NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft has experienced a computer glitch that’s causing a bit of a communication breakdown between the 46-year-old probe and its mission team on Earth.

  • @sneezymrmilo
    link
    English
    92
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Bit of a misleading title. The voyager can still receive commands and send data to earth, the problem is that instead of useful data it just keeps sending repeating code of no use. Not a huge fan of these sensationalized and just blatantly wrong news article titles.

    • @Bonskreeskreeskree
      link
      English
      361 year ago

      Would you consider someone screaming gibberish at you, communicating?

      • @sneezymrmilo
        link
        English
        121 year ago

        Haha I mean that’s fair. Although I’m mainly just displeased with the title of the article. Its worded in a way that conveys that we’ve lost contact with the satellite completely, which is not the case. Just a bit too click baity for my tastes.

        • Jojo
          link
          fedilink
          English
          01 year ago

          I didn’t quite read it that way, but I can see how someone could read it that way. It does really seem like the probe is having problems with its internals, less than “communication has stopped”

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          41 year ago

          It’s actually just gotten far enough that the data is being rendered at lower fidelity to save resources

          They didn’t expect us to get sensors outside the heliosphere before winning the game, but players always immediately find crazy and unexpected ways to break your games

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        91 year ago

        From what I read they can talk to the CCS (Computer Command System) just fine but the CCS is getting garbled data from the FDS (Flight Data Subsystem)

      • @deafboy
        link
        English
        51 year ago

        People do this on a daily basis.