voyager Black”); General Electric (The Missions); Tumblr/Y2K Aesthetic Institute (Adidas Kobe Two)

Apollo 11 anniversary at Engadget

NASA apollo 11 lander illustration


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Watch astronauts reach space on Apollo 11’s 50th anniversary

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The mission is a relatively routine one, but symbolizes how much spaceflight and the US space program have changed in half a century, for better or for worse. In 1969, the US and Russia were the only two countries to have sent people into space — while they’re still dominant, it’s now common for people from other nations to make the journey. The first space station, Russia’s Salyut 1, hadn’t reached orbit 50 years ago, but the present-day ISS has been in service for nearly 21 years. And the use of a Russian Soyuz rocket is emblematic of both greater international cooperation (however tentative it may be) and the gap in US spaceflight capabilities until the Space Launch System is hopefully ready in 2020.

An actual trip to the Moon will have to wait until 2024, when NASA hopes to once again put people on the lunar surface through its Artemis program. The timing isn’t ideal, then. All the same, it’s good to know that humanity isn’t staying on terra firma during such an important historic milestone.

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How HoloLens is helping advance the science of spaceflight

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Microsoft and NASA’s partnership began on June 28th, 2015 as part of Project Sidekick when a SpaceX supply rocket docked with the ISS and delivered the headsets to the waiting astronauts. “HoloLens and other virtual and mixed reality devices are cutting edge technologies that could help drive future exploration and provide new capabilities to the men and women conducting critical science on the International Space Station,” Sam Scimemi, director of the ISS program at NASA said in a 2015 press release. “This new technology could also empower future explorers requiring greater autonomy on the journey to Mars.”

Aboard the ISS, crews utilized the HoLolens’ “Remote Expert Mode” in many of their tasks. Remote Expert connects the wearer with an Earth-based technician from the flight control team via Skype, allowing them to see what the astronaut is seeing and advise accordingly. The headsets could also be deployed in Procedure Mode, which played locally-stored animated holographic illustrations for times when an expert wasn’t available.

Project Sidekick was short lived, only running until the following March. However, a few months later in the summer of 2016, NASA’s Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida launched “Destination: Mars,” a mixed reality guided tour of the Red Planet narrated by none other than Buzz Aldrin. Visitors were taken on a walking tour of several Martian sites using images captured by the Curiosity Mars Rover.

“This experience lets the public explore Mars in an entirely new way. To walk through the exact landscape that Curiosity is roving across puts its achievements and discoveries into beautiful context,” said Doug Ellison, visualization producer at JPL, said in a press release at the time. The OnSight application, which actually stitched those captured images together, went on to win NASA’s 2018 Software of the Year award.

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Augmented reality has also found its way into spacecraft design and production with incredible results. Take the Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle, for example. It’s currently being developed by NASA and the ESA and built by Lockheed Martin. The 4-person crew capsule is designed to ride atop the Space Launch System during the Artemis lunar exploration missions as well as to Mars.

It’s also a fantastically complex piece of engineering. The Orion’s assembly manual alone is a 1,500 page behemoth, requiring technicians to constantly flip back and forth between the instructions and the task at hand. But that’s where the HoloLens comes in.

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“Manufacturing was a good place to start because it’s easier to quantify what we’re seeing in terms of a comparison between traditional methods and what AR helping would take,” Shelley Peterson, the principal engineer for Augmented & Mixed Reality at Lockheed Martin Space, told Engadget.

Using the same Procedure Mode as aboard the ISS, Lockheed’s teams were able to drastically reduce the amount of time needed to assemble the spacecraft’s various systems. The team was able to cut down the time spent joining components and torquing bolts to precise specifications by 30 to 50 percent. Rather than having to thumb through the instructions to know how many pounds of pressure a specific bolt requires, that information is displayed directly atop the bolt by the HoloLens, Peterson explained.

“More recently, we’ve been working with position alignment of objects,” she continued. It really just changes things when you can see within your environment where you’re needing to place an object, instead of having to measure or use other methods. It’s a fantastic way to represent the data.”

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What used to take a technician a full 8-hour shift to complete can now be done in 15 minutes, Peterson said. What would take a pair of technicians three days to do can now be done by a single technician in two and a half hours. “At Kennedy Space Center, we had an activity that normally takes eight shifts,” Peterson said. “They completed it in six hours.”

The HoloLens doesn’t just reduce the amount of time (and money) spent putting the Orion together, it also helps to mitigate uncertainty in the manufacturing process and prevent costly mistakes. “If [the technicians are] trying to interpret a 2D drawing or 3D model on a 2D screen, and make that mental translation to what it means to the object in the room, there’s still some questions,” Peterson explained, “and they’d like to be absolutely certain when they’re working on the spacecraft.”

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Peterson also points to the headsets’ ease of use. A technician typically needs less than a half hour to get orient themselves with the system before jumping into their tasks. “They’re able to put it on and just start working,’ she continued. The current iteration of the HoloLens is still a bit heavy to be worn all day, though technicians can wear them for up to three hours before tiring, or simply pop the headset on and off as needed throughout the day.

The only major sticking point that Peterson notes is the difficulty in entering data. “We need a better way to type or to take the place of typing — voice doesn’t quite do it just yet,” Peterson said. “There’s times where we need to enter data, or capture data as we’re working and they have to move across to a Bluetooth keyboard.” That takes the technician out of their workflow, which is what the HoloLens was designed to minimize in the first place.

Lockheed isn’t the only organization leveraging AR technology in its manufacturing process. Rival aerospace company BAE has also paired with Microsoft, using HoloLens to eliminate the need for paper assembly manuals in its electric bus division, while a team of researchers from Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) have used the tech to design their Dragonfly rotorcraft lander.

The Dragonfly will be heading deep into our solar system when it launches towards Saturn’s moon, Titan, in 2025. It’ll take a whopping nine years to get to the moon’s surface but once there, the Dragonfly’s exploration will help unlock the mysteries of our home system and maybe even — fingers crossed — give us our first glimpse at extraterrestrial life.

Apollo 11 anniversary at Engadget

NASA apollo 11 lander illustration


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Did Frankenstein go to the Moon?

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Frankenstein & Sons was founded in 1854 and operated out of the Victoria Rubber Works in Newton Heath, Manchester.

During the Second World War, it started producing highly sophisticated survival gear for aircrew. For a while, Britain protected some of its convoys with Hawker Hurricane fighters that launched from merchant vessels retrofitted with rocket-propelled catapults. Once the pilots had intercepted the enemy — typically long-range reconnaissance planes — they had to eject and wait in the sea for an allied forces pickup. Frankenstein & Sons is thought to have developed a leather-based ‘immersion suit’ and, later, a fabric-based alternative that stopped pilots from catching hypothermia while they waited for a pickup in the icy water.

Over time, planes were developed that could fly higher and higher above the ground. The Royal Air Force (RAF) Physiological Laboratory explored full pressure suits — a complete outfit that offers an artificial environment for the wearer — in the 1940s. The outfits were preferable to full cockpit pressurisation because they had a smaller weight impact and could protect the pilot if the cockpit was pierced by enemy fire and — worst case scenario — required evacuation. The work was developed further with three companies in the 1950s: Siebe Gorman, BWT (Baxter, Woodhouse and Taylor) and Frankenstein & Sons.

All of the prototype suits were tested by the RAF’s Institute of Aviation Medicine (IAM) and the Royal Aircraft Establishment’s (RAE) Mechanical Engineering department in Farnborough.

As the Science and Industry Museum in Manchester explains, these suits were designed to inflate and stabilize the pressure felt by the pilot in the event of decompression inside the cockpit. Many of them looked like rudimentary spacesuits because they were designed for similar levels of elevation and atmospheric problems.

Frankenstein & Sons

Frankenstein & Sons’ measuring device

Full pressure suits are large and bulky. As a consequence, they have a major impact on the pilot’s reach and flexibility. To tackle this problem, Frankenstein & Sons developed a measuring device with a circular track that extended above the wearer’s head. It allowed the company to take precise measurements and make granular adjustments that maximized the wearer’s reach inside high-altitude aircraft like the Avro Vulcan.

“[Otherwise] the flight engineer sits on the Vulcan, and then you find out that when he puts on a suit he can’t reach the bloody knobs,” Cliff Butterworth, a former Frankenstein & Sons employee told the Science and Industry Museum in 2007. “If he has to turn to keep the aircraft flying… it gets a bit serious.”

NASA, meanwhile, was said to be having problems. The suits it had developed were so restrictive that astronauts couldn’t raise their arms above shoulder level. “Whereas [with] the suit that was developed at Newton Heath,” Fred Evans, another former Frankenstein & Sons employee explained, “the wearer of the suit could scratch the back of his neck.”

Frankenstein & Sons sold one of its measuring devices to NASA for “a very nice profit,” according to Butterworth. Staff interviewed in 2007 say that Ian Wright, an engineer at the company, was also invited to spend a couple of months helping NASA solve some of its mobility problems.

Frankenstein & Sons sold one of its measuring devices to NASA for “a very nice profit.”

Wright clearly loved space. Documents owned by the Science and Industry Museum list him as an attendee for a ‘Commonwealth Spaceflight Symposium’ at the British Interplanetary Society in August 1959. He also held a talk at the Clothing Institute, which involved modelling various Frankenstein equipment, in 1960. “To the conventional tailors present at the meeting, these suits and numerous other garments were like something out of this world,” a report explained. Newspaper articles also show that he appeared on the TV game show What’s my Line wearing a full pressure suit.

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the UK continued to test a number of full pressure suits including the Type 51 developed by Frankenstein & Sons. None of the prototypes were given the go-ahead for frontline use, however.

Frankenstein & Sons

An experimental full pressure suit

Then, in 1959, British physician and RAF squadron leader John Billingham started developing a suit concept that used liquid, rather than air, to regulate temperature.

While he stewed on the idea, NASA continued to pursue spaceflight. In July 1961, Gus Grissom became the second American to travel in space, after fellow Mercury Seven astronaut Alan Shepard. His capsule, nicknamed the Liberty Bell 7, landed in the Atlantic Ocean and opened its hatch cover by mistake. “He panicked and jumped out,” Butterworth said in 2007. “And the water went into his neck. Fortunately for him, they had these (Navy) Seal people ’round.”

According to Butterworth, NASA asked the UK’s Ministry of Defence for help, who explained that it was using sealed ‘neck suits.’ “So they came to us and bought 12 neck suits,” Butterworth told the Science and Industry Museum.

According to Frankenstein employees, at least three suits were sent to NASA over the years.

By 1962, Frankenstein had developed a survival-focused pressure jerkin that, when combined with a partial-pressure helmet and anti-g suit, could keep aircrew alive for up to one minute at 70,000 feet, followed by a rapid descent to 40,000 feet. At the same time, the first liquid-cooled prototype was being developed at Farnborough. It’s not clear if this version was developed by Frankenstein & Sons. Records show that NASA did buy a full pressure suit from the company for $7,150 (or roughly $60,500, adjusted for inflation) in March 1962, however. According to Frankenstein employees, at least three suits were sent to NASA over the years.

Regardless, Billingham was hired the following year to lead NASA’s environmental physiology branch at the Johnson Space Center. In the mid-1960s, he helped finesse the liquid-cooling system that eventually wound up in the Apollo 11 spacesuit.

Frankenstein, meanwhile, was hired to produce liquid-cooled suits for the RAF in 1965. These were meant for low-level flights in hot climates, however, rather than spaceflight. Early trials conducted by pilots in Libya were unsuccessful, however, and the ensuing report effectively delayed the project until 1972.

Moon Landing-Movies

2001: A Space Odyssey

No matter. In the mid-to-late 1960s, Frankenstein had other projects in the pipeline, including a possible movie spacesuit. Frederick I. Ordway, a scientific advisor for 2001: A Space Odyssey, wrote in a retrospective: “We had our space helmets built, from our designs, at the MV Aviation Co., Ltd of Maidenhead; our spacesuits at the Air Sea Rescue Division, Victoria Rubber Works of the Frankenstein Group, Ltd. of Manchester; and our space pod interiors — instrumentation, controls, displays, etc. — at Hawker Siddley Dynamics at Stevenage not far from our Borehamwood location.”

The company’s involvement has never been confirmed or mentioned beyond this passage, however.

Stanley Kubrick’s movie was released in 1968. One year later, Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin made history by wandering across the Moon together.

It’s impossible to say how heavily Frankenstein’s work influenced NASA’s spacesuit designs. In 2007 and 2010, the Museum of Science and Industry was given numerous boxes filled with material about Wright and Frankenstein & Sons. The material inside, though, is difficult to parse without an employee’s assistance. It’s quite possible that some of the photos and documents will never be truly understood. What has been uncovered, however, suggests that the Manchester company had some impact on the first Moon landing. Frankenstein & Sons never went to space, but there’s a good chance its aviation and survival research did.

Images: NASA (Buzz Aldrin with US flag); Science and Industry Museum (measuring device and experimental full pressure suit); Warner Bros. via AP (2001: A Space Odyssey)

Apollo 11 anniversary at Engadget

NASA apollo 11 lander illustration




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2020 Corvette adds NFC, 1080p and OTA updates

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Standing in the shadow of the Apollo missions, 50 years later.NASA’s plan to return to the Moon with Project Artemis

NASA’s Project Artemis (aptly named as the goddess of hunting is Apollo’s twin sister) aims to take humans back to the Moon by 2024. But there are many lingering questions about the destination, the goals, the motivations, the project itself, NASA’s current readiness level and whether it has the support in Congress to move forward.


The new entry-level MacBook Pro is a much-needed upgrade.Apple 13-inch MacBook Pro review (2019): This is the one

Apple’s latest MacBook Pro isn’t the redesign some are waiting for. But it’s a strong refinement of the existing formula, particularly in the speed department. For $200 more than a MacBook Air, you get a much faster machine.


Gear and gadgets and more for beyond your front door.Engadget’s guide to all the outdoor gear you need this summer

The weather is, well, getting there. It’s time to step outside and enjoy the outdoors, whether that’s the trail or the backyard. This week, we have some gear recommendations to ratchet it up a notch. If you really want to escape, we can show you how technology can help you live in nature full-time (and still keep your job) and what to pack should (natural) disaster strike. For those who just want to enjoy the ride between home and work, we have some treats for you, too.


It’s like a sewing machine. Sort of.Elon Musk’s Neuralink plans to install brain-computer interfaces in humans next year

Two years ago, we heard about Elon Musk investing heavily in Neuralink, a company dedicated to building a device that links human brains to computers. Now, it has unveiled the “threads” and other hardware that it says can actually do the job. So far it has been done in rats, and according to Musk, “a monkey has been able to control the computer with its brain.”

Thanks to a robot carefully inserting the wires near groups of neurons, the hope is that not only will it assist patients in restoring things like movement or sight, but possibly help humanity keep pace with AI.


Besides some phone-like specs, it also moves the engine to a new spot.2020 Chevrolet Corvette comes with NFC, 1080p video and wireless charging

After decades of speculation and nearly endless teasing, Chevrolet has unveiled the long-awaited mid-engined Corvette. Scheduled to begin production later this year, the 2020 Stingray brings the “fastest 0-60 time of any entry Corvette ever” — with a starting price promised under $60,000 and a right-hand-drive version — thanks to a naturally aspirated 6.2L V8 engine capable of 495 HP.

The Performance Data Recorder / Valet Mode system it added in 2014 has been updated for high resolution 1080p recording, and its nose can use GPS to remember where speed bumps are, then automatically lift when it gets near one. It also has Android Auto, Apple CarPlay, wireless charging and NFC.

But wait, there’s more…


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NSA contractor sentenced to nine years over theft of classified info

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In 2016, federal agents arrested NSA contractor Harold Martin for stealing up to 50TB of classified information, and reports claimed that included offensive hacking technology designed to break into foreign computer networks. Sources for the data he took included the NSA, CIA and US Cyber Command over two decades between 1996 and 2016. On Friday, U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett sentenced Martin to nine years in prison for the offense — per his plea agreement, even as each of the twenty charges against him could have carried up to a 10 year sentence — and while that has ended the case, it didn’t answer all the questions.

Around that same time, the “Shadow Brokers” started leaking classified NSA hacking tools online, tools that included exploits later used by malware like NotPetya and WannaCry. According to CyberScoop, the judge noted a suspicious Twitter message linked to an account Martin supposedly operated that went out hours before the leaks, and the government declined to comment further.

Prosecutors told the judge they never found proof he shared the documents from anyone, and speculation about how the group got its classified information is still unconfirmed. As for Martin, his sentence includes credit for three years already served, as well as three years of supervised release.

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FTC approves a fine for Google over YouTube kids privacy probe

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The FTC has been getting child privacy complaints against YouTube for years, according to previous reports. COPPA, after all, prohibits companies from collecting data from users under 13 and from targeting them with personalized ads. To better protect kids using the internet these days, the agency intends to reexamine how COPPA is enforced, seeing as a lot of young users access websites and video games that weren’t made for them.

Since the Post’s sources aren’t authorized to speak on the issue, the exact amount and the conditions of the settlement are still unclear. A multimillion dollar fine is likely chump change for a massive corporation like Google, and the FTC’s officials were reportedly divided on the settlement: it was reportedly backed by the agency’s three Republicans and opposed by its two Democrats. That said, the agency’s decision could affect the tech industry as a whole. As the Post noted, the issues privacy advocates raised against Google also apply to other tech and gaming companies.

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