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shortercodetoday at 10:16 AM2 repliesview on HN

I feel both great and awful about this. For over a decade I’ve said that nearly anyone that uses a computer could benefit from some programming understanding. A little bit can go a long way to solving problems like this. Problems that collectively slow down and block the ambitions of a huge number of people worldwide.

But instead we’ve found a way to circumvent the process. Losing the understanding of your own problem and the new ideas that come off the back of it.

I’m reminded of the story that NASA had a research project to make pens that would work in space, and Roscosmos just used pencils. I always thought NASA came off worse in that anecdote, but I wonder what they learnt while making the pen…


Replies

ash_091today at 11:49 AM

That story is a classic urban legend.

Both agencies used pencils, but they were problematic because the graphite could break off / float around / cause shorts.

The space pen was developed by Fisher independently of NASA. NASA bought 400 of them for $2.39 each. The Roscosmos later bought 100 for the same price.

Tuna-Fishtoday at 11:56 AM

The story is BS, btw.

Firstly, pencils in space pose serious risks. Pencils produce dust, graphite dust is conductive, and won't settle down in microgravity. They were used early on, but both space agencies phased them out when they realized the risks. After that, they first moved to grease pencils, which kind of suck for normal writing.

NASA didn't research how to make pens that work in space, an American private company did it on their own initiative and money. Then they sold pens to NASA for cheap, and marketed the same pens to people not in space for a lot of money and made a nice profit.

Today, both Roscosmos and NASA use the same pens, bought from Fisher.

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