Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

> While SpaceX has been successful and innovative, it certainly doesn’t keep folks around. Average tenure is ~3.6 years

What was it for the Apollo programme?(The entire programme was 11 years [1].)

> Are we optimizing for the individual? Or for an aerospace manufacturing and supply chain system that requires care and feeding over decades?

I’m not arguing against having more people at NASA. Simply against the claim that this is the evidenced issue. Unless the entire American space programme is a failure, private operators are not the root problem.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_program



The Apollo program doesn’t seem to be a good example of a space pipeline that is sustainable for a few decades at least.


> Apollo program doesn’t seem to be a good example of a space pipeline that is sustainable for a few decades at least

Correct. OP suggested the root of the problem is we haven't made "these workers government employees." The Apollo programme had lots of government employees. Commercial interests clearly aren't at the root of the problem.


Im pretty sure the government employees working on Apollo were mostly already there before the program or stayed there afterwards, so their tenure was probably much longer than 3.6 years. And a lot of work on Apollo was done by contractors (for example building basically all flight hardware as far as I know).




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: