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#1
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So, what do you think the next X prize will bring? First privately
funded re-usable spacecraft to orbit the earth? To the moon? Looks like this is gearing up to be the next big economy 'boom' |
#2
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![]() "Chris" wrote in message ... So, what do you think the next X prize will bring? First privately funded re-usable spacecraft to orbit the earth? To the moon? Looks like this is gearing up to be the next big economy 'boom' It will be interesting. However, its to bad that greedy American CEOs have ruined engineering as a profession so much that now American schools graduate less and less engineers each year, and of those graduates many are foreign born. Perhaps the Chinese and Indians will do well. Once they rule space they will rule the planet. But we can provide the marketing fluff. Earl G |
#3
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So, what do you think the next X prize will bring? First privately funded
re-usable spacecraft to orbit the earth? To the moon? Looks like this is gearing up to be the next big economy 'boom' According to "Air & Space" magazine, Congress has before it a bill that would provide $20 million for various aeronautical "X" prizes, in hopes of spurring more Rutan-like entrepreneurs. One of the ideas being proposed is an "X" prize for flying a "life form" to the moon, and keeping it alive for 90 days. Although using taxes for this kind of stuff rubs me the wrong way, it *does* provide "seed money" for thinking outside the box. Sadly, some stupid government bureaucracy will (of course) have to be set up to administer the program, which will probably suck most of the life (and funding) out of it. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#4
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Earl,
Lots of truth here! When I graduated as a E.E. in 1987 engineering was a respectable profession. Now we are just an expense item that needs to be reduced by off-shoring to India and China. The current crop of CEOs are mostly MBAs without a clue as to where all the product they are currently selling came from... or maybe they just don't care. If I were entering college right now, I don't think that I would want to go through the expense and hard work of an engineering curriculum with such an uncertain return on investment waiting for me in corporate America. That's why American students are staying away from engineering right now... Dean "Earl Grieda" wrote in message ink.net... "Chris" wrote in message ... So, what do you think the next X prize will bring? First privately funded re-usable spacecraft to orbit the earth? To the moon? Looks like this is gearing up to be the next big economy 'boom' It will be interesting. However, its to bad that greedy American CEOs have ruined engineering as a profession so much that now American schools graduate less and less engineers each year, and of those graduates many are foreign born. Perhaps the Chinese and Indians will do well. Once they rule space they will rule the planet. But we can provide the marketing fluff. Earl G |
#5
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Lots of truth here! When I graduated as a E.E. in 1987 engineering
was a respectable profession. Now we are just an expense item that needs to be reduced by off-shoring to India and China. The current crop of CEOs are mostly MBAs without a clue as to where all the product they are currently selling came from... or maybe they just don't care. If I were entering college right now, I don't think that I would want to go through the expense and hard work of an engineering curriculum with such an uncertain return on investment waiting for me in corporate America. That's why American students are staying away from engineering right now... Supply and demand rules. When I was growing up in the 1960s and 70s, engineering ruled. My Dad, a career manager with a herd of engineers working for him, urged me to get an engineering degree. In his mind, it was the Holy Grail that would ensure his son's future, as the pay was extremely high, and the hours were certainly good. Instead, much to his dismay, I obtained an English degree. :-) It appears that a lot of my peers listened to their fathers, and went the engineering route. The pay was (and still, in some industries, is) extremely high, and the hours are still good -- but as the supply of engineers increased, the demand for them decreased. Any good CEO is ALWAYS looking for areas to cut costs, and salaries are usually the biggest item on the balance sheet. If a company can get the same work for less pay, they would be stupid not to. That's the free market. It sucks, sometimes. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#6
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote: Supply and demand rules. [snip] That's the free market. It sucks, sometimes. It is getting to the point where it will suck ALL the time for the incomes of many Americans. The global free market economy will tend to level out standards of living world-wide. Americans (and West Europeans) will not like this, I predict. -- Dan C-172RG at BFM |
#7
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![]() One of the ideas being proposed is an "X" prize for flying a "life form" to the moon, and keeping it alive for 90 days. The Melissa worm? Jose -- (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
#8
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![]() I work in the software industry and have a lot of friends who got their degrees in mechanical, civil, electrical, and chemical engineering. They all weathered the past three years better than my other friends who had "leisure arts" degrees, but they've all also gone down more of a management track. In IT, what I see is that core engineering is still being done here, but grunt work that involves relatively little local-area expertise is slowly moving offshore. The real losers in this case are the marginally-skilled people who were just capable enough to get into IT, and because of the relative shortage of people were enjoying relatively high salaries (e.g. 60-80k in New England) performing relatively straightforward jobs. However, I think for every ten companies that talk about doing it, there is maybe one or two that actually go for it, and the wage differentials everybody talks about (e.g. $5/hr for an Indian engineer) never pan out. For instance, if you want to employ 20 engineers at a call center in India, you'll need to run your own fiber optic lines or get a satellite dish, and have an electrical generator that can run it all when (not if) the local power station browns out. Quite a few companies have seen offshoring blow up in their face. Does anybody remember the days when computers were going to put us all out of a job? Well, I guess they did eliminate the need for so many telephone operators and clerks, but overall white-collar employment is quite a bit larger as a proportion of the population than it was 50 years ago. Something tells me we'll survive this latest scare too. Best, -cwk. |
#9
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American schools
graduate less and less engineers each year, fewer and fewer engineers. (I are one). -- Bob (Chief Pilot, White Knuckle Airways) I don't have to like Bush and Cheney (Or Kerry, for that matter) to love America |
#10
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Although using taxes for this kind of stuff rubs me the wrong way, it
*does* provide "seed money" for thinking outside the box. I'd much rather pay this than for gasoline subsidies to Iraqis. "Hello, NASA, (tap tap) is this thing on?" |
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