







SatNOGS Wins the 2014 Hackaday Prize For Satellite Networked Open Ground Station 21
szczys writes SatNOGS has won the 2014 Hackaday Prize. The team of developers designed a satellite ground station which can be built with available tools, commodity parts, and modest skills. Data from each station can be shared via a networked protocol to benefit a much wider swath of humanity than one station could otherwise accomplish.
My 555 timer based cure for cancer should have won (Score:2)
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Ever hear of nanosats? Mere mortals can buy them even and put them into orbit (certainly a modest kickstarter campaign can get one built).
There is also the OSCAR [wikipedia.org] series of amateur radio satellites that are generally available if you have qualifications as a ham radio operator.
Or for that matter, perhaps you want to watch the X-37B that the U.S. Air Force has sent up to try and figure out what they are doing?
In other words, there are plenty of applications for this kind of technology, especially if it was c
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Exclusive to a very very small group of people relative to the others. Not a good choice.
This is the quote right here. Yes the concept is great but lets face it what won here was a small niche concept (networked satellite monitoring) in a small niche part (tracking satellites) of an already small subset (RF / Ham) of the hacking community.
I won't see people running out to build these.
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all uses which have less practical use for me than 99% of hackaday posts. which is quite an accomplishment!
and you would think that amateur sats that already have goal of making received data available are already making said data available?
if I were to build one or two of the projects, this one would be the last on the list.
but it's SPACE! and the prize is space! .. I seriously don't get the rationale behind awarding them the first prize.
sure, it's cheap to build, but also the one with least uses.
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The sour grapes is strong in this one.