• Carighan Maconar
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    126 months ago

    Valve got Sony to hold off on the PSN account linking for Helldivers II, valve got Boeing to hold off on the Starliner launch. Impressive!

  • @x4740N
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    6 months ago

    Boeing, I hope that’s unmanned

    Edit: no it’s not unmanned and knowing boeing’s track record with planes I hope this doesn’t end up being another challenger

    • partial_accumen
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      96 months ago

      They’ve had two uncrewed flights so far. Both had issues. The first’s issues were so bad that NASA ordered the second (previously unplanned) uncrewed flight. That one had issues too, not quite as bad though.

      • @halcyoncmdr
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        66 months ago

        Also, while their pad abort test was technically a success, it was only barely. Only 2 of the 3 parachutes deployed. You know, the same parachutes used for re-entry. Granted, that system has worked correctly since, and there’s always one-off issues. One-off issues being found are the reason for all the delays.

        These are the guys in the industry saying iterative design (like SpaceX) is dangerous, and that apparently taking 2x the budget and 4x the time is the way to make it work the first time safely.

        Boeing was the “safe” bet in this competition. They were supposed to have Starliner operational 4 years ago. SpaceX was the one expected to falter, being over budget and late. Instead, the SpaceX Dragon 2 has already made 23 launches (10 cargo deliveries and 13 crew missions) while Starliner still hasn’t made any deliveries or crewed launches yet. They made it to the ISS once, uncrewed, but it needed to be manually docked due to issues.

        It really is quite fascinating how much Starliner has dropped the ball on something that was expected to be quick and easy. While these are completely separate teams and systems from the airplane portion of the company, it seems like the overall company culture may be preventing them from actually making good products that are safe.

    • sebinspace
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      56 months ago

      Honestly? If you got on a Max right now, you’re more than likely going to be perfectly okay. Thousands of those planes fly each day with no issues…

    • @[email protected]
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      16 months ago

      For real though I’m not at all confident in Boeing’s engineering safety competence and rigor at this point. They have burned pretty much every single shred of goodwill and perceived competence they had built up over the course of the last 108 years.

      The fucking beancounters ran it into the ground, and all they give a shit about is their golden parachutes and covering their asses from any possible legal liability.

      I hope they can recover at some point. But if those idiotic finance types keep running the show, it’s gonna be on a downward spiral for a good long while.

  • @AshMan85
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    26 months ago

    They have failed in modern day to do what they and others succeeded in doing for many decades, building airplanes. How are they supposed to make a vessel ment for space if they can’t make one for in atmosphere? I guess by assassinating everyone that stands in there way. Retire the B-52 early and cancel all contracts for boeing

  • @[email protected]
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    -26 months ago

    It’s ok I heard they’re gonna swap the door for the one they use in the 737 MAX.

    Wait wha-

    explosive decompression