🇩🇪 · CCCFFM · m
Jeden 3. Samstag im Monat findet ab 16 Uhr das Linux-Café statt. Linux ist eine moderne Alternative zu anderen Betriebssystemen. Alle Neugierigen, Ein- und Umsteiger/innen sind herzlich eingeladen vorbeizukommen. Beim Linux Café gibt es jeweils einen Vortrag mit Tipps und …
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🇧🇬 · VarnaLab · hellmare (hellmare@undisclosed.example.com)
Лабърски
Лабърски
Бърз достъп:
* 💰 Финанси
* 📝 Срещи в Лаба (записки)
* ✉️ Формата за изпращане на месечните мейли (за достъп - тук) В МОМЕНТА НЕ РАБОТИ, ПОСТВАЙТЕ ДИРЕКТНО В ГРУПАТА!
* 🛜 Wi-Fi мрежи (пароли)
* ✅ Задачи за изпълнение
* 🖼️ Презентации: кратка (английска версия) и по-дълга
Вътрешни страници…
🇧🇬 · VarnaLab · hellmare (hellmare@undisclosed.example.com)
Сайтът е обновен до последна версия След толкова много чакане :) Има още какво да се прави, защото тага е изцяло забранен и не мисля, че има смисъл да слагаме plugin за това, а по-скоро всичко ще се прави през varnalab plugin-а като widget или snippet, за да нямаме бъдещи проблеми.
🇧🇬 · VarnaLab · hellmare (hellmare@undisclosed.example.com)
Gallery
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* VarnaLab's 12th anniversary party
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🇺🇸 · Crash Space · Theo
.cs-post *{box-sizing:border-box} .cs-post{ font-family:Georgia,"Times New Roman",serif; max-width:720px; margin:0 auto; color:#1a1a1a; line-height:1.75; } /* ── body text ── */ .cs-post p{ font-size:17px; margin:0 0 1.4rem; color:#2a2a2a; } .cs-post p:last-child{margin-bottom:0} /* ── pull quote ── */ .cs-post-pullquote{ border-left:3px solid #1D9E75; background:#f4faf7; border-radius:0 8px 8px 0; padding:1rem 1.25rem; margin:1.75rem 0; font-size:16px; color:#0f4030; font-style:italic; line-height:1.65; } /* ── feature pills ── */ .cs-post-pill{ display:inline-flex; align-items:center; gap:5px; font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,"Segoe UI",sans-serif; font-size:12px; font-weight:600; padding:3px 10px; border-radius:20px; margin:0 4px 6px 0; white-space:nowrap; } .cs-post-pill-green{background:#E1F5EE;color:#085041} .cs-post-pill-amber{background:#FAEEDA;color:#633806} .cs-post-pill-purple{background:#EEEDFE;color:#3C3489} .cs-post-pill-gray{background:#F1EFE8;color:#444441} .cs-post-pill svg{width:7px;height:7px;flex-shrink:0} /* ── CTA card ── */ .cs-post-cta{ display:block; text-decoration:none!important; background:linear-gradient(135deg,#1a1a1a 0%,#2e2e2e 100%); border-radius:14px; padding:1.75rem 2rem; margin:2.25rem 0; position:relative; overflow:hidden; transition:transform .18s ease,box-shadow .18s ease; box-shadow:0 4px 20px rgba(0,0,0,.22); } .cs-post-cta:hover{ transform:translateY(-2px); box-shadow:0 8px 32px rgba(0,0,0,.32); } .cs-post-cta::before{ content:""; position:absolute; inset:0; background-image: linear-gradient(rgba(248,153,57,.07) 1px,transparent 1px), linear-gradient(90deg,rgba(248,153,57,.07) 1px,transparent 1px); background-size:28px 28px; pointer-events:none; } .cs-post-cta-layout{ position:relative; z-index:1; display:flex; align-items:center; gap:1.5rem; } .cs-post-cta-icon{ flex-shrink:0; width:72px; height:72px; border-radius:16px; overflow:hidden; box-shadow:0 2px 12px rgba(0,0,0,.4); } .cs-post-cta-icon svg{width:100%;height:100%;display:block} .cs-post-cta-text{flex:1;min-width:0} .cs-post-cta-label{ font-family:"SFMono-Regular",Consolas,monospace; font-size:10px; letter-spacing:.14em; text-transform:uppercase; color:#f89939; opacity:.85; margin-bottom:.4rem; } .cs-post-cta-title{ font-family:Georgia,serif; font-size:19px; font-weight:700; color:#fff; margin:0 0 .3rem; line-height:1.25; } .cs-post-cta-sub{ font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,"Segoe UI",sans-serif; font-size:13px; color:#bbb; margin:0 0 1rem; } .cs-post-cta-btn{ display:inline-flex; align-items:center; gap:7px; background:#f89939; color:#1a1a1a!important; font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,"Segoe UI",sans-serif; font-size:13px; font-weight:700; padding:9px 18px; border-radius:8px; text-decoration:none!important; transition:background .15s; } .cs-post-cta-btn:hover{background:#e07f20} .cs-post-cta-btn svg{width:13px;height:13px;fill:currentColor;flex-shrink:0} /* ── github button ── */ .cs-gh-btn{ display:inline-flex; align-items:center; gap:8px; background:#24292e; color:#fff!important; font-family:-apple-system,BlinkMacSystemFont,"Segoe UI",sans-serif; font-size:13px; font-weight:600; padding:10px 18px; border-radius:8px; text-decoration:none!important; transition:opacity .15s; margin-right:10px; margin-bottom:10px; } .cs-gh-btn:hover{opacity:.85} .cs-gh-btn svg{width:16px;height:16px;fill:#fff;flex-shrink:0} /* ── button row ── */ .cs-post-buttons{ display:flex; flex-wrap:wrap; gap:0; margin:2rem 0 1rem; } /* ── divider ── */ .cs-post-divider{ border:none; height:1px; background:linear-gradient(90deg,transparent,#ddd 20%,#ddd 80%,transparent); margin:2rem 0; } @media(max-width:480px){ .cs-post-cta-layout{flex-direction:column;align-items:flex-start;gap:1rem} } Over the past few months I’ve been working on a personal fork of OrcaSlicer , the open-source 3D printing slicer, adding features that have been bugging me as a daily user. A handful of these are already in review for merge into the main project, and more are in active development. All of this work is happening in the open, and a lot of it was figured out here at CRASH Space. Here’s a rundown of what’s in the pipeline. The goal isn’t just a personal patch, it’s contributing features back upstream that the whole OrcaSlicer community can use. The features span a range of areas: quality-of-life workflow improvements, new visual polish, and a couple of deeper algorithmic additions. Current status at a glance: Favorites Panel, In Review Alt Unit Display, In Review Animated Print Status, In Review Local Version Control, In Review Slice Settings History, In Progress UI Color Settings, In Progress New Infill Patterns, Researching Windowed Path Preview, Researching Animated Tab Icons, On Hold A few highlights: the Favorites Panel lets you pin any setting from anywhere in the Process tab and access them all in one place. The Alt Unit Display lets you hold Alt to instantly see all measurements in inches without changing any stored values, or Alt+Shift to make the swap permanent. The Local Version Control feature automatically saves full 3MF snapshots of your project at configurable intervals, so you can roll back to any prior state across sessions. The full feature page has screenshots, demo videos, changelogs, and build instructions for each feature as they mature. Check it out below, it’ll stay updated as things progress. CRASH Space Blog OrcaSlicer Fork, Feature Development & Downloads Screenshots, videos, changelogs, and build instructions for every feature. View the feature page The fork is also fully open, if you want to build it, follow along, or contribute, everything is on GitHub. Theo-Erickson/OrcaSlicer on GitHub This is an independent open-source project and is not affiliated with the official OrcaSlicer project. Pull requests and feedback are welcome.
FeaturedMember Projects
🇺🇸 · Huntsville Alabama L5 Society (HAL5) - Project HALO · National Space Society
By Burt Dicht NSS Space Coast Correspondent Artemis II – By the Numbers Flight Day 10 — Friday, April 10, 2026 Status at Wake-Up The crew began the final phase of their journey home to the songs “Run to the Water” by Live — selected by the crew themselves and “Free” by Zac Brown Band, as they prepared for their third return trajectory correction burn. When they woke up, they were 61,326 miles from Earth. The Final Burn The third and final return trajectory correction burn occurred at 2:53 p.m. EDT, refining Orion’s path for atmospheric entry and splashdown, with the spacecraft making precise adjustments to stay on its targeted course home. Reentry Sequence — Minute by Minute At 7:33 p.m., Orion’s crew module separated from the service module, exposing the heat shield for the spacecraft’s return through Earth’s atmosphere, where it would encounter temperatures of about 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit. At 7:37 p.m., following separation, Orion performed an 19-second crew module raise burn to set the proper entry angle and align the heat shield. At 7:53 p.m., Orion reached 400,000 feet above Earth’s surface while traveling nearly 35 times the speed of sound, beginning a planned six-minute communications blackout as plasma built around the capsule. The crew was expected to experience up to 3.9 Gs. At 8:03 p.m., drogue parachutes deployed at around 22,000 feet, slowing and stabilizing the capsule. At 8:04 p.m., the three main parachutes unfurled at around 6,000 feet, reducing Orion’s speed to less than 136 mph . Splashdown — Picture Perfect Integrity touched down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego at 8:07:27 p.m. EDT — just 27 seconds off the planned target time — after a journey of 694,481 miles. The trajectory was right on track throughout the 13-minute reentry sequence, and the mission concluded in textbook fashion. Crew Status — All Four Healthy All four crew members — Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and CSA Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen — are confirmed healthy following splashdown. Commander Wiseman reported, “four green crewmembers,” meaning they were all healthy and not referring to their complexion. Victor Glover and Christina Koch on the deck (2 hours after splashdown the astronauts are now onboard the USS John P. Murtha and will undergo a medical evaluation. The recovery team will now focus on bringing the capsule into the well deck.) Splashdown Quotes: Mission Control — at the moment of splashdown: “A perfect bullseye splashdown. This is a perfect descent for Integrity.” “A new chapter of the exploration of our celestial neighbor is complete. Integrity’s astronauts, back on Earth.” Commander Reid Wiseman — first words after communications restored post-blackout: “Houston, Integrity, we have you loud and clear.” There were big cheers in Mission Control. Commander Wiseman — from inside Orion, bobbing in the Pacific: “What a journey. We are stable. Four green crewmembers.” NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman — aboard the USS John P. Murtha: “This is not just an accomplishment for NASA. This is an accomplishment for humanity, again, a historic mission to the moon and back.” CONGRATULATIONS AND THANK YOU To the Artemis II astronauts— Reid Wiseman , Victor Glover , Christina Koch , and Jeremy Hansen —congratulations on completing a mission that has inspired millions and marked a historic return of humans to deep space beyond Earth orbit. Congratulations as well to NASA, the European Space Agency, the Canadian Space Agency, the countless industry partners, contractors, and the tens of thousands of engineers, technicians, flight controllers, recovery teams, and support personnel whose dedication and expertise made this mission possible. This achievement belongs to every person who helped design, build, test, launch, fly, recover, and support Artemis II. We have taken the first steps in returning humanity to the Moon and establishing a sustained human presence beyond Earth. The journey has begun. Thank you. SPLASHDOWN THEN AND NOW: FROM CARRIER TASK FORCES TO PRECISION RECOVERY When astronauts return from space today, the recovery operation can look surprisingly modest. For Artemis II, Orion descended beneath its parachutes into the Pacific Ocean, where divers, helicopters, small boats, and a single U.S. Navy amphibious ship—USS John P. Murtha (LPD-26)—stood ready to recover the crew. The entire operation was carefully choreographed, but by Apollo-era standards it was remarkably lean. That was not always the case. During the Apollo era, splashdown recoveries were major naval operations. Astronauts returning from the Moon on missions such as Apollo 8 and Apollo 11 Moon Landing were greeted by full aircraft carrier task forces. Ships such as USS Hornet (CVS-12) and USS Yorktown (CVS-10) served as floating command centers, surrounded by helicopters, support vessels, medical teams, and extensive communications assets. These carrier groups were not assembled merely for spectacle. In the 1960s, NASA and the Navy were operating at the very edge of what was technologically possible. Spacecraft navigation was far less precise than it is today, and mission planners had to account for far greater uncertainty in splashdown location. Even a small trajectory error could place the capsule dozens of miles from its planned landing zone. The Navy provided the only organization capable of responding to that uncertainty. Aircraft carriers offered enormous flight decks for helicopter operations, large medical facilities, robust communications systems, and the manpower required to conduct complex search-and-rescue operations across vast stretches of ocean. Apollo recoveries also reflected the scientific uncertainties of the era. Early lunar missions required astronaut quarantine because scientists could not fully rule out the possibility that lunar material might carry unknown microorganisms. When the crew of Apollo 11 Moon Landing returned, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins entered a sealed Mobile Quarantine Facility aboard USS Hornet (CVS-12) before being transported to Houston for further isolation and study. The Cold War added another dimension. Apollo missions unfolded on the world stage, and the presence of a Navy carrier group underscored the technological and strategic strength of the United States. Modern spacecraft recoveries tell a very different story. Advances in navigation systems, satellite tracking, and highly accurate onboard computers now allow mission controllers to predict splashdown locations with remarkable precision. Instead of preparing for wide dispersions across hundreds of miles of ocean, recovery teams can concentrate their assets in a tightly defined landing zone. Spacecraft design has evolved as well. Orion was engineered specifically for streamlined ocean recovery. Commercial spacecraft have pushed efficiency even further. SpaceX Dragon capsules are routinely recovered by dedicated recovery vessels supported by fast boats and helicopters rather than large naval task forces. Once Dragon splashes down, teams aboard the recovery ship quickly secure the spacecraft, perform safety checks, and hoist the capsule onto the deck, where astronauts typically exit directly from the ship. The process is designed for speed and operational efficiency, reflecting the more routine cadence of today’s orbital missions. The contrast among Apollo, Artemis, and commercial recoveries highlights more than technological progress. It reflects a broader shift in how human spaceflight is conducted. Apollo was a national mobilization driven by geopolitical urgency. The resources committed to each mission were enormous, and recovery operations reflected that scale. Today’s missions are designed with sustainability and efficiency in mind. Artemis still draws on the capabilities of the U.S. Navy, but the goal is to accomplish the same task—bringing astronauts safely home from deep space with a far more streamlined operational footprint. Yet despite the differences in scale, one element remains unchanged. Whether it is a massive aircraft carrier surrounded by a Cold War task force, a single amphibious ship waiting in the Pacific, or a commercial recovery vessel supporting routine crew flights, the moment of splashdown still represents the same profound milestone: the safe return of human explorers from the frontier of space.
MoonNASA
🇳🇴 · Omega Verksted · Robotkrigansvarlig
Lørdag 18. april braker det løs med semesterets store begivenhet – ROBOTKRIG! Om du ønsker å se på eller planlegger å delta, starter kvelden kl. 18. Det er bare å komme innom! For informasjon om påmelding, gå inn på «Robotkrig»-fanen øverst på siden. Dette medfører at OV vil ha begrenset funksjonalitet og færre arbeidsplasser hele neste uke. Vi beklager ulempene dette medfører, men håper Robotkrigen gjør opp for det! Vi satser likevel på å få opp noen arbeidstasjoner, så det er aldri for sent å prøve å lage seg en robot!
🇧🇬 · VarnaLab · hellmare (hellmare@undisclosed.example.com)
Приятели на ВарнаЛаб Софийският хакерспейс Бургаският хакерспейс IT Турнето включва поредица от технически конференции в големи български градове
🇧🇬 · VarnaLab · hellmare (hellmare@undisclosed.example.com)
🇧🇬 · VarnaLab · hellmare (hellmare@undisclosed.example.com)
Галерия
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Какво е Meshtastic
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КУЛТОВИ РЕТРО 8-БИТОВИ КОМПЮТРИ
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* Парти по случай 12-тата годишнина на …
🇩🇪 · MakerSpace Bonn
Die Campdays im April 2026 finden im Makerspace Bonn statt. Kommt zum zweitägigen Barcamp oder zum Kennenlernen am Samstagnachmittag! Die Campdays sind das Aktiven-Barcamp der Teckids-Gemeinschaft. Hier treffen sich alle, die in der Gemeinschaft aktiv sind, regelmäßig für ein Wochenende für gemeinsame Themen-Sessions, Freizeit und mehr. Auch Interessierte, die (noch) nicht regelmäßig dabei sind, können mitmachen. Einen Eindruck von den Campdays gibt es im Blog-Post der Sommer-Campdays 2024 oder in dem von den Campdays in Osnabrück . Das Wochenende wird primär von und für die etwa 25 aktiven Kinder, Jugendlichen und Erwachsenen organisiert, die sich regelmäßig treffen, um sich mit Themen rund um Teckids und seine Ziele und Werte auseinanderzusetzen. Es kann aber auch jede*r andere teilnehmen – man sollte sich für die Themen der Teckids-Gemeinschaft interessieren und am besten schon ein bisschen Erfahrung mit Barcamps haben. Wer noch nicht "bereit" für das ganze Barcamp ist, kann auch als Gast beim offenen Nachmittag am Samstag zu Besuch kommen. Weiteres unter https://teckids.org/blog/2026/04/einladung-campdays/
HaupteintragAllgemeinesArchivROOT
🇺🇸 · Sudo room · Romy Ilano
Sign up at https://luma.com/5v5g3tx2 t’s the SF Climate Week edition of our weekly Tuesday night open house at Sudo Room / Omni Commons: come tour this amazing jewel of a building in the Temescal district of Oakland and bring your repair projects – electronic gadgets, appliances, computers, toys, sewing machines, fabric items, etc. – for assessment, disassembly, and possible repair. ○ General Repair: Fixit Clinic’s weekly Oakland residency: we’ll provide workspace, specialty tools, and guidance to help you disassemble and troubleshoot your item. First-time repairers and “Fixing Families” are heartily invited. ○ Projects: can range from building course materials for teaching local kids electronics to a robotic arm that draws, to light projection art, to people building their own microchip boards! We provide the space, tools and peer learning – you bring your project and enthusiasm! ○ Group Sewing: Learn to do simple mending or get help with technical fabric and textile projects. In addition to regular machines our Sewing Lab features heavy-duty industrial sewing machines and sergers. Our in house sewing guru CC has worked for Academy or Art College, Tesla, SuitX, and Zipline and has vast sewing machine repair and maintenance experience; bring your own machine to tune up for tip-top operation and sew alongside others. https://sudoroom.org/wiki/HardwareHackNight Fixit Clinic Founder Peter Mui will also be a panelist at The Art of Repair Thursday Apr 23 4-6pm: https://luma.com/hb7ydlxs “ By registering for this event, you agree to share your registration information with the organizers of SF Climate Week.”
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🇧🇬 · VarnaLab · hellmare (hellmare@undisclosed.example.com)
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🇧🇬 · VarnaLab · hellmare (hellmare@undisclosed.example.com)
За VarnaLab
Какво е VarnaLab?
VarnaLab е независимо физическо място, развивано и използвано от хора с общи интереси, обикновено в сферата на компютрите, машините, технологиите, науката и цифровите или електронните изкуства, където те могат да се срещат, общуват и сътрудничат.
🇧🇬 · VarnaLab · hellmare (hellmare@undisclosed.example.com)
About us
What is VarnaLab?
VarnaLab is an independent physical space evolved and used by people having common interests mainly in the IT sector (also in machines, technologies, science and digital/electronic arts) where they can meet, talk and collaborate.
🇳🇴 · Bitraf · jensa
I midten av Februar fikk vi endelig på plass noe vi har ønsket oss lenge – et eget kursrom og møterom! Rommet ligger inn bak SmutCave og har nydelig utsikt over Akerselva. Helt siden vi flyttet inn i Brenneriveien har vi hatt lyst på et eget kursrom og møterom. Frem til nå har vi brukt ett av bordene i labben til dette. Dette førte til at de som satt i labben ble forstyrret og det forstyrret også kursene når folk kom og gikk i labben. TV’en vi brukte til kursene stod oppe på en av pultene i labben slik at pulten ikke egentlig var særlig praktisk å jobbe på. Tekstilrommet har også blitt brukt til mindre kurs og som møterom. Dette har forstyrret annen aktivitet så mye at det har ødelagt for andre. Begge disse problemene er løst med det nye rommet! Siden vi flyttet har økonomien vært trang og vi har heller ikke hatt noe ledig lokale som vi kunne ha brukt, men når gjengen i Plaato skulle flytte på seg åpnet det seg en mulighet. Plaato har nå har vokst seg ut av lokalene våre og har nå flyttet noen hundre meter, opp på Grunerløkka. Dette har ført til en større omrokkering der Axess har overtatt det meste av Plaato’s lokaler. Martin, Joar og Vladimir har overtatt lokalene som Axess hadde – bak kjøkkenet. Og så har det blitt 3 ledige kontorplasser i kontorlandskapet. Ta kontakt om du trenger plass! For å gjøre klar kurslokalet ble det arrangert en dugnad med godt oppmøte! Tak, Vegger og gulv ble vasket og skurt. Og kursmøbler ble flyttet inn. Fine blå stoler og sammenleggbare kursbord for 24 personer ble skaffet via Finn.no. Disse ble også renset og fikset opp da de hadde vært brukt på en skole i Sandvika i flere år. Dagen etter ble en diger 85″ TV montert på veggen i kursrommet. En annen del av dugnaden fokuserte på å gjøre SmutCave klar. Døren inn til kursrommet har nemlig vært bak en av pultene i Smutcave, så for å bruke denne måtte det masse endringer til. Vi fikk en ny og smalere ESD-pult inne på Smutcave, ESD-pulten fra SmutCave ble flyttet til labben og den eksisterende pulten i labben ble flyttet til en ledig kontorplass. For å få bedre plass ble den noe bortgjemte bokhyllen i labben flyttet til inngangen, så sittegruppen her har fungerer nå som et lite bibliotek. Med den nye elektronikkpulten i labben har vi nå tre pulter med to plasser for elektronikkjobbing i labben. Så oppsummert: Labben og Tekstilrommet blir mye mindre forstyrret av kurs, Bokhylla er mer synlig, Labben har fått flere plasser, Smutcave har fått ny pult og vi har fått et flott kurs og møterom som allerede er i god bruk.
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🇺🇸 · Huntsville Alabama L5 Society (HAL5) - Project HALO · National Space Society
Now we must focus on continued forward-looking goals In the evening of April 10, the Artemis 2 mission concluded with a flawless reentry and splashdown off the coast of Southern California. From its launch on April 1 to the crew recovery on Friday, the flight was one for the history books, with every major system working as planned. “Congratulations to the crew and the teams who made this possible,” said Karlton Johnson, NSS CEO. “Four heroic crew members carried the flag into deep space, going further than anyone before them, and have taken a bold step forward in extending human presence beyond Earth.” Johnson added, “Today’s splashdown brings the mission full circle. America has shown that we can operate in cislunar space, as we did so long ago, and with confidence and permanence. This is how sustained human activity beyond Earth begins to take shape.” The flight lasted just over nine days and hit its objectives one after another. From a successful launch, to raising to high Earth orbit, to the trans-lunar injection (TLI) burn, a successful lunar flyby, and their return home, Artemis 2 was “by the numbers,” as Apollo Flight Director Gerry Griffin put it. “I’ve seen the early flights of every U.S. launch system, and the launch of Artemis 2 was about the smoothest. What a mission!” Next comes the flight of Artemis 3 in 2027, an Earth-orbital test flight of rendezvous and docking between the Orion capsule and lunar landing hardware. This will be followed by Artemis 4, now scheduled to land astronauts on the Moon in 2028. But these missions, spectacular as they are, are just the beginning, and there’s work to be done to ensure smooth continuity. “As we welcome the Artemis crew back to Earth from their hugely successful lunar voyage, it is time to redouble our efforts to support a strong and economically sustainable space program,” said Dale Skran, NSS COO and Senior Vice President. “The exciting lunar base plan presented by NASA Administrator Isaacman has been followed by a new budget from the White House that, for a second year in a row, dramatically cuts NASA science programs, and attempts to derail the Commercial LEO Destinations (CLD) program to support privately operated space stations. The NSS is urgently needed as a citizen’s advocacy group, fighting for continuity in space progress and humanity’s spacefaring future.”
MoonNASANSS Press Releases