> Right, you must have missed the part where I said I saw that part. My post was responding to your statement where you incorrectly and condescendingly said that redundancy helps with ionizing radiation. It doesn't, as…
> It, in fact, does help. Voting mechanisms can help protect, detect, and/or recover from radiation-induced bit flips and outages. Early radiation-induced failures in systems can also be addressed in this way. You are…
> Hardly. Things can and are made to tolerate a high radiation environment. In SpaceX's case, this is done via redundancy (and perhaps shielding, to some extent) and replacing the satellites at regular intervals.…
> Right, you must have missed the part where I said I saw that part. My post was responding to your statement where you incorrectly and condescendingly said that redundancy helps with ionizing radiation. It doesn't, as…
> It, in fact, does help. Voting mechanisms can help protect, detect, and/or recover from radiation-induced bit flips and outages. Early radiation-induced failures in systems can also be addressed in this way. You are…
> Hardly. Things can and are made to tolerate a high radiation environment. In SpaceX's case, this is done via redundancy (and perhaps shielding, to some extent) and replacing the satellites at regular intervals.…