I am lucky enough to have been picked to spend a few months up on the International Space Station doing some kind of experiment.
During my downtime I assume I can watch a DVD or read a book because I brought my trusty laptop with me. Can I also surf the Internet while I am up there?
There is internet on the ISS. NASA uses modified laptops on the ISS more for reasons of cooling than things like radiation. The lack of convection in a microgravity environment means that air doesn’t circulate well through a laptop and you can get overheating problems, even considering the laptop’s normal fans.
As to the internet connection, the bandwidth is something close to 10 Mbits/Sec, so it’s pretty close to what many folks have for their home internet connection.
Any idea how that bandwidth is achieved (OK, scratch that, just read bup’s link), and what percentage of the ISS orbit has it available? Does it entirely depend on line of sight to a suitable ground station, or are there other paths available?
Kinda bizarre that they set it up so that astronauts remote control a ground computer that’s then connected to the internet. I wonder why they don’t just set up a VPN-style proxy… a Twitter post is a lot less bandwidth-intensive than sending the whole screen of the ground computer.
I guess Ping should not be a really noticeable, given the fact that the ISS is flying only at 370 km above ground. Therefore, light (and radio signals, therefore) would take only 0.001 second to get down to earth. Even with satellites, I guess the guys flying up there have way better internet than good part of the world.
On the other hand, if the ISS were set on the sun I guess they would not be able to play any online games (well, maybe Tibia…), as it would take around 8 minutes for data to get down to earth.
Um, I’m pretty sure that part of the OP was rhetorical, not meant to be taken literally. If he really were picked, he’d be asking his NASA contacts questions like these, not us.
i think it was more of an introduction to a hypothetical
no person who is actually picked to go to outer space would wonder if they would be allowed to watch a dvd in their downtime
Not from an internet connection, but through the old-fashioned humble tried-&-true infected usb drive. Good news, patriots: One of America’s finest may be again heading into the final frontier. I’m talking, of course, about Stuxnet, the malware worm that the US and Israel designed to cripple Iran’s nuclear program. An in-depth 2012 report from The New York Times, and recent revelations from Edward Snowden, all but confirmed that the US was behind the virus—and has lost control of it. The malware is now attacking nuke plants as far away as Russia—and international space stations.
Motherboard
The nuke plants are sometimes so old they don’t have internet, so again, direct malware application. Might not be necessary when it comes back to the west’s power stations.
Does Stuxnet actually do anything to anything but its intended target? I had understood that it was extremely specific, only targeting facilities that had a certain specific number of specific modules in a specific configuration.