Wow, gotta love how this article just hand-waives away the completely legitimate concerns/criticisms that this is nothing more than a way to stroke billionaire's egos. Talking about moving mining to space/asteroids is supposed to be a noble goal? The tone deafness is astounding. A billionaire went into space (and the launchpad bill was footed by taxpayers who will probably never see space) and we are supposed to cheer this on? I think not.
It might be more productive if you explain what it is about GP's post you actually disagree with.
Personally I find the fact that we've set up a system where a few rich guys can burn obscene amounts of money in a dick measuring competition while people in their own countries increasingly increasingly lack stable income/house/food pretty abhorrent.
This is a good soundbyte, but misses that the world overall is getting richer and safer every year. The UK is not getting poorer. The US is not either. There's always going to be someone, somewhere who falls through the cracks. That doesn't mean we need to stop humans from exploring the solar system until everyone, everywhere is covered.
If you really care about solving homelessness and income inequality everywhere, why not take it from the truly "useless" industries like entertainment, cosmetics, toys, or luxury cars? Rather than the one industry trying to build a long-term future for humanity.
The US spends $50B a year on pet food or whatever. Get rid of the pets and take that money if you want. I don't see why you are offended that a couple billion is being spent on something that actually matters.
> That doesn't mean we need to stop humans from exploring the solar system until everyone, everywhere is covered.
Sending billionaires into space so they can film Tik-Toks from an in-orbit Tesla roadster and get mining rights to all the precious metals in the solar system while patenting and monopolizing critical space travel tech doesn't advance humanity at all, it sets us back. Government investment in and exploration of space pushes us forward, as do massive taxes on billionaires and redistributing their wealth to the general populace and public works projects.
It's astounding to me that there is any non-billionaire alive that doesn't realize this.
How many more astrophysicists would we have if the current wealth of the top 10 billionaires went to our educational system and bringing people out of poverty? Sending billionaires into space accomplishes nothing that the rest of humanity can benefit from, and actually would do a good bit of damage to our future. Sure, the tech will get better, but it will be patented and upcharged in a way similar to our pharmaceutical industry, only with fewer regulations. Space is too important a frontier and space exploration is too important an endeavor to squander in this way. We need NASA in space, not billionaires.
At this point any kind of business that does repeatable and sustainable space flights is good, is even if it's for the entertainment of the billionaires. Slowly and surely the process will get improved and the cost will go down and maybe some of those taxpayers will see space after all.
As I've stated elsewhere in this thread, this is not true. It is quite possible to do actual damage to our future if we allow corporate monopolization of the resources or means of getting into space. Work like this is too important to leave to privatization, but funding of our space program has lagged so grossly that the only option left is billionaire charlatans who want to stake their claim on the stars in a race to monopolize the resources of space.
I think we can wait to argue about who gets the space resources until we can reliably get to space. Currently the resource being exploited by the "charlatans" is pretty views from upper atmosphere. As long as they don't leave trash in orbit, which this is very far from, they can do it all day long for all I care.
Also this whole focus on the billionaires is misguided. Up until very recently only large nation states could afford to have a space program that is any more ambitious than delivering a satellite to orbit. Now it's eccentric billionaires. Tomorrow it'll be small cap companies. Elon Musk is not getting Mars, don't worry.
> This is a good soundbyte, but misses that the world overall is getting richer and safer every year. The UK is not getting poorer. The US is not either. There's always going to be someone, somewhere who falls through the cracks. That doesn't mean we need to stop humans from exploring the solar system until everyone, everywhere is covered.
The number of food banks and their use is on the rise in the UK. The "Gig economy" takes all the worst bits of the precarious situation people were put in by zero hours contracts and additionally ditches pension benefits, holidays, and maternity/paternity leave. House prices are up ~13% on last year. Countries on aggregate might be getting wealthier, but that wealth is going straight into the pockets of those at the top end of the scale. On the lower end you'll find yourself in a damp filled flat run by a dodgy landlord with people who spent the pandemic working from home telling you to feel grateful.
> If you really care about solving homelessness and income inequality everywhere, why not take it from the truly "useless" industries like entertainment, cosmetics, toys, or luxury cars? Rather than the one industry trying to build a long-term future for humanity.
The benefits of this "space race" are limited to a few billionaires, the sectors you named largely benefit wide swathes of society.
> I don't see why you are offended that a couple billion is being spent on something that actually matters.
I don't think it does matter, at least not in the near/mid future.
"why not take it from the truly "useless" industries like entertainment, cosmetics, toys, or luxury cars"
I couldn't be more pro-Billionaire Astronauts, but at the same time there is danger in them spending their money and influence on things that may not work.
If they had gone out and bought more cars, yachts, and real estate, that's money that goes into mature industries with efficient supply chains that support the livelihoods of many people.
You can look at a billion dollar yacht and say, "What a waste", but the shipwrights, plumbers, electricians, carpenters, and welders who built the yacht, not to mention the crew that steers, maintains, and cleans it probably don't think it was a waste, nor do the people who work in the industries that provide the materials for it.
> If they had gone out and bought more cars, yachts, and real estate, that's money that goes into mature industries with efficient supply chains that support the livelihoods of many people.
The same can be said about rockets and spacecrafts. They also need an efficient supply chain that provides all the parts. Even if these billionaires failed, they would have spent the money to feed upstream industries. Furthermore, they are thinking to commercialize such travels in future. More jobs and a bigger market if succeeded.
So, are they burning money or making money then, what is it?
There's no argument, no logic, just people seeing "Hm, billionaire, things I can't do, must be bad"
Even in the least charitable readings, this sort of venture is so immeasurably better than the the myriad other ridiculous things billionaires do Just Because They Can.
If most of the money they skim off a business like this would be going back into the economy - if the owner of the company spent the money they accrue, would they still be billionaires?
There's an upper limit on how much you can spend. You can own a dozen private jets, a dozen castles, but you can't be on more than one at any given time. And, by not being on any given one for longer than a couple months every year, you can pretty much avoid paying taxes anywhere.
> To entice Branson and his space ambitions, taxpayers in New Mexico funded the bulk of the costs for the $220 million Spaceport America.
This was not, to my understanding, connected to the X Prize. Also they didn't win the X Prize according this article [0].
[0] > A team led by Burt Rutan would [claim the X Prize eight years later](https://arstechnica.com/uncategorized/2004/06/3908-2/), barely within the deadline. Rutan’s team built SpaceShipOne, a small rocket-powered vehicle dropped from an aircraft.
Or you know, you could just go to their website and confirm that in fact, they did win it[0]
There will always be naysayers, detractors, and people who will always question the value of exporation and human inventiveness.
Like in business, if it was obvious, it would have long been done. Yes, it does tak ea bit of brashness and self serving to do new things. and their practically is seldomly obvious at the beginning.
But this is EXACTLY how humanity moves forward!!! The crazy ones, the selfish ones. The ones that sometimes do it for the glory, or just because its' hard.
It's very easy to critique, but in the words or someone else... "what have you done that is so great?"
" In 2004, it signed a deal with Virgin Galactic to develop the Virgin SpaceShip, a suborbital spacecraft, for space tourism. Virgin Group and Scaled Composites have subsequently formed a joint venture, The Spaceship Company, to manufacture the spacecraft."[0]
I guess New Mexico put the money down so that it can get it back in taxes and jobs once it becomes a "space hub". We see this kind of gov/public offers all the time to auto-makers for example and that's a boring sector lacking any kind of innovation.
It's ars technica, pretty much everything they write has this creepy techno-hopium spin on it, to cater to the worshippers of technology and its ability to eventually, magically fix any problem.
There's nothing legitimate about these concerns. It's a Twitter-stoked outrage that the billionaire isn't spending their money on some random Twitter-poster's pet project.
They do indeed hand wave away things like the cost and other concerns and cheer on the "vision"...
"The billionaires see a future in which humanity, constrained for resources such as water, food, and energy, fights ever harder for a more meager share. “We really could go down one of two paths,” Garriott said. “In a few decades we could reach a point where we have to ration birth rates, energy, food, and more in a stark way. Or, we could bring back the bounty of resources in space, and now is the time to start that process."
It's good that billionaires are looking into a distant future, I can't fault them for that. It surprises me that they're not also looking at the present and wondering how they can also have a meaningful and large impact on problems we have right now that are going to impact that future they see. Those hundreds of millions of dollars and huge number of people working on going into space could be doing some serious work on the ground here.
I get it, I really get what they're going after here, but I can't help but think there are really truly better things to do with all that money and time.
I take it as a very strong signal that at least Branson and Musk have essentially decided that Earth is doomed and they're wanting to get off of it as soon as possible.
Of all the ways to stroke the egos of billionaires, this is by far more socially valuable than buying yachts and doing all the other things that billionaires spend their money on.
When billionaires spend their wealth it is far more beneficial than if they lock it up in stock.
When they buy a yacht it feeds that entire supply chain. not to mention all the other things along the way like docking fees, maintenance, insurance, etc...
Holding significant amounts of Amazon stock for example only benefits the billionaire, whereas if they sold the stock it could democratize ownership and allow many more to benefit from Amazon's growth.
There's a scene in the Digha Nikaya where the Buddha says there's nothing particularly wrong with having a lot of money, as long as you spend it. The more lavishly, the better. If you spend it, that circulates the wealth and creates jobs. Potentially exciting jobs doing fun, fulfilling things that wouldn't be possible any other way. A couple thousand years ago that was making beautiful things, but making rockets is perhaps not so different?
By contrast, if you just hoard it, Warren Buffett style, none of that wealth is doing anybody any good.
No it isn't. This is incredibly polluting. Yachts are also very polluting. I am not sure what is worse. But there other much more socially valuable ways for billionaires to spend money.
Charity, building parks, funding research, giving out scholarships, are all ways of stocking rich peoples egos that are also beneficial to society.
Even if you look at adrenaline pumping adventures, you can do helium balloons, sailing yachts, or submarine voyages to the deep ocean. These do not create much pollution.
> this is by far more socially valuable than buying yachts and doing all the other things that billionaires spend their money on.
Perhaps, but I'm not really seeing it. This looks to me like it's about equally valuable, but comes with the downside of further increasing the number of launches -- and launches are pretty terrible, environmentally speaking.
In any case, here's hoping that the future will prove me wrong, since it's pretty clear that we have no choice. This is the path we're going, regardless of whether it turns out to be good or the opposite of good overall.
The technology advancements from the development of space are very significant and have big impacts for everyone back on the surface.
I haven't looked into it, but I'd guess those from yachts and the like are far less substantial.
> launches are pretty terrible, environmentally speaking
Individual launches are quite bad when compared to things like a single car. But on a macro scale, my understanding is that they are a rounding error on a rounding error.
I've heard the statistic that each orbital launch is the equivalent to the emissions of the cars of a few hundred people. There are currently about 100 orbital launches per year across the world. So even if we increased the number of launches by 100-fold (which would be absolutely bonkers -- feasible, but bonkers), it would a very small fraction of all non-commercial auto emissions in the US alone, for example.
Of course, this is only looking at greenhouse gas emissions, which I think is the most pressing issue. I'm less familiar with broader potential environmental issues with launches, so perhaps I'm missing something important there.
Edit: Fix a math error and cleaned up the comment in general.
> The technology advancements from the development of space are very significant and have big impacts for everyone back on the surface.
This is true, and I'm not arguing that there's no value in space exploration. I'm arguing that making going into space something that is common is a highly questionable goal, and isn't necessary in order to get the technological advancements that come with learning how to operate in space.
And, more to the point of the topic at hand, there is no value to sending business executives into space at all.
> I've heard the statistic that each orbital launch is the equivalent to the emissions of the cars of a few hundred people.
That may be -- but an orbital launch can't carry anywhere near as many people as a few hundred cars, even if there's one driver per car.
The proper way to measure this isn't to compare # of launches with # of cars, but the amount of pollution and fuel use per a standard unit mass of payload.
And cars (as well as airplanes) are actually good examples of why the increase in space launches concerns me. Both planes and cars are very harsh on the environment. But that wasn't a real issue until using them became possible to untold millions of people.
In the words of the great bill burr, even if they're a psychopath, at least they're on a bicycle or in a space ship rather than spilling oil in the ocean. The more dumb stuff a rich person like this does, the less they're involved in doing truly bad shit.
Sounds like you are upset with the state Government of New Mexico and the voters in whatever counties for funding Spaceport America. Those entities are the ones responsible for how they choose to spend money, not Branson.
Branson is doing this because he thinks there is money to be made flying rich people to space. Spaceport America was funded because the funding entities thought there was money to be made by doing it. The majority of the investment for virgin galactic’s program was private, and a lot came from people who already booked flights to space.
While an accomplishment no doubt, the utility and difficulty of achieving orbital speeds is not even in the same ballpark as simply flying above the Karman line.
I used to think differently also but then I learned from KSP how incredibly more difficult achieving orbital velocity(and surviving deceleration from such) is than simply going up and back down.
New Shepard looks like an orbit rocket but is not even close in cabability. SpaceShipTwo would burn up on re-entry if it ever reached orbital speeds.
Years ago when they took the X-prize it was explained as something groundbreaking how they folded the wings for re-entry. I, along with probably the vast majority of the public, equated this re-entry to the same re-entry that the Space Shuttle experiences and felt this was some monumental achievement and advancement of the art.
Again, not to belittle the accomplishment, as it is definitely in an elite realm, but not even close to what is accomplished by Boeing, Lockheed, NASA, SpaceX, and all the other entities actually achieving orbit.
Back in 2003 when SSO went to 100km, landed, then did it again a couple of weeks later, it was an amazing accomplishment.
18 years later notsomuch. SpaceX have eclipsed it with the F9 and Crew Dragon, let alone the progress they're making on starship.
Virgin Orbit is interesting though. Electron is good too. F9 is great. Starship will be shocking if it works. Bezos and Branson though? It's nearer youtuber stuff than grown up rockets.
> SpaceShipTwo would burn up on re-entry if it ever reached orbital speeds
Our biggest problem with space is having engines good enough. We have nothing that comes close to being remotely adequate.
With a decent sci-fi-grade engine, we don't need to use the atmosphere to turn speed into heat - we can just point the engine in the right direction and step on it until we get a manageable speed, then point it down to slow the fall.
I've always been against manned space flight, I think it would be better to send up robots. However, if Branson and Bezos want to spend their money on this I feel its okay as long as they don't suck up too many subsidies.
The interesting turning point will be when one of these guys doesn't make it back, how will the public react? Surely not the same way we did back when Challenger exploded.
We can only pray and hope that one of these goobers doesn't make it back. Not that they won't just be replaced by another one, but it might nip their personality cults in the bud a little.
The page says "9 reviews" but shows only six, four of which are for books. The most recent is from 2006. One is an endorsement for the product category, not the specific product.
So we're left with a single recommendation from 2000, and it reads like it was written by the manufacturer who paid a lot of money for the review. Or maybe Jeff really did like the product.
The whole livestream was cringe-inducing, but maybe that's because I'm a peasant and their target market was the ticket holders (AFAIK you can already give Branson your money in exchange for a promise that some day you can experience what he experienced), they even had an interview with 2 random folks at the after-party, who were there because they plan to go up. Of course the interview didn't bring any insights other than "Rich person is excited she is going to go on a rocket".
You think Richard Branson attached a self-aggrandizing title to himself to comply with regulations, rather than it just being another stroke in this self-indulgent, egotistic, public masturbatory display?
There are different rules for non employees versus employees, but Virgin received permission to fly non employees a few days ago. (Afaict Branson is not an employee)
If you're referring to stemming climate change, you won't succeed. I doubt anyone will. Modern society depends on manufacturing, food, and travel, and nobody will give it up. It's a steep fitness landscape and doesn't really work because someone "breaking the rules" will have a substantially easier time.
Climate change prevention is a meme for rich countries. It's an unwinnable battle.
I'm not saying we shouldn't be paying attention. We absolutely should. But humans follow gradient ascent and won't be willing to handicap every area of life to make modest gains on the climate front.
Paper straws don't even make a dent.
It's happening, and we'll just have to adapt. Sucks immeasurably for the current biodiversity, but life has adapted to much warmer climate in the past. We should catalog what we can while we can.
To address your comment, I think you'll find greater success in extending the lives of rich and powerful people. Once they realize there's a long term ahead, they'll adjust their thinking and time horizons.
I'm less worried about current biodiversity than I am about the risk of significant population centers becoming uninhabitable over the coming decades. Some due to inundation, others because human bodies can survive high heat or high humidity, but not both a the same time.
It seems potentially worthwhile to fight a figurative battle for stemming climate change in order to try and reduce the risk of setting off a chain of events that could lead to a literal war.
That said, I suspect that fretting about space tourism also wouldn't make much of a dent. Maybe more than worrying about straws, but I bet we would get a lot more out of, e.g., allowing the real price of meat to rise back up to what it was 50 years ago.
Cue the usual string of anti-money, anti-profits, anti-capitalism, anti-business comments.
Frankly, I continue to find this ideology perplexing. Particularly at a time when, quite literally, everyone reading this likely owes their very lives to the fruits of capitalism.
Before you say "Government funded the vaccines!". Sure. And the companies that were ready --with technology, know-how, people, equipment, laboratories, systems, software, etc.-- were ready, at that precise moment in time, because of decades upon decades of developing products for profit. From the pharmaceutical companies to the makers of the chips in the machines they used to do the work to the machining equipment that manufactured the components of the lab equipment and the injection molding systems that made the plastic parts and the computers software engineers used to write the code that ran all of it. And more. Much more.
Quite literally, from birth until you the moment you are sitting in front of your computer reading this comment, everything that has touched your life and surrounds you has been the product of capitalism. Need I list it all? Imagine everything in that hospital where you were born. From the very materials and components used to construct the building to the equipment in the rooms, the drugs and the accumulated knowledge stemming from decades of advancements.
And now, today, everything on your desk, the room you are in, your home, office, car and more. All of it is the fruit of capitalism. Which, from one perspective, is people at all levels --from small entrepreneur to multi-billionaires-- risking their money and reputation to go after a dream or a need. And that's how we've pushed forward.
Is capitalism and for-profit enterprise the best? Who knows? Likely not. Yet it is the best humanity has come up with so far. And the results are hard to argue against.
The standard of living of the average person in the world has risen considerably --and continues to do so-- for centuries. Nothing has elevated more people out of poverty than this approach. Yes, we still have more work ahead of us, but the solution isn't to hand everyone fish. The solution is to collectively solve problems through risk-taking and, yes, profit motive. We have mountains of evidence to show that this approach is the best way to raise people from poverty.
I truly can't comprehend people who have this ideological hatred or disdain of business, profit and capitalism. At a very minimum the hypocrisy that is their very lives runs far, deep and thick. Now, if they all rejected the products of capitalism and for-profit business and lived in an ideologically pure condition where they lived their lives where their mouths tend to go, well, then they would at least deserve some respect for not being hypocrites.
Richard Branson risked it all. Not just his money. His life.
He has it all. And yet he strapped himself into a rocket.
None of his critics (or critics of capitalism) would even consider being inconvenienced in support of their ideology, much less risk their lives for it.
> Cue the usual string of anti-money, anti-profits, anti-capitalism, anti-business comments.
It's perfectly reasonable to support something and to be critical of it. It could be argued this is how most progress happens -- by critically evaluating, changing and continuing to do so.
Also, the thread seems pretty tame -- not sure what you're reading but it's mostly on-point.
> Quite literally, from birth until you the moment you are sitting in front of your computer reading this comment, everything that has touched your life and surrounds you has been the product of capitalism. Need I list it all?
You could make the same argument during feudal times. "All you see before you is because of the king! Give praise to the king for all you have!"
But in reality, everything you would care to list is a product of worker labor, not capitalism or capitalists. It's the worker who deserves our praise and attention -- and especially the rewards of our modern time -- not Richard Branson and people like him.
Compare the standard of living of the average person when, as you say, everything was provided by the one and only ruler to BILLIONS of people being elevated by capitalism.
As I said, not perfect by any means, but nothing anyone has come-up with has ever come close.
Again, this same argument could have been made during feudal times.
"Look at your standard of living and how great it is! Do not be envious of the king's standard of living, for you have only him to thank for your material comfort. Instead, be thankful you do not have to live like your ancestors, who were slaughtered and raped and starved to death. The king has protected you and your family from slaughter and rape and provides you food and shelter. This system is not perfect, but nothing anyone has come up with has ever come close to the greatness of our king and what he has done for you."
It's not persuasive.
> when, as you say, everything was provided by the one and only ruler
I did not say that. In fact, during feudal times everything was still provided by workers. Workers farmed food, raised families, built houses, served in the armies, and did the work required to run society. Without workers society would collapse. Without kings (or billionaires, our modern kings), society would barely notice their absence.
> As I said, not perfect by any means, but nothing anyone has come-up with has ever come close.
I noticed in another reply you said
Today the average worker in most economies has as much freedom as they want (they can quit and go get a different job and even make more money) and tons of protections (rightly so)."
You know where those protections came from, right? They didn't come from capitalists of the time, that's for sure. They came from unionized laborers demanding and fighting, literally for those protections, with many paying the ultimate price [1], when capitalists responded with guns and bombs. Capitalists today still fight unions tooth and nail, because they know that when unions have power, workers get protections (rightly so). This idea capitalism is the best humanity has to offered is proven wrong by the improvements labor (not capitalists) have made to the system. Labor has more to say about how to improve the system. If they have improved it in the past, as you admit by calling their improvements "right", why are you not open to their ideas to improve it further?
I would rephrase the OP's argument to "capitalism is the best humanity has offered so far". Or to paraphrase Churchill "capitalism is the worst form of economy except for all those forms that have been tried from time to time". Note: I only mean real-world, tried-and-true forms of economies. Not in books, not utopias, only real societies. Because not even this capitalism is "by the book", many countries and many epochs defined it differently, with unions, with subsidies, with with with... there's a lot to be improved, but I still argue we didn't have better (or less bad, if you want).
Because capitalists, by definition, exploit others in order to turn a profit. Capitalism isn't a win-win game. Nothing 'trickles down'. Without sufficient government regulation, you get things like one trip to the ER bankrupting a person, Amazon delivery drivers defecating in baggies while working, megacorps like Walmart putting thousands of small shops out of business without creating anything of better value, to name just a few consequences.
The cherry on top is that the growth mindset at the center of modern capitalism (fueled by industrialism) is extremely unsustainable, due to capitalists' myopic decisions and the relevant economics' inability (or unwillingness) to calculate environmental costs as part of the profit equation. Sure, a couple centuries of explosive growth and innovation is cool, but tragically pointless when the system collapses under its own weight after it exhausts all reasonably-extractable resources. And no, space mining is not going to save it. Even oil is already becoming unprofitable to extract in many areas on our own planet, how do you expect anything involving spaceflight to be? Even events like this Branson party wouldn't exist if the companies involved didn't believe they were turning a profit (in this case, by fleecing would-be space travelers).
> Because capitalists, by definition, exploit others in order to turn a profit.
This is the kind of thing someone who has never run a non-trivial business of any kind might say.
I'll concede that during the dark ages of the industrial revolution workers needed help. That's the history of humanity. We suck at things until we figure out the right way to do it. Today the average worker in most economies has as much freedom as they want (they can quit and go get a different job and even make more money) and tons of protections (rightly so).
"exploit others to turn a profit"? Hogwash. Please. You might not understand any of this until you are personally responsible for making payroll.
Any business that creates a product converts labor into a product that is sold to another party. The capitalist uses his position of power in owning the means of production necessary to create the product in order to turn a profit on this transaction, by extracting money from the laborer as well as from the buyer (in most cases, another laborer). So the net result is that laborers work, and the capitalists leech money from all parties involved. How do you think it occurs that the wealth gap keeps growing? If capitalists were equitable, the profit would go mostly into the pockets of the laborers, and we would not have such a massive divide in between working and capitalist classes. But this is utopian and goes against the reasons capitalists become capitalists in the first place- to get richer. And to get richer, you have to extract money from someone else, as it is a zero-sum game.
When it grows then people still appreciate the quality of life that the growing company provides.
At some point though the startup becomes a behemoth and the rate of improvement in quality of life provided by the behemoth slows down. It's natural, S-curves rule the world.
But the hedonistic treadmill has already took hold of the population and all of a sudden with the rate of improvement in quality of life slowing down they all take a long and hard look at the monetary rewards reaped by the company and the entrepreneur.
All that can be summed up with:
"What have you done for me recently?"
If the population think that the answer is "not enough" then the next logical step to extract quality of life out of the company is to break it up and expropriate the entrepreneur.
That way you'd get yet another boost in your quality out of past purchases of products and services by de-facto retroactively stealing them. That's a good way to beat the hedonistic treadmill, to get one last hit out of the bong...or in this case out of Windows 95.
On top of that you also get the huge quality of life boost of seeing somebody richer than yourself getting down at your level or even worse.
So it's useless to try and reason with people. The heart wants what it wants.
There is some equilibrium though . Under the current system the limit was tested most recently by Microsoft and Bill Gates.
It took:
a) 160B personal wealth back in 1999 = 262B today equivalent
b) Total domination in a newborn sector of the economy which everybody wanted to have a foot in.
c) Not wanting to talk with politicians and bend to play the D.C. lobbying games.
d) Lots of angry competitors who actually did bend and went to cry to D.C. and accepted to play their games.
e) But all of the above wouldn't have mattered if Windows 98 was as big of a leap in quality of life provided as Windows 95.
So the lesson here is:
1) You would not have to worry about the haters until you are disgustingly rich, they can moan and cry but they can't do anything.
2) If you reach a stage where your company is exceptionally powerful and you are disgustingly rich and you want to keep going for more then you have to keep taking risks like you were poor and the company was a startup company. That's the only way to beat the S-curve and avoid the "what have you done for me recently?" question.
I agree it is sad. Also largely hypocritical of HN in general, since historically HN shows its contempt for the poor (read any post about zoning or rent regulation in SF) than the rich.
I truly can't comprehend people who have this ideological hatred or disdain of business, profit and capitalism.
Because not all CEOs are Richard Branson, who for all his flaws is known for having a big, playful, loving heart. The loyalty he cultivates is fierce because he genuinely cares about people. He famously caught one of his first employees stealing from him (literally pocketing money out of a cash register!). He didn't fire him, he forgave him and used it as a teaching opportunity. He is the exception, not the rule.
It is a fairly well known statistic that the rate of sociopathy we see in CEOs is much higher than the average population, potentially by orders of magnitude. The reason is simple enough. For-profit businesses don't have any rule or ideal to care about humans beyond what it takes to make a profit. If it is ever found to be profitable to throw bodies into the furnace to keep the wheels churning then many members of a company will do just that, even people who aren't pathological, because power and money corrupts many people who even have the best intent.
This as opposed to non-profit or governments, which is a very different set of ideals, established for people, not for profit, by definition. This isn't to say that these are perfectly implemented, pure, un-corrupted. Fair from it. The point is that at the very least the ideals exist.
> If it is ever found to be profitable to throw bodies into the furnace to keep the wheels churning then many members of a company will do just that
Sorry, that's just crazy. Of the billions of businesses that exist world wide, the only "business" that has ever gone that far has been government, the Nazi's.
This reduction of all business under the sky to a single variable, where everyone is evil as a function of profit is just silly. Also, businesses don't have to be outwardly visible in their kindness like Branson in order to be a force for good in the community. These are stories that never make the mainstream and yet, on the aggregate, are much larger than anything Branson has done on this front. A simple local example: Our largest boat dealer/manufacturer in the area pays for and supports all local aquatic programs for kids.
> This as opposed to non-profit or governments
The day you can name ten such organizations who have lifted billions of people out of poverty is the day this statement stops being silly. Until then. No. It's a fantasy.
Sure, the ideals exist. Great. They have done nothing (or very little) for the billions of people who have improved their lives because entrepreneurs, large, medium and small, have risked life, limb and treasure to chase a dream and, yes, profit.
Again, every time anyone has these thoughts they need to look around the room, what they are typing on, where they live and everything that has touched their lives (and, in some cases, kept them alive) and come to the realization that this stuff was not the product of a benevolent king, government or non-profit. So, how about we are a little honest about this?
You seem to be interpreting what I'm saying literally. No, I don't believe that businesses literally have furnaces in which they throw humans. It is a metaphor.
Nobody said "everyone is evil as a function of profit." Where is this coming from?
You seem deeply affected by this for some reason, and it's pretty difficult to have a conversation from a place where my message is being this severely caricaturized and distorted. Not seeing a way forward with this discussion until we can make it a little less personal.
> Sorry, that's just crazy. Of the billions of businesses that exist world wide, the only "business" that has ever gone that far has been government, the Nazi's.
How many people did cigarettes bring an early death to, while the tobacco companies hid and fought the evidence that they're awful for health? How is that appreciably different than literal gas chambers?
Same for lead companies too. They knew it was making people sick and killing them, but they hired people to publish bogus research and keep selling it.
> The promise of suborbital tourism is that it could expand space access to many, many more people.
Sure. I mean the 0.0001%ers. Yay for them. So while they're slapping each others' backs, there are people who are just trying to do their best to feed their family. These "accomplishments" mean nothing to them.
And this billionaire worshiping really needs to just end. It's so pathetic.
There are many ways seemingly unrelated technologies can enable new developments. For example, without orbital rockets, smartphone navigation wouldn’t exist, as we wouldn’t have GPS.
I think you are missing an important distinction here: when the first planes got commercialised, even the first passenger flights weren't just amusement rides. They were expensive, sure, but they served a legit purpose.
The same is true to an even greater degree for mobile phones.
Joy rides to the edge of space however are neither new (Dennis Tito went all the way to the ISS back in 2001 and jet planes to the upper stratosphere could be booked for decades as well) nor in any way pushing progress.
Nonsense like this doesn't have to be stopped - everyone's free to spend their money however they wish - it's the glorification of the ultra-rich and their playthings (especially in the face of pending global ecological and social collapse) that's is being criticized.
Brandson’s flights, once available to the public, will cost ~$200k, not $20m like flights to the ISS have costed in the past. A 100x decrease in cost is a pretty meaningful change.
What is your basis for claiming that these developments will have no useful secondary or tertiary spillover effects for society? Many space developments have created new technologies that are useful back on the surface.
People have been protesting space launches since the Apollo programs. It really adds nothing to the discussion to say “but other people have x problems.” We know. If it was necessary for 100% of humanity to be on equal footing in order for technology to progress we’d still be living in the stone age.
I think you missed the point of that commenter's rant, understandably though.
A majority of people (these days) see the benefit for a wide spectrum of folks this modern space race is producing. What no one gives a shit about is the ego driven, "I was first" billionaire crap that the media is focused on. It's like people who post, "first" on youtube videos. Sure, helps the video's algorithm stance a bit, but a useless attempt to feel important over something silly is annoying as hell.
Billionaire worship is indeed pathetic but these nuckleheads literally drive down costs so the rest of us knuckleheads can do a miserable family subby during the long summer years when Earth is scorching hot - literally on fire - due to climate change.
I'm not saying we shouldn't have any space programs, but given the urgency of climate change who in their right mind thinks space tourism for the masses is a good idea?
These non-orbital flights will be a footnote to the SpaceX chapter in history. In another decade humans will be hauling massive payloads to orbit, building on the Moon, Mars, in orbit, etc.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 81.8 ms ] threadPersonally I find the fact that we've set up a system where a few rich guys can burn obscene amounts of money in a dick measuring competition while people in their own countries increasingly increasingly lack stable income/house/food pretty abhorrent.
This is a good soundbyte, but misses that the world overall is getting richer and safer every year. The UK is not getting poorer. The US is not either. There's always going to be someone, somewhere who falls through the cracks. That doesn't mean we need to stop humans from exploring the solar system until everyone, everywhere is covered.
If you really care about solving homelessness and income inequality everywhere, why not take it from the truly "useless" industries like entertainment, cosmetics, toys, or luxury cars? Rather than the one industry trying to build a long-term future for humanity.
The US spends $50B a year on pet food or whatever. Get rid of the pets and take that money if you want. I don't see why you are offended that a couple billion is being spent on something that actually matters.
Sending billionaires into space so they can film Tik-Toks from an in-orbit Tesla roadster and get mining rights to all the precious metals in the solar system while patenting and monopolizing critical space travel tech doesn't advance humanity at all, it sets us back. Government investment in and exploration of space pushes us forward, as do massive taxes on billionaires and redistributing their wealth to the general populace and public works projects.
It's astounding to me that there is any non-billionaire alive that doesn't realize this.
Also this whole focus on the billionaires is misguided. Up until very recently only large nation states could afford to have a space program that is any more ambitious than delivering a satellite to orbit. Now it's eccentric billionaires. Tomorrow it'll be small cap companies. Elon Musk is not getting Mars, don't worry.
The number of food banks and their use is on the rise in the UK. The "Gig economy" takes all the worst bits of the precarious situation people were put in by zero hours contracts and additionally ditches pension benefits, holidays, and maternity/paternity leave. House prices are up ~13% on last year. Countries on aggregate might be getting wealthier, but that wealth is going straight into the pockets of those at the top end of the scale. On the lower end you'll find yourself in a damp filled flat run by a dodgy landlord with people who spent the pandemic working from home telling you to feel grateful.
> If you really care about solving homelessness and income inequality everywhere, why not take it from the truly "useless" industries like entertainment, cosmetics, toys, or luxury cars? Rather than the one industry trying to build a long-term future for humanity.
The benefits of this "space race" are limited to a few billionaires, the sectors you named largely benefit wide swathes of society.
> I don't see why you are offended that a couple billion is being spent on something that actually matters.
I don't think it does matter, at least not in the near/mid future.
I couldn't be more pro-Billionaire Astronauts, but at the same time there is danger in them spending their money and influence on things that may not work.
If they had gone out and bought more cars, yachts, and real estate, that's money that goes into mature industries with efficient supply chains that support the livelihoods of many people.
You can look at a billion dollar yacht and say, "What a waste", but the shipwrights, plumbers, electricians, carpenters, and welders who built the yacht, not to mention the crew that steers, maintains, and cleans it probably don't think it was a waste, nor do the people who work in the industries that provide the materials for it.
The same can be said about rockets and spacecrafts. They also need an efficient supply chain that provides all the parts. Even if these billionaires failed, they would have spent the money to feed upstream industries. Furthermore, they are thinking to commercialize such travels in future. More jobs and a bigger market if succeeded.
The money isn't disappearing, it's going to people feeding their families and creating research valuable to humanity as a whole.
So, exactly, what the fuck is Bad about this?
There's no argument, no logic, just people seeing "Hm, billionaire, things I can't do, must be bad"
Even in the least charitable readings, this sort of venture is so immeasurably better than the the myriad other ridiculous things billionaires do Just Because They Can.
If most of the money they skim off a business like this would be going back into the economy - if the owner of the company spent the money they accrue, would they still be billionaires?
There's an upper limit on how much you can spend. You can own a dozen private jets, a dozen castles, but you can't be on more than one at any given time. And, by not being on any given one for longer than a couple months every year, you can pretty much avoid paying taxes anywhere.
The X Prize was publicly funded big whoop.
I’m all for subsequent efforts using no public resources aside a regulatory agency curbing the excesses of privatized space efforts.
This was not, to my understanding, connected to the X Prize. Also they didn't win the X Prize according this article [0].
[0] > A team led by Burt Rutan would [claim the X Prize eight years later](https://arstechnica.com/uncategorized/2004/06/3908-2/), barely within the deadline. Rutan’s team built SpaceShipOne, a small rocket-powered vehicle dropped from an aircraft.
There will always be naysayers, detractors, and people who will always question the value of exporation and human inventiveness.
Like in business, if it was obvious, it would have long been done. Yes, it does tak ea bit of brashness and self serving to do new things. and their practically is seldomly obvious at the beginning.
But this is EXACTLY how humanity moves forward!!! The crazy ones, the selfish ones. The ones that sometimes do it for the glory, or just because its' hard.
It's very easy to critique, but in the words or someone else... "what have you done that is so great?"
[0]https://www.xprize.org/prizes/ansari
" In 2004, it signed a deal with Virgin Galactic to develop the Virgin SpaceShip, a suborbital spacecraft, for space tourism. Virgin Group and Scaled Composites have subsequently formed a joint venture, The Spaceship Company, to manufacture the spacecraft."[0]
[0]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojave_Aerospace_Ventures
I’ll use it against cynicism in the future!
https://www.xprize.org/about/people/the-ansari-family
Go away.
"The billionaires see a future in which humanity, constrained for resources such as water, food, and energy, fights ever harder for a more meager share. “We really could go down one of two paths,” Garriott said. “In a few decades we could reach a point where we have to ration birth rates, energy, food, and more in a stark way. Or, we could bring back the bounty of resources in space, and now is the time to start that process."
It's good that billionaires are looking into a distant future, I can't fault them for that. It surprises me that they're not also looking at the present and wondering how they can also have a meaningful and large impact on problems we have right now that are going to impact that future they see. Those hundreds of millions of dollars and huge number of people working on going into space could be doing some serious work on the ground here.
I get it, I really get what they're going after here, but I can't help but think there are really truly better things to do with all that money and time.
When they buy a yacht it feeds that entire supply chain. not to mention all the other things along the way like docking fees, maintenance, insurance, etc...
Holding significant amounts of Amazon stock for example only benefits the billionaire, whereas if they sold the stock it could democratize ownership and allow many more to benefit from Amazon's growth.
By contrast, if you just hoard it, Warren Buffett style, none of that wealth is doing anybody any good.
Charity, building parks, funding research, giving out scholarships, are all ways of stocking rich peoples egos that are also beneficial to society.
Even if you look at adrenaline pumping adventures, you can do helium balloons, sailing yachts, or submarine voyages to the deep ocean. These do not create much pollution.
Perhaps, but I'm not really seeing it. This looks to me like it's about equally valuable, but comes with the downside of further increasing the number of launches -- and launches are pretty terrible, environmentally speaking.
In any case, here's hoping that the future will prove me wrong, since it's pretty clear that we have no choice. This is the path we're going, regardless of whether it turns out to be good or the opposite of good overall.
I haven't looked into it, but I'd guess those from yachts and the like are far less substantial.
> launches are pretty terrible, environmentally speaking
Individual launches are quite bad when compared to things like a single car. But on a macro scale, my understanding is that they are a rounding error on a rounding error.
I've heard the statistic that each orbital launch is the equivalent to the emissions of the cars of a few hundred people. There are currently about 100 orbital launches per year across the world. So even if we increased the number of launches by 100-fold (which would be absolutely bonkers -- feasible, but bonkers), it would a very small fraction of all non-commercial auto emissions in the US alone, for example.
Of course, this is only looking at greenhouse gas emissions, which I think is the most pressing issue. I'm less familiar with broader potential environmental issues with launches, so perhaps I'm missing something important there.
Edit: Fix a math error and cleaned up the comment in general.
This is true, and I'm not arguing that there's no value in space exploration. I'm arguing that making going into space something that is common is a highly questionable goal, and isn't necessary in order to get the technological advancements that come with learning how to operate in space.
And, more to the point of the topic at hand, there is no value to sending business executives into space at all.
> I've heard the statistic that each orbital launch is the equivalent to the emissions of the cars of a few hundred people.
That may be -- but an orbital launch can't carry anywhere near as many people as a few hundred cars, even if there's one driver per car.
The proper way to measure this isn't to compare # of launches with # of cars, but the amount of pollution and fuel use per a standard unit mass of payload.
And cars (as well as airplanes) are actually good examples of why the increase in space launches concerns me. Both planes and cars are very harsh on the environment. But that wasn't a real issue until using them became possible to untold millions of people.
Inb4 fumes from the ship killing earth.
Branson is doing this because he thinks there is money to be made flying rich people to space. Spaceport America was funded because the funding entities thought there was money to be made by doing it. The majority of the investment for virgin galactic’s program was private, and a lot came from people who already booked flights to space.
While an accomplishment no doubt, the utility and difficulty of achieving orbital speeds is not even in the same ballpark as simply flying above the Karman line.
I used to think differently also but then I learned from KSP how incredibly more difficult achieving orbital velocity(and surviving deceleration from such) is than simply going up and back down.
New Shepard looks like an orbit rocket but is not even close in cabability. SpaceShipTwo would burn up on re-entry if it ever reached orbital speeds.
Years ago when they took the X-prize it was explained as something groundbreaking how they folded the wings for re-entry. I, along with probably the vast majority of the public, equated this re-entry to the same re-entry that the Space Shuttle experiences and felt this was some monumental achievement and advancement of the art.
Again, not to belittle the accomplishment, as it is definitely in an elite realm, but not even close to what is accomplished by Boeing, Lockheed, NASA, SpaceX, and all the other entities actually achieving orbit.
18 years later notsomuch. SpaceX have eclipsed it with the F9 and Crew Dragon, let alone the progress they're making on starship.
Virgin Orbit is interesting though. Electron is good too. F9 is great. Starship will be shocking if it works. Bezos and Branson though? It's nearer youtuber stuff than grown up rockets.
Make that days - 29 September and 4 October 2004.
Our biggest problem with space is having engines good enough. We have nothing that comes close to being remotely adequate.
With a decent sci-fi-grade engine, we don't need to use the atmosphere to turn speed into heat - we can just point the engine in the right direction and step on it until we get a manageable speed, then point it down to slow the fall.
Again, nothing we have comes even close to this.
The interesting turning point will be when one of these guys doesn't make it back, how will the public react? Surely not the same way we did back when Challenger exploded.
Even if you search Space Shuttle Challenger now you instantly get crud content.
Is there a regulatory reason that everybody on board had to be some kind of specialist?
If Jeff Bezos were testing a new Amazon product, would he not be a specialist evaluating the customer experience?
https://www.amazon.com/gp/profile/amzn1.account.AHDRLTPKOLOH...
The page says "9 reviews" but shows only six, four of which are for books. The most recent is from 2006. One is an endorsement for the product category, not the specific product.
So we're left with a single recommendation from 2000, and it reads like it was written by the manufacturer who paid a lot of money for the review. Or maybe Jeff really did like the product.
My guess is that it's an insurance thing.
Climate change prevention is a meme for rich countries. It's an unwinnable battle.
I'm not saying we shouldn't be paying attention. We absolutely should. But humans follow gradient ascent and won't be willing to handicap every area of life to make modest gains on the climate front.
Paper straws don't even make a dent.
It's happening, and we'll just have to adapt. Sucks immeasurably for the current biodiversity, but life has adapted to much warmer climate in the past. We should catalog what we can while we can.
To address your comment, I think you'll find greater success in extending the lives of rich and powerful people. Once they realize there's a long term ahead, they'll adjust their thinking and time horizons.
It seems potentially worthwhile to fight a figurative battle for stemming climate change in order to try and reduce the risk of setting off a chain of events that could lead to a literal war.
That said, I suspect that fretting about space tourism also wouldn't make much of a dent. Maybe more than worrying about straws, but I bet we would get a lot more out of, e.g., allowing the real price of meat to rise back up to what it was 50 years ago.
Frankly, I continue to find this ideology perplexing. Particularly at a time when, quite literally, everyone reading this likely owes their very lives to the fruits of capitalism.
Before you say "Government funded the vaccines!". Sure. And the companies that were ready --with technology, know-how, people, equipment, laboratories, systems, software, etc.-- were ready, at that precise moment in time, because of decades upon decades of developing products for profit. From the pharmaceutical companies to the makers of the chips in the machines they used to do the work to the machining equipment that manufactured the components of the lab equipment and the injection molding systems that made the plastic parts and the computers software engineers used to write the code that ran all of it. And more. Much more.
Quite literally, from birth until you the moment you are sitting in front of your computer reading this comment, everything that has touched your life and surrounds you has been the product of capitalism. Need I list it all? Imagine everything in that hospital where you were born. From the very materials and components used to construct the building to the equipment in the rooms, the drugs and the accumulated knowledge stemming from decades of advancements.
And now, today, everything on your desk, the room you are in, your home, office, car and more. All of it is the fruit of capitalism. Which, from one perspective, is people at all levels --from small entrepreneur to multi-billionaires-- risking their money and reputation to go after a dream or a need. And that's how we've pushed forward.
Is capitalism and for-profit enterprise the best? Who knows? Likely not. Yet it is the best humanity has come up with so far. And the results are hard to argue against.
The standard of living of the average person in the world has risen considerably --and continues to do so-- for centuries. Nothing has elevated more people out of poverty than this approach. Yes, we still have more work ahead of us, but the solution isn't to hand everyone fish. The solution is to collectively solve problems through risk-taking and, yes, profit motive. We have mountains of evidence to show that this approach is the best way to raise people from poverty.
I truly can't comprehend people who have this ideological hatred or disdain of business, profit and capitalism. At a very minimum the hypocrisy that is their very lives runs far, deep and thick. Now, if they all rejected the products of capitalism and for-profit business and lived in an ideologically pure condition where they lived their lives where their mouths tend to go, well, then they would at least deserve some respect for not being hypocrites.
Richard Branson risked it all. Not just his money. His life.
He has it all. And yet he strapped himself into a rocket.
None of his critics (or critics of capitalism) would even consider being inconvenienced in support of their ideology, much less risk their lives for it.
It's perfectly reasonable to support something and to be critical of it. It could be argued this is how most progress happens -- by critically evaluating, changing and continuing to do so.
Also, the thread seems pretty tame -- not sure what you're reading but it's mostly on-point.
You could make the same argument during feudal times. "All you see before you is because of the king! Give praise to the king for all you have!"
But in reality, everything you would care to list is a product of worker labor, not capitalism or capitalists. It's the worker who deserves our praise and attention -- and especially the rewards of our modern time -- not Richard Branson and people like him.
Compare the standard of living of the average person when, as you say, everything was provided by the one and only ruler to BILLIONS of people being elevated by capitalism.
As I said, not perfect by any means, but nothing anyone has come-up with has ever come close.
"Look at your standard of living and how great it is! Do not be envious of the king's standard of living, for you have only him to thank for your material comfort. Instead, be thankful you do not have to live like your ancestors, who were slaughtered and raped and starved to death. The king has protected you and your family from slaughter and rape and provides you food and shelter. This system is not perfect, but nothing anyone has come up with has ever come close to the greatness of our king and what he has done for you."
It's not persuasive.
> when, as you say, everything was provided by the one and only ruler
I did not say that. In fact, during feudal times everything was still provided by workers. Workers farmed food, raised families, built houses, served in the armies, and did the work required to run society. Without workers society would collapse. Without kings (or billionaires, our modern kings), society would barely notice their absence.
> As I said, not perfect by any means, but nothing anyone has come-up with has ever come close.
I noticed in another reply you said
You know where those protections came from, right? They didn't come from capitalists of the time, that's for sure. They came from unionized laborers demanding and fighting, literally for those protections, with many paying the ultimate price [1], when capitalists responded with guns and bombs. Capitalists today still fight unions tooth and nail, because they know that when unions have power, workers get protections (rightly so). This idea capitalism is the best humanity has to offered is proven wrong by the improvements labor (not capitalists) have made to the system. Labor has more to say about how to improve the system. If they have improved it in the past, as you admit by calling their improvements "right", why are you not open to their ideas to improve it further?[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_Wars
The cherry on top is that the growth mindset at the center of modern capitalism (fueled by industrialism) is extremely unsustainable, due to capitalists' myopic decisions and the relevant economics' inability (or unwillingness) to calculate environmental costs as part of the profit equation. Sure, a couple centuries of explosive growth and innovation is cool, but tragically pointless when the system collapses under its own weight after it exhausts all reasonably-extractable resources. And no, space mining is not going to save it. Even oil is already becoming unprofitable to extract in many areas on our own planet, how do you expect anything involving spaceflight to be? Even events like this Branson party wouldn't exist if the companies involved didn't believe they were turning a profit (in this case, by fleecing would-be space travelers).
This is the kind of thing someone who has never run a non-trivial business of any kind might say.
I'll concede that during the dark ages of the industrial revolution workers needed help. That's the history of humanity. We suck at things until we figure out the right way to do it. Today the average worker in most economies has as much freedom as they want (they can quit and go get a different job and even make more money) and tons of protections (rightly so).
"exploit others to turn a profit"? Hogwash. Please. You might not understand any of this until you are personally responsible for making payroll.
Everybody loves a startup/small business.
When it grows then people still appreciate the quality of life that the growing company provides.
At some point though the startup becomes a behemoth and the rate of improvement in quality of life provided by the behemoth slows down. It's natural, S-curves rule the world.
But the hedonistic treadmill has already took hold of the population and all of a sudden with the rate of improvement in quality of life slowing down they all take a long and hard look at the monetary rewards reaped by the company and the entrepreneur.
All that can be summed up with:
"What have you done for me recently?"
If the population think that the answer is "not enough" then the next logical step to extract quality of life out of the company is to break it up and expropriate the entrepreneur.
That way you'd get yet another boost in your quality out of past purchases of products and services by de-facto retroactively stealing them. That's a good way to beat the hedonistic treadmill, to get one last hit out of the bong...or in this case out of Windows 95.
On top of that you also get the huge quality of life boost of seeing somebody richer than yourself getting down at your level or even worse.
So it's useless to try and reason with people. The heart wants what it wants.
There is some equilibrium though . Under the current system the limit was tested most recently by Microsoft and Bill Gates.
It took:
a) 160B personal wealth back in 1999 = 262B today equivalent
b) Total domination in a newborn sector of the economy which everybody wanted to have a foot in.
c) Not wanting to talk with politicians and bend to play the D.C. lobbying games.
d) Lots of angry competitors who actually did bend and went to cry to D.C. and accepted to play their games.
e) But all of the above wouldn't have mattered if Windows 98 was as big of a leap in quality of life provided as Windows 95.
So the lesson here is:
1) You would not have to worry about the haters until you are disgustingly rich, they can moan and cry but they can't do anything.
2) If you reach a stage where your company is exceptionally powerful and you are disgustingly rich and you want to keep going for more then you have to keep taking risks like you were poor and the company was a startup company. That's the only way to beat the S-curve and avoid the "what have you done for me recently?" question.
It is a fairly well known statistic that the rate of sociopathy we see in CEOs is much higher than the average population, potentially by orders of magnitude. The reason is simple enough. For-profit businesses don't have any rule or ideal to care about humans beyond what it takes to make a profit. If it is ever found to be profitable to throw bodies into the furnace to keep the wheels churning then many members of a company will do just that, even people who aren't pathological, because power and money corrupts many people who even have the best intent.
This as opposed to non-profit or governments, which is a very different set of ideals, established for people, not for profit, by definition. This isn't to say that these are perfectly implemented, pure, un-corrupted. Fair from it. The point is that at the very least the ideals exist.
Sorry, that's just crazy. Of the billions of businesses that exist world wide, the only "business" that has ever gone that far has been government, the Nazi's.
This reduction of all business under the sky to a single variable, where everyone is evil as a function of profit is just silly. Also, businesses don't have to be outwardly visible in their kindness like Branson in order to be a force for good in the community. These are stories that never make the mainstream and yet, on the aggregate, are much larger than anything Branson has done on this front. A simple local example: Our largest boat dealer/manufacturer in the area pays for and supports all local aquatic programs for kids.
> This as opposed to non-profit or governments
The day you can name ten such organizations who have lifted billions of people out of poverty is the day this statement stops being silly. Until then. No. It's a fantasy.
Sure, the ideals exist. Great. They have done nothing (or very little) for the billions of people who have improved their lives because entrepreneurs, large, medium and small, have risked life, limb and treasure to chase a dream and, yes, profit.
Again, every time anyone has these thoughts they need to look around the room, what they are typing on, where they live and everything that has touched their lives (and, in some cases, kept them alive) and come to the realization that this stuff was not the product of a benevolent king, government or non-profit. So, how about we are a little honest about this?
Nobody said "everyone is evil as a function of profit." Where is this coming from?
You seem deeply affected by this for some reason, and it's pretty difficult to have a conversation from a place where my message is being this severely caricaturized and distorted. Not seeing a way forward with this discussion until we can make it a little less personal.
How many people did cigarettes bring an early death to, while the tobacco companies hid and fought the evidence that they're awful for health? How is that appreciably different than literal gas chambers?
Sure. I mean the 0.0001%ers. Yay for them. So while they're slapping each others' backs, there are people who are just trying to do their best to feed their family. These "accomplishments" mean nothing to them.
And this billionaire worshiping really needs to just end. It's so pathetic.
There are many ways seemingly unrelated technologies can enable new developments. For example, without orbital rockets, smartphone navigation wouldn’t exist, as we wouldn’t have GPS.
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https:/...
https://www.reddit.com/r/SpaceXLounge/comments/dsppi6/a_ques...
The same is true to an even greater degree for mobile phones.
Joy rides to the edge of space however are neither new (Dennis Tito went all the way to the ISS back in 2001 and jet planes to the upper stratosphere could be booked for decades as well) nor in any way pushing progress.
Nonsense like this doesn't have to be stopped - everyone's free to spend their money however they wish - it's the glorification of the ultra-rich and their playthings (especially in the face of pending global ecological and social collapse) that's is being criticized.
What is your basis for claiming that these developments will have no useful secondary or tertiary spillover effects for society? Many space developments have created new technologies that are useful back on the surface.
I. Don’t. Care.
Space is cool.
Noted.
A majority of people (these days) see the benefit for a wide spectrum of folks this modern space race is producing. What no one gives a shit about is the ego driven, "I was first" billionaire crap that the media is focused on. It's like people who post, "first" on youtube videos. Sure, helps the video's algorithm stance a bit, but a useless attempt to feel important over something silly is annoying as hell.
Conan summed it up nicely...
"I dream of a day when space travel is available not only to billionaires, but to any person with a net worth of over $500 million."
[1] https://twitter.com/ConanOBrien/status/1415372778358951936