Also, ISRO achieved this at very low cost.
Remember that cost of space operations is one of the major hindrances in
exploring more.

Also, the Impact Probe worked. The Impact probe was an all or nothing
attempt and we got all.

The Chandrayaan-2 mission is even more ambitious. I am proud to be
living in this era and
 dreaming of contributing to this great endeavor one day.

Regards,
Venkat

On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 1:29 AM, Anand Balachandran Pillai
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 15, 2008 at 4:59 AM, Deepak Thukral <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> A job well done!
>>> (It is unknown whether Python was running onboard ;-)
>>
>> ISRO is in stone age as far as Computer Technology is concern (Their portal 
>> only works in IE6 and written in creepy html). I think they are toiling with 
>> C, Fortran & JAVA. Probably they should inherit Python/Erlang from NASA/ESA. 
>> Hoping their new GIS Keyhole like webapp will use Python.
>>
>
> Don't confuse the lack of sophistication of their website with any lack of
> sophistication in engineering. Space & rocket science/engineering is a much 
> more
> complex and delicate affair than typical software engineering. ISRO develops
> and uses complex software for mission control which is not exactly
> akin to developing a website - it is much more difficult to get right.
>
> Even if your website crashes, perhaps you might loose data or a few visitors
> and lose some uptime. However, this is not the case with the software used
> in space science. Everything has to work and work perfectly. Remember that
> simple software glitches have often caused entire rocket missions to be 
> aborted.
> This has happened even for mighty NASA. The most recent one I can think of
> is the glitch with VxWorks that happened in one of their Mars rovers
> which caused
> the system software to reboot itself many times.
>
> In fact ISRO has done a splendid job managing to put a satellite to Moon
> orbit and also perform a moon impact all in the very first attempt. Recall 
> that
> Russia and U.S.A have had several crash lands and aborted attempts in their
> moon missions. The quality control at ISRO has to be pretty damn good.
>
> I read a few articles about the images from Chandrayaan and it seems the
> camera they have is top-class. The images it has send are already pretty good,
> and it is perhaps the first moon satellite to carry a 3D (Terrain
> mapping) camera.
> I don't think any single moon (or perhaps earth) satellite is a classic 
> example
> of international co-operation. Chandrayaan carries 11 payloads.
>
> To me, it looks like India is leading the way in international space
> co-operation.
> ISRO needs a big pat on the back for what they have done.
>
>> Deepak
>>
>>
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> -Anand
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