Hm, the tech was borderline back then, to the point that we oh-so-twitterly-advanced are having a hard time duplicating the effort. Rocket science is still rocket science, and still on the kaboomey side. The internet and computer tech today is mainly "same stuff as yesterday, only faster and flashier". There is no big paradigm shift in sight as it has been with the explosion of home computers in the late '70s-early '80s. Quite simply, we do with one small device what we used to do with many larger devices, but there's no "widening" as we experienced with the early days of the Web. If anything, we're now experiencing a low tide as walled gardens and secluded communities displace the Great Wide Open that used to be.
I personally think we're better off with the Moon landings than without. I like the fact that looking at the Moon I can say "Well, some guy has been there". It's inspirational, and reminds me that mankind could still learn that life is about more than GNP figures and 3-months ROI.
I agree that the twittery crowd is becoming dumbed down if that's what you're alluding to.
The computer and internet stuff is the same thing now as it was then. In a way yes and in a way no. Yes because it is just pushing bits and bytes around. No, because of all the connectivity options, including twitter!
I agree there has been no paradigm shift in the last, what, 25-30 years? Yes.. No shift. Everything is evolutionary instead of revolutionary. The computer being used as tool to control you and your finances is subtle, but a real one, for example.
Today we are so removed in time from the moon landings and I think they have little effect on today's youth. In fact, the other day I was over at the neices and nephews house and they commandeered my computer to watch Tik Tok Kesha's Dr. Drew video and to get their iPod's updated with Katy Perry music. Ughh. My moon landing clips and vids were referred to as old man sci-fi stuff!
It's the frettings about ROI and GNP and next month's bottom line that put food on your table. Sad but true.
Practically true, but there is another tiny detail that he has right: Apollo wasn't the edge of technology of the day, it was even less advanced than Gemini. Apollo was somewhere between the brute force approach (big rocket, limited risk by higher safety margins) and the best practice technology (not the most advanced, but the selected not so advanced technology tested and improved until it was as good as it can get).
What were the main areas where Apollo lagged in tech? IMHO more advanced tech is not always better. And the same hold true for software revisions, especially makework-busywork version upgrades that add only eye candy.
I think it's a shame we never tried that manned Venus flyby
What was that all about?
The Apollo 11 landing was seen by about 600 million TV viewer. The world population was 3.3 billion I think. And that public interest went down quite rapidly for the following missions. I think that the excitement is between nostalgia and myth rather than a real influence of the world. Today it's basically awesome for space flight enthusiasts. And that community sadly is a quite small one. The average Joe doesn't really care, or thinks it was fake anyway.
The memorial ceremony for Michael Jackson was seen by an amazing one billion TV viewer. And I think that 9/11 was seen by an euqal number of people, or even more.
From that three events, I think the most influential one was 9/11, sadly. Resulting in dubious political decisions, scare-mongering and invasions in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Real spaceflight is too complicated and boring and slow-moving to be of interest to much of today's youth.
It's what the media broadcasts and deems important that determines how many viewers it gets. That and things that are "celebrity" and "death & destruction" related will always take the numbers over science and mankind progress.
I wonder how the world will view science and space activities when a killer asteroid is discovered? And then subsequently blown off course by a nuke or some other tech? Would it be as fantastic as Apollo. I say it might be far more interesting.
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It also happens that now we have more TVs around. In 1969 there were still families without a TV set, now we have multiple sets for family or even per person. Live coverage of events in 1969 was still pretty rare, now it's commonplace (we don't have "film at 11" anymore). You don't even need expensive infrastructure to cover an event live, you only need your smartphone. The 21st century is a different animal, a comparable event today would have a quite diverse and wide coverage.
And pray-tell what is a cell-phone network in combination with the internet? Satellites? Fiber-optics? This is a trillion dollar network. Without it your toy cellphones would cease to operate.
As for the average Joe... Don't dismiss him so easily. I've been to some spaceflight and Apollo-related public conferences (not hoax stuff) and every time I saw a full house. A very variegated public and not just space enthusiasts, and of all ages. A lot of young people who never had the direct experience of the Apollo flights were the most fascinated.
The average Joe and his buddies Tom, Dick, and Harry are write-offs. The interest you observe is but a curiosity. How many of them would donate 1 day a week of their time applying a skill they have, for free, to the betterment of the space program?