Posted on 09/11/2015 10:24:42 AM PDT by Red Badger
This is moronic. Touch screen controls? Take a tablet with you and have a friend drive the car over a bumpy dirt road. Now, try to use the tablet’s touch screen. Your fingers will go everywhere but where you want them to. Now try it in a spacecraft experiencing 8Gs and severe turbulence. RIP, crew. The military and NASA use big, robust levers and switches for a reason. This “preview” has to be a lie.
No holo-deck?
If the seats fail there is backup, both struts under the seat will impale the astronaut's back to support them.
It does not look like they took them being out of the seats into account.
Yep....I see that and I see, don’t get out of the seat, and hope for the best.
No Windows?
Looks like their gave the design to art majors and not engineers. Call me back when their rockets stop exploding.
Well you certainly don’t have to worry about hitting any mechanical switches. Since they put cabin depress right next to deorbit burn, it’s clear safety is #1; at least the buttons are protected like in Apollo.
There is a reason real space/aircraft don’t use smooth flat buttons. And a ‘deorbit now’ button? Is this whole mockup a joke? Sure looks like satire.
Well, I certainly do hope it all works well.
The metal edge of those screens looks like a great place to smash your skull open in micro gravity.
To this day, my all time fav movie...and I don’t care for Sci-Fi stuff and absolute detest StarWars/StarTrek drivel.
Nope....................
“And a deorbit now button?”
I must say, they sure have made this space flight thingy pretty simple!
Well played
Probably plastic........................
Is there a convertible model?
“The occupants had damned well better be strapped in on reentry or liftoff, though....”
You’re suggesting that isn’t always true?
Not until 1 minute and 35 seconds after launch.....................
No, actually. But then again there’s the old standby “rough air” thing you get on airlines. Just doesn’t seem to me it’s designed for inflight roaming, IMO.
“The military and NASA use big, robust levers and switches for a reason.”
Not anymore.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.