A spacecraft circling the moon has snapped the sharpest photos ever of the tracks and trash left behind by Apollo astronauts during their visits from 1969 to 1972.
Images taken by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter from 13 to 15 miles up show the astronauts' paths when they walked on the moon, as well as ruts left by a moon buggy. Experts could even identify the backpacks astronauts pitched out of their lunar landers before they returned to Earth.
"What we're seeing is a trail," said Arizona State University geology professor Mark Robinson, the orbiter's chief scientist.
"It's totally awesome.""
Isn't it cool, when chief scientists get quoted saying something like, "It's totally awesome?"
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Remastered, 2023. Chat GPT.
Apollo Moon Missions Rediscovered: Uncovering the Tracks and Treasures Left Behind
Recently, NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter has captured the most impressive photos to date of the Apollo astronauts' tracks and the debris they left behind during their expeditions from 1969 to 1972.
From an altitude of 13 to 15 miles, the images showcase the pathways that the astronauts traveled during their moonwalks, as well as the tracks left by their moon buggy.
Additionally, the experts could identify the backpacks that the astronauts tossed away from their lunar landers before returning to Earth.
"This trail is absolutely incredible," expressed Mark Robinson, the orbiter's chief scientist, and professor of geology at Arizona State University. "It's totally awesome."
It's amazing how far we have come as a society to witness such groundbreaking achievements. Even more thrilling is the fact that we continue to discover new aspects of these historic moments in time.
You could say that. Transformationis the new convergence, the new change.
Was the HP decision to let go it's PSG division, one of the Triad, Wall Street driven or some emotional knee-jerk reaction to dismal TouchPad sales?
The answer is 'Yes'. And HP is genius. Mother Blue see's a future without desktops.
It's a crazy world, upside down, inside out - we'll make sense of this over the next 18 months - rationalize or remember.
And we'll hear everything from "business is proceeding as usual, you will experience little impact", the typical HP Edgeline, Mopier, 9065 talk track to "see, we told you HP has no loyalty to you, why should you to them?" Dell, Lenovo, Samsung, PC dejour...
We'll read industry pundits explain how 'so and so' will take HP's $42billion company on, re-label and grow.
IPG - Supplies, are big. Sustainable?
Meanwhile, 10,000+ HP employees squirm, VARs scramble, 'loyal' HP Enterprise customers call emergency CIO driven IT meetings, evaluating their 5 year technology refresh plans.
General panic smolders just below the surface and MotherBlue stays the course. She's just too damn big to ignore, she can do absolutely anything she wants...
And this is just the beginning. This is the first in a sequence - tell me, if the largest PC company in the world can get out of PC's, how difficult is it to see the worlds largest printer company, get out of PRINTING?
IPG is 21%(Q1/2011) of HP total revenue - ten years ago, IPG accounted for 43% of revenues.
Guess how much PSG, the division HP is remembering to let go, contributed to total revenues...31%.
Do you see what I see? The biggest question is, who can afford to swallow IPG? Xerox? Ricoh? Cannon? Lexi? Nobody. What about spinning IPG off, all on its lonesome, eh?
Someday...
CONTENT, CONTENT, CONTENT.
PC's are dying, the focus, the singular focus, is not the machine, it's the stuff going through the machines - bits, data, thoughts, ideas, conversations, expressions, information - CONTENT.
Look to the content, not the machine - maybe, just maybe, HP has this all white boarded out, because they look hellbent on shedding their hardware pedigree and heading to the cloud.
Let's put this in context. Remember when every employee had a PC at their desk? For every new hire, IT had to set up credentials, order up a PC, secure network drops, and LOAD PRINT DRIVERS. Because every PC sold had a printer with it. Free Dells anyone?
Perhaps, quite soon, it won't matter how well the OPS partners are fairing, if the HP MpS program supports the channel or MES.
Maybe, someday soon, I won't be required to report how many third party toners I sold last year. Because, as goes the PC, so goes the printer.
Let's say you're selling copiers - no big stretch there.
Your company/dealer/branch conducts Monday morning group meetings followed by individual, one on one, 'Sales funnel' sessions.
Consider the following:
Scenario 1 - New Sales Rep
Your company-owned, CRM has to be updated, all the stages of the cycles illustrated and filled.
Your funnel covers 150% of your quota - all target accounts diagrammed, bases covered, red flags seen. Number of appointments, number of cold calls, demos, etc. etc., etc.
All normal and ordinary. You're ready and prepared for that meeting with your Sales Manager.
Scenario 2 - Old-Salt
Same company, same meeting.
You've been moving copiers since 1980 and remember selling machines on real cold calls; face to face, demo in the lobby, one appointment close.
All your prospects' and clients' business cards are at your fingertips. You've worked with more sales managers than you can remember.
Your Monday morning routine includes reminding the Sales Manager why you're still there, how much gear you've landed over the past decade and how many more are coming down in the next 30 days. You present this verbally because you don't get paid to play with spreadsheets and computers.