JPL and the Space Age: The Stuff of Dreams

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  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2022
  • In 1977, the greatest adventure in space exploration began with the launch of the Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 spacecraft, two robotic explorers designed to explore the deep reaches of our solar system.
    The Voyagers were the creations of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, where a brash young scientist had just been put in charge. His ambition was to take the next steps in exploring the solar system. Instead, he found himself struggling for JPL’s very survival in the midst of financial cutbacks at the very same time of the Voyagers' triumphs of discoveries at Jupiter and Saturn.
    “The Stuff of Dreams” tells the story of the Voyagers’ astounding successes and unexpected discoveries - but most of all, it’s a tale of perseverance by people and machines struggling against forces put in their way.
    Documentary length: 1 hour 27 minutes
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Комментарии • 154

  • @akshayagrawal7848
    @akshayagrawal7848 Год назад +170

    JPL please never stop doing these documentaries! The world needs it. Don't let your management judge these science communication efforts based on metrics. For everyone who is deeply curious and smitten by exploration - these videos are invaluable.

    • @deanmuhl7417
      @deanmuhl7417 Год назад

      You need to seriously wake up! These videos are absolutely nothing but a con job on the American taxpayer. Nothing but clear images doctored through CGI presented as exploration. Stop accepting lies because you want them to be true and start thinking critically about what is presented to you.

    • @noeraldinkabam
      @noeraldinkabam Год назад +5

      If you are a voter in the usa you can use your vote to insure thatexact thing.

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад +1

      I'd love to see more of this type of documentary!

    • @AcePilot1233_real
      @AcePilot1233_real 2 месяца назад +1

      ikr

  • @Pedro_Santo
    @Pedro_Santo 2 года назад +66

    This is gold, I am sure most space enthusiasts don't know these documentaries are available here.
    Godspeed NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory

    • @jeffdavis5723
      @jeffdavis5723 Год назад +1

      *#Like** 👍🏼 other people’s comments on here as well.* 🤔 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

    • @deanmuhl7417
      @deanmuhl7417 Год назад +3

      All that glitters is not gold.

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад

      I'm glad they made this!!

  • @Cassini-Huygens
    @Cassini-Huygens Год назад +24

    My beloved "babies " turning 45!❤ I check almost everyday how far they are, if they're OK. The first brave interstellar ambassadors. They gave us so much knowledge and wonder and are still doing it. Safe journey Voyagers. A piece of my heart is always with you 👏❤

    • @PBeringer
      @PBeringer Год назад +1

      Likewise! I think I've had the DSN open in a browser tab since it was first possible. Haha.

  • @pi.actual
    @pi.actual Год назад +13

    I discovered this channel just a couple of weeks ago and I've been watching one episode after the other ever since. I'll say kudos to those cameramen that filmed this with 30 pound film cameras on their shoulders throughout the 70's and 80's

  • @talkingmudcrab718
    @talkingmudcrab718 Год назад +11

    If it weren't for these people I wouldn't be an engineer and astronomer today. The Voyager program was a major inspiration in my life as a child watching the discoveries on TV and checking out books about them in the local library.

  • @ravensrulzaviation
    @ravensrulzaviation Год назад +15

    I love all of these documentary’s. I was born in 1966 and remember that last Apollo mission 17 in 1972. Now I am in to all things space and rockets, cosmology, astrology, astrophysics, astrobiology, etc. All due to JPL and NASA, and now with Commercial SPACE X, and than he others, can’’t wait for Artemis 1 on the 29th, sad, I get home from Venice Florida after 5 weeks on the 28th.

    • @jeffdavis5723
      @jeffdavis5723 Год назад +3

      *#Like** 👍🏼 other people’s comments on here as well.* 🤔 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

  • @debbiestocks2567
    @debbiestocks2567 Год назад +17

    H. Richard Malm, my dad, and Voyager engineer. These engineer pioneers accomplished amazing things.

    • @jeffdavis5723
      @jeffdavis5723 Год назад

      *#Like** 👍🏼 other people’s comments on here also.* 🤔 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

    • @kylewilliams2648
      @kylewilliams2648 Месяц назад

      I'm just a regular dude .my family hasn't done anything like that.But for what's worth ,I thank your dad and the other folks that made all this possible .it's truly amazing! So thank you !!! ✌️

  • @vito9674
    @vito9674 Год назад +6

    Having lived these as they were happening JPL giving us the background and put us inside the rooms at the time is a rare gift that in todays world uplifts my spirit like finding a unreleased Beatles song ! JPL THANK YOU very much ! PLEASE Keep them coming !

  • @Kevin-hb7yq
    @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад +6

    One of the best documentaries about space exploration.
    The teams at JPL have made the nearly impossible seem almost routine.
    Absolutely incredible and fantastic!!

  • @DarkDragonPath
    @DarkDragonPath Год назад +22

    These documentaries, thus far, have been nothing short of excellent.
    I find it interesting that the Voyager-Era, the thing JPL is almost synonymous with, and lauded for (even now, after Cassini, Juno, Spirit & Oppy, Curiosity, and Perseverance), was also quite a tumultuous and uncertain time for the lab. Let the explorers of science explore.

  • @headninjadog8120
    @headninjadog8120 Год назад +6

    These documentaries have been such a treasure. Watching the archive footage and graphics/animations have been nothing short of amazing! Plus, it’s amazing to hear from so many key people from the past missions and projects.

  • @RV4aviator
    @RV4aviator 11 месяцев назад +4

    Superb...! Brave, Intelligent and driven people with a passion for exploration and knowledge end up being chosen by JPL/NASA. I struggled with Calculus and higher Maths/Physics in high school, but I loved the application of physics to engineer space craft. I've been a space fan/nut forever, and every space fan/nut knows JPL is the top of the pyramid ... Cheers. Long live JPL...!

  • @marsspacex6065
    @marsspacex6065 Год назад +7

    William Pickering is the most underrated person ever. The father of space exploration. We need to expand his legacy around the world and especially in New Zealand. There should be statues of him everywhere.

  • @allisayisthatyouhavetobehere
    @allisayisthatyouhavetobehere Год назад +10

    As a fellow filmmaker, can say that you‘ve got to win awards for these documentaries. The storytelling; narrator, interviews, archive, visuals, music - absolutely captivating and extremely interesting with this nostalgia.

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад

      I'm not a film maker, but I do enjoy the high standard of quality this documentary maker employed. Such an interesting and thought provoking show.

  • @leninalopez2912
    @leninalopez2912 2 года назад +16

    Like a few people I saw commenting here... I just cannot make my mind around on why this documentaries aren't publicly listed!? Make them listed NASA JPL!!! What are you thinking!? :P

    • @jeffdavis5723
      @jeffdavis5723 Год назад +1

      *#Like** 👍🏼 other people’s comments also on here.* 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼 🤔

  • @DasIstDragana
    @DasIstDragana Год назад +14

    Thank you so much for making and sharing this documentary :-) Long live JPL!

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад

      These people have changed human history!

  • @ultrametric9317
    @ultrametric9317 Год назад +9

    @31:35 - that appears to be Challenger astronaut Judy Resnick seated at the console (RIP). She had just become a NASA astronaut in the first group of women astronauts along with Sally Ride while the Voyagers were in transit.

    • @jeffdavis5723
      @jeffdavis5723 Год назад

      *#Like** 👍🏼 other people’s comments on here as well.* 🤔 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +3

      @@jeffdavis5723 Jeff, when you cut and paste the same comment all over RUclips, it makes you look like a troll - and a lazy one, as well. No offense intended, of course.

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад

      @@TheStockwell I agree that comments and discussion help these videos become recommended to more people. Very interesting and informative!

  • @leonardigweokolo2813
    @leonardigweokolo2813 Год назад +4

    These videos are invaluable. Dont stop making them.

  • @oc2phish07
    @oc2phish07 День назад

    What an excellent video. I have been following the space program since I was about 9 years old back in 1957 when Sputnik was launched. I have watched people who I regard as greats in the field including Patrick Moore, James Burke, the incredible Carl Sagan, Brian Cox, Michelle Thaller, Michio Kaku, Neil DeGrasse Tyson and many others. I watched the launch and moon landing of Apollo 11, on TV rather than in person unfortunately, and the launch of the first shuttle. I watched the shuttle as it was transported on the back of a Boeing 747 and flew over Windsor Castle here in England in 1983. I am a firm believer in space exploration and feel this is definitely the way forward for mankind. One day I would love to visit JPL and watch a 'live' launch from Cape Canaveral.

  • @quietwarf1019
    @quietwarf1019 Год назад +6

    Legends. Now it’s time to make more.

  • @ramseydaugherty5515
    @ramseydaugherty5515 Год назад +5

    Howdy folks, I am most certainly a space enthusiast and I have considered myself a student of Neil DeGrasse Tyson for at least a decade. I'm astonished that I'd never seen these documentaries and honestly disappointed in myself for not have seen them sooner. Please keep making these informative, and very entertaining videos

  • @AR-jq1hs
    @AR-jq1hs Месяц назад

    Wow, this is such a beautiful documentary. My most sincere thanks to the JPL and all of its staff for everything they have done through the past, are doing in the present, and will continue to do in the future. Your efforts and accomplishments will always be praised and remembered.

  • @Stopl1ght
    @Stopl1ght Год назад +7

    Godspeed to the Voyager's.
    Hope they make it to 50 years, even though it's decently unlikely

    • @Stopl1ght
      @Stopl1ght Год назад +1

      @@whybother1887 indeed. But let's hope they stay transmitting for at least another 5 years.

  • @gauravgayakwad
    @gauravgayakwad Год назад +4

    😃 Really amazing documentary on history of 'Science and Society in Transition' marking key eras in Space Exploration [ Voyager missions followed by next inter- planetary robotic missions ] amidst uncertain geopolitical chaos, having inspiring and motivational curiosity+perseverance of scientific community of scientists and engineers !!! 🙂 Really needed this insightful documentary in these paradoxical times of another ambitious era of Space Exploration [ Artemis I and II ] marking next chapter in 'Science and Society in Transition' amidst anxious current geopolitical chaos !!!

  • @atomspalter2090
    @atomspalter2090 Год назад +9

    I am hyped!
    Nasa Jet Propulsion Laboratory is the enthuiasm. They are the love and happiness of a little kid. Of all the spacekids and spaceadults like me on this planet.
    Greetings from germany.
    I love your videos, streams, just everything!

    • @jeffdavis5723
      @jeffdavis5723 Год назад +1

      *#Like** 👍🏼 other people’s comments on here as well.* 🤔 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

    • @DasIstDragana
      @DasIstDragana Год назад +1

      Yes! Nicely put, I totally agree :-)

  • @Steelninja77
    @Steelninja77 Год назад +3

    There goes that Mass Effect Codex entry narrator again. love his Narration.

  • @paulneale988
    @paulneale988 Год назад +2

    Keep these coming as they inform us on what's talen and taking place in the world of space exploration

  • @saganandroid4175
    @saganandroid4175 24 дня назад

    Thank you JPL past members and current crew, for all you do, and for this great video!

  • @s3tthunderbolt99
    @s3tthunderbolt99 Год назад +3

    Thank you all.

  • @thomthumbe
    @thomthumbe Год назад +8

    After the video credits ended, I just kept staring at the motionless screen, lost in deep thought. Thank god I was allowed to live at a time when mankind first left earth in both body and robotically.

    • @jeffdavis5723
      @jeffdavis5723 Год назад +1

      *#Like** 👍🏼 other people’s comments on here as well.* 🤔 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад

      Amazing achievements, impressive and exciting!

  • @aramirez8427
    @aramirez8427 Год назад +2

    Geez....what a great documentary......thank you so much

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад +1

      Informative and interesting!

  • @BrewManPhilly
    @BrewManPhilly Год назад +9

    Just think what we could accomplish if we took just 10% of the DOD budget an gave it to NASA.

  • @aternias
    @aternias Год назад +1

    Voyager 1 and 2 were a huge step for humanity.

  • @greg9404
    @greg9404 2 года назад +6

    After around 1.5 years (it was uploaded Nov.2020), there's only ~1000 views?!?

    • @axleoe
      @axleoe Год назад +1

      its in premièrè...

    • @citizen240
      @citizen240 Год назад +1

      .

    • @jeffdavis5723
      @jeffdavis5723 Год назад

      *#Like** 👍🏼 other people’s comments on here as well.* 🤔 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад

      It's amazing that these achievements ever happened at all, kinda sad so few people are familiar with how it happened.
      I'm so excited for what will be discovered next!!

  • @scottthomas6202
    @scottthomas6202 Год назад +1

    I was in high school during the Voyager launch and Viking lander.....these videos are great!

  • @golagaz
    @golagaz 5 месяцев назад

    Inspiration to future generations. Jewel of human intellectual achievement : JPL and NASA. Absolutely brilliant.

  • @headninjadog8120
    @headninjadog8120 Год назад

    THANK YOU FOR SHARING WHO CREATED THE GRAPHICS FROM THE PAST! I was always captivated by them for years! Thanks JIM BLINN!

  • @rublymonica
    @rublymonica Месяц назад

    What wonderful story! What incredible achievements! Loved it!

  • @ernestomartinez2330
    @ernestomartinez2330 Год назад +2

    Maravilloso documental!!!

  • @dougholliday467
    @dougholliday467 Год назад

    When I was a kid, I could stand on a bluff just a few feet from my home and see JPL (in it's infancy). Additionally, I went to school with Dr. Pickering's daughter. Quite lovely I must say. Now that was over 55 years ago.

  • @saganandroid4175
    @saganandroid4175 24 дня назад

    39:27 Anyone else remember the Voyager scene in the Commodore Amiga commercials of summer 1985? The first commercial (and possibly only one) showed a wireframe Voyager flying by Jupiter. Strangely it was done using the lowest-res mode of the Amiga and used maybe 16 or 32 out of 4,096 colors. Commodore never knew how to advertise, but this still managed to wow people.

  • @denniscruz4991
    @denniscruz4991 Год назад +2

    Please keep doing these. 🙏🏼

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад

      Yes this! The launches, the exploration, and the documentaries!!

  • @jamiboothe
    @jamiboothe Год назад +1

    it seems so simple as an individual to project yourself into space, when you see a dark night for the first time.

  • @kugelblitz-zx9un
    @kugelblitz-zx9un Год назад +3

    I was here!

  • @TheJazzManifesto
    @TheJazzManifesto Год назад +1

    Looking at this amazing historical achievements of the human kind, I can't stop thinking at the lyrics of "Star Crossed" by Arcturus:
    We-
    Organic images
    Dissolving earth
    Our future children
    Stare at us unfixed
    From a residence of stars
    In their sidereal ships
    Ho sailing beyond within
    Their eyes
    Black in kingdoms of gold
    Like the rocks of this desert
    Where we wander in circles
    Tails up the mass of time
    .......

  • @jeffdavis5723
    @jeffdavis5723 Год назад +2

    *Thanks **#NASA** **#JPL** for this video.* 🤔 🇺🇸 👍🏼👍🏼

  • @EchoesDistant
    @EchoesDistant Год назад +2

    Can you folks upload that symposium "Jupiter and the Mind of Man" at the 43 min mark? I cannot find it anywhere.

  • @kimberlythornton4448
    @kimberlythornton4448 Год назад +2

    Nice.

  • @nicovsii
    @nicovsii 2 месяца назад

    Very interesting documentation. 👍

  • @PBeringer
    @PBeringer Год назад +1

    56:55 ... No way! It's Carl's famous leather jacket! I'd only ever heard about it. So, the legends are true ...

  • @Rugged-Mongol
    @Rugged-Mongol Год назад

    Ahh so refreshing to see actual progress in humanity's story, bayarlalaa.

  • @London97
    @London97 Год назад

    Splendid piece 😊

  • @964cuplove
    @964cuplove Месяц назад

    1:12:00 Carl Sagan was a truely great visionary scientist and the world is in dire need if more people like him.

  • @saintzig
    @saintzig 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you!

  • @mikekincaid7412
    @mikekincaid7412 Год назад

    Veger(Star Trek fan?) best thing us money ever invested in by far.. still fascinated to watch this stuff

  • @langambatha1896
    @langambatha1896 Год назад +1

    Now I am in to all things space and rockets, cosmology, astrology, astrophysics, astrobiology, etc

    • @smeeself
      @smeeself Год назад

      Let's hope astrology was a typo. 😄

  • @AlexandreSenesse
    @AlexandreSenesse Год назад +2

    This documentary tells about spacial history before I was born until times after my childhood dreams. Now my Voyager I and II idols are far, far away in deep space while the war echoes again from Russia. So please do not sop your exploration work because, for me, and maybe for my neighborhoods, it is very important: this gives hope on mankind (a child thing).

  • @whirledpeas3477
    @whirledpeas3477 Год назад +2

    💢 My Initials are JPL 💢 Just a coincidence 🤔

  • @henrivanbemmel
    @henrivanbemmel 8 месяцев назад

    I loved the Titan IIIC. Quite a brute.

  • @hundun5604
    @hundun5604 2 месяца назад

    13:55 That's what we nowadays call a back-up system.

  • @mikekincaid7412
    @mikekincaid7412 Год назад

    Had a friend worked on Voyager.. 2000th inch tolerance on any part was mandatory.. no wonder it’s still going

  • @voycressv460
    @voycressv460 3 дня назад

    space, the last frontier, will the space ship, Enterprise be finally be built ,that would be a Star Trek wonder.

  • @davidfarmer5565
    @davidfarmer5565 4 месяца назад

    I always think of like a 57 Chevy floatin around up there 😂🎉!

  • @user-vh6yu9te1j
    @user-vh6yu9te1j 2 месяца назад

    My name jesse nice to hear you

  • @Thisandthat8908
    @Thisandthat8908 Год назад +1

    good Job JPL managed to get Galileo working as good as it did after it being royally messed up by the idiotic forced (and delayed) shuttle launch. One of the weirder ideas Nasa ever had, forced by politicians with no plan. And it was far from easier or cheaper.
    It probably was good for future missions which were allowed to launch on a "boring" normal rocket.

  • @RomeArt
    @RomeArt Год назад

    I love you so much 😢😊

  • @SukhdevSingh-ge5rj
    @SukhdevSingh-ge5rj Год назад +1

    Oh my goodness, Jupiter lost 1 foot per trillion years of its orbital velocity just because the Voyager space probe needed some gravity assist!!!

  • @dillonzhang978
    @dillonzhang978 Год назад

    DO these two probes have NERVA capabilities??

  • @sinisa485
    @sinisa485 Год назад +3

    ...and then ignorant people say that the space is not interesting...

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад +1

      I always suggest those people watch Carl Sagans 'Pale Blue Dot'.
      Cheers!

    • @johnhoney5089
      @johnhoney5089 6 месяцев назад

      The only thing that interests the ignorant masses is Twitter drama. A chimpanzee can outsmart them. Those people really test the idea of humans being more evolved sometimes.

  • @josephdonais4778
    @josephdonais4778 Год назад

    "3 1/2 seconds", I wonder why that never took synonymously. It is a good and one.
    To The Stuff of Dreams in 3 1/2 Seconds, answer it.
    "Bizarre has become common place", welcome back to your childhood.
    *The push to focus JPL to the military was a lazy thief's cop out.
    ''Give me your lunch money ...and your seat at the table while you're at it.". That is known as strong arm thievery.
    I am glad we managed to bounce back from that, even if we didn't get the satisfaction to bloody a nose.
    Now I understand why all the hostile military take overs portrayed in the entertainment industry.
    I thank all of you with a hand in getting us back out there.

  • @markbass_trojanthinking
    @markbass_trojanthinking Год назад +2

    👍

    • @markbass_trojanthinking
      @markbass_trojanthinking Год назад +2

      I was going to say something about dreams but thought better not, thanks for the like!

  • @mikekincaid7412
    @mikekincaid7412 Год назад

    My Old fiat car broke down somewhere in Nevada … can’t call anybody.. it’s 116 degrees..no water.. what Would JPL doo??dump my last 2 beers into radiator and get going.. yea you guys your not vest mission savers your life savers.. thank you

  • @BerekeTSame
    @BerekeTSame 2 месяца назад

    I must admit I love the goods but I have to ask which came first. The knowledge or the creator? So does science tries to explain that is already exits, interesting. So what else is buried that you do not want any to explore? I guess this is a note to say next time you go up there is one looking up thinking easter to let me get in that hid it that high. Please show us what you saw than you. Your heir. Welcome! Haha

  • @scott83074
    @scott83074 4 месяца назад

    I wish we could spend 1/2 the national budget on NASA

  • @gabrielluna5774
    @gabrielluna5774 2 года назад +2

    Edward C. Stone Voyager Programs client my first consumers talked to Linda Morabito Kelly explain how things important happened change informations questions about your goals Voyager spacecraft arrives at Jupiter’s moons Io in March 1979

  • @blaydCA
    @blaydCA Год назад

    Splendid documentary spoiled by far too many commercials. How sad.

  • @tsennhauser
    @tsennhauser Год назад +2

    One always forgets that all these scientific achievements were only possible thanks to the determination of visionary leadership that was able to both secure funding and manage mind-bogglingly complex programs.

    • @booklover6753
      @booklover6753 Год назад +2

      Not true. Good administration is important, but it's the scientists and engineers that make the missions work successfully. It's all possible because of a group effort. No administrator can secure funding for a lab staffed by dummies.

    • @tsennhauser
      @tsennhauser Год назад +5

      book lover
      I understand your comments. Ok, sure. But the people who enable the complex execution are the engineers, not the scientists. Think of propulsion, navigation, communication, instrumentation, and system engineering. The scientists are the beneficiaries and, of course, mankind overall. But despite the recognition the engineers deserve for their superb skills, it takes visionary and tenacious leadership to get congress approve the program and to keep the projects on track, not to mention to keep complex teams working together and motivated during inevitable setbacks that will occur over time.

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад

      The political will to spend money on these projects is a daring gamble, as the potential 'payoff' will often come well after the political career is over.
      Visionary leadership indeed!!

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад

      @@booklover6753 The engineering groups at labs like JPL were so competent and professional, that its difficult to believe they had to do any convincing at all. So glad that all of the various levels of leadership gave these spectacular people the means to achieve these discoveries!!

  • @nicholasmcelroy603
    @nicholasmcelroy603 8 месяцев назад

    Jpl has done many great things but are now charging far to much money for their services. That's why new laboratories and companies are taking their place on many of the new missions. That's not to take away from their many great accomplishments. They should relocate from California and look for ways to cut costs so they can continue to be a part of space exploration

  • @maxsaigon6477
    @maxsaigon6477 Год назад

    How lucky we are in 2023. What scientists dreamers and hunter gatherers sitting beside a fire, looking up, wondering if it possible to explore these planets from close up. Humans worked out how to get happening. Dinosaurs lived for 100s of millions of years, they didn't send stuff to Neptune,our primate ancestors didn't build telescopes..in a relatively short time scale,we have done it. No robots, visiting aliens gave us advice or a RUclips instruction video. If we don't destroy ourselves, what can we be capable of in 100, 1000,10000 or 100000 years?? Our journey has just begun..

  • @user-ti3rx8ur3y
    @user-ti3rx8ur3y 3 месяца назад

    ❤(7)

  • @MyvideoPersonal9235
    @MyvideoPersonal9235 Год назад

    Desire is a source of frustration that has brought down the lives of many great people across the globe. Because they follow their senses too much , let the lack of satisfaction of life dominate the heart , he said : " to achieve better worldly things . " Lust if followed continuously , will never end . Hoping continuously for worldly pleasures and glory is tantamount to increasing the possibility of the world failing us. The higher the expectation to obtain the glitter of noble material, the higher the number of depression that may be experienced in the future. Therefore , do not want to be bothered with the high interest provocation that is spread by the popular media and the people around us . Instead, feel satisfied with what you have and enjoy life as it is. Just keep focusing on God and give opportunities to share with others in between lessons and work.

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +3

      Give it a rest, you big ol' goof. 🙄

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад +1

      @@TheStockwell I'm glad these people at JPL made the decisions they did, they literally brought the solar system to all of humanity!

  • @electricminecrafter
    @electricminecrafter Год назад +1

    34:13 nice nose zoom in

  • @Paul1958R
    @Paul1958R 2 месяца назад

    NASA: No taxpayer dollar left unwasted

  • @hamentaschen
    @hamentaschen Год назад +1

    "I'm gonna go get the papers, get the papers."

  • @princeindrajitlawlaha7027
    @princeindrajitlawlaha7027 Год назад +1

    ! 💝 💯 👏 🎉 🙏 🚀 👍 🤖 🎅 ✝ 🌝 !

  • @SukhdevSingh-ge5rj
    @SukhdevSingh-ge5rj Год назад +1

    😲 WOW! So Hollywood CGI was born in JPL. Thanks to James F Blinn and Charles E Kohlase.

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад +1

      The teams had to invent many of their own tools, such excellence!!

    • @johnhoney5089
      @johnhoney5089 6 месяцев назад

      CGI didn't take off until 2003, so no.

  • @acanuck1679
    @acanuck1679 Год назад +1

    I remember the Reagan years--they were as bad as was depicted here. NASA itself has still not learned the lessons of that period. While the destruction of Challenger served to undermine the unhealthy focus on a single, very expensive and ultimately flawed 'ticket to space', the STS, it took the destruction of another orbiter, the Columbia, to end it. Yet here we are, still awaiting the outcome of $30bn in development costs associated with the SLS, a space launch system that is essentially a dead end.
    In the meantime, JPL's work has gone from strength-to-strength.
    Let's hope that JPL can carry on as new space launch capabilities--most notably the promising Starship system being developed by SpaceX---offer the prospect of sending powerful exploration craft back to the outer solar system (and possibly beyond).

  • @user-vh6yu9te1j
    @user-vh6yu9te1j 2 месяца назад

    Jwst

  • @EkoSusanto-sr8id
    @EkoSusanto-sr8id 3 месяца назад

    هنڠ حنڬ خڬاأ شصهمص يڽصم ينچمڠ فن ڠخ جمصحن مهلڬ راز ڤهل هب

  • @deanmuhl7417
    @deanmuhl7417 Год назад +2

    Science fiction sells.

    • @caturdaynite7217
      @caturdaynite7217 Год назад +10

      And science fact compels.

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +2

      . . . and bitter, cynical, hipster trolling is mildly entertaining. 🙄

    • @deanmuhl7417
      @deanmuhl7417 Год назад

      @@TheStockwell You're a believer in this cult I take it?

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +3

      @@deanmuhl7417 No. I'm Episcopalian - and not an agressively delusional Flat Earth troll.
      Have a magical week, Dino. 😐

    • @Kevin-hb7yq
      @Kevin-hb7yq Год назад +1

      @@TheStockwell Cheers!!

  • @psycleen
    @psycleen Год назад +1

    lies

  • @jeffmerklinger9067
    @jeffmerklinger9067 Год назад

    Fix Fukushima or all this knowledge is useless.

    • @TheStockwell
      @TheStockwell Год назад +5

      Spoiler alert: JPL has nothing to do with tsunami-damaged reactors in Japan. 🙄

    • @johnhoney5089
      @johnhoney5089 6 месяцев назад

      That's like asking a jet engineer to fix a broken toilet.

  • @Half-CockedG
    @Half-CockedG Год назад

    Homemade Documentaries channel is better fyi

  • @larrysmith6797
    @larrysmith6797 Год назад

    The Greatest Adventure? Everyone at JPL including my friend who did a lot of the programming on the Voyager and Mariner programs think they are above manned space flight. No JPL employee ever risked his life and no JPL flight directors ever had anybody's life in their hands. The biggest risk ever faced by JPL was getting their funding cancelled after successive mission failures. There is no adventure without risk.