When the Artemis II four-person crew left Earth’s orbit, they were protected by a computing system designed to move beyond simple redundancy (a la the Apollo missions) to a fail-silent architecture.
Annie Easley began as a ‘human computer’, performing complex calculations by hand before electronic systems took over. She later became a programmer at NASA, contributing to propulsion and energy ...
The company is saying the quiet part out loud. The post Meta Installing Software on Employee Computers to Track Everything ...
OCEAN. JACKSON STATE UNIVERSITY ALUM IS HELPING TO LEAD THE FUTURE OF SPACE EXPLORATION AT NASA. 16 WAPT’S ALLIE WARE TELLS US WHAT ROLE SHE’S PLAYING IN ARTEMIS MISSION, AND HOW MISSISSIPPI AND JSU ...
NASA built a spacecraft computer that can lose three systems mid-flight and still keep astronauts alive 250,000 miles from ...
A team of MassBay Community College computer science students, including one from Framingham and another from Bellingham, has ...
From its origins to its cultural influence today, this is how IBM helped shape America as one of the nation’s most iconic ...
The repository, posted by NASA's Chris Garry and designated as public domain, contains two distinct programs: Comanche055, ...
One man with an Alabama connection was, like many, glued to his TV on Friday afternoon, April 10, watching as the Artemis II ...
The orange rafts that fished four astronauts out of the Pacific after the Artemis II splashdown April 10 didn’t come from a ...
In high-stakes roles, NASA launch and mission control teams on the ground will keep the Artemis II astronauts safely on track during a 10-day journey around the moon.