NASA's first astronauts to fly to the Moon in more than 50 years will pay tribute to the lunar and space exploration missions that preceded them, as well as aviation and American history, by taking with them artifacts and mementos representing those past accomplishments.
NASA, on Wednesday, January 21, revealed the contents of the Artemis II mission's Official Flight Kit (OFK), continuing a tradition dating back to the Apollo program of packing a duffel bag-sized pouch of symbolic and celebratory items to commemorate the flight and recognize the people behind it. The kit includes more than 2,300 items, including a handful of relics.
"This mission will bring together pieces of our earliest achievements in aviation, defining moments from human spaceflight and symbols of where we're headed next," Jared Isaacman, NASA's administrator, said in a statement. "Historical artifacts flying aboard Artemis II reflect the long arc of American exploration and the generations of innovators who made this moment possible."
Looking for a unique vacation spot? Have at least $10 million USD burning a hole in your pocket? If so, then youβre just the sort of customer the rather suspiciously named βGRU Spaceβ is looking for. Theyβre currently taking non-refundable $1,000 deposits from individuals looking to stay at their currently non-existent hotel on the lunar surface. They donβt expect youβll be able to check in until at least the early 2030s, and the $1K doesnβt actually guarantee youβll be selected as one of the guests who will be required to cough up the final eight-figure ticket price before liftoff, but at least admission into the history books is free with your stay.
This never happened.
The whole idea reminds us of Mars One, which promised to send the first group of colonists to the Red Planet by 2024. They went bankrupt in 2019 after collecting ~$100 deposits from more than 4,000 applicants, and we probably donβt have to tell you that they never actually shot anyone into space. Admittedly, the Moon is a far more attainable goal, and the commercial space industry has made enormous strides in the decade since Mars One started taking applications. But weβre still not holding our breath that GRU Space will be leaving any mints on pillows at one-sixth gravity.
Speaking of something which actually does have a chance of reaching the Moon on time β on Saturday, NASA rolled out the massive Space Launch System (SLS) rocket that will carry a crew of four towards our nearest celestial neighbor during the Artemis II mission. Thereβs still plenty of prep work to do, including a dress rehearsal thatβs set to take place in the next couple of weeks, but weβre gettingΒ very close. Artemis II wonβt actually land on the Moon, instead performing a lunar flyby, but it will still be the first time weβve sent humans beyond Low Earth Orbit (LEO) since Apollo 17 in 1972. We canβt wait for some 4K Earthrise video.
In more terrestrial matters, Verizon users are likely still seething from the widespread outages that hit them mid-week. Users from all over the US reported losing cellular service for several hours, though outage maps at the time showed the Northeast was hit particularly hard. At one point, the situation got so bad that Verizonβs own system status page crashed. In a particularly embarrassing turn of events, some of the other cellular carriers actually reached out to their customers to explain it wasnβt their fault if they couldnβt reach friends and family on Verizonβs network. Oof.
Speaking of phones, security researchers recently unveiled WhisperPair, an attack targeting Bluetooth devices that utilize Googleβs Fast Pair protocol. When the feature is implemented correctly, a Bluetooth accessory should ignore pairing requests unless itβs actually in pairing mode, but the researchers found that many popular models (including Googleβs own Pixel Buds Pro 2) can be tricked into accepting an unsolicited pairing request. While an attacker hijacking your Bluetooth headset might not seem like a huge deal at first, consider that it could allow them to record your conversations and track your location via Googleβs Find Hub network.
Incidentally, something like WhisperPair is the kind of thing weβd traditionally leave for Jonathan Bennett to cover in his This Week in Security column, but as regular readers may know, he had to hang up his balaclava back in December. We know many of you have been missing your weekly infosec dump, but we also know itβs not the kind of thing that just anyone can take over. We generally operate under a βWrite What You Knowβ rule around here, and that means whoever takes over the reins needs to know the field well enough to talk authoritatively about it. Luckily, we think weβve found just the hacker for the job, so hopefully weβll be able to start it back up in the near future.
Finally, we donβt generally promote crowdfunding campaigns due to their uncertain nature, but weβll make an exception for the GameTank. Weβve covered the open hardware 6502 homebrew game console here in the past, and even saw it in the desert of the real (Philadelphia) at JawnCon 0x2 in October. The project really embraces the retro feel of using a console from the 1980s, even requiring you to physically swap cartridges to play different games. Itβs a totally unreasonable design choice from a technical perspective, given that an SD card could hold thousands of games at once, but of course, thatβs not the point. Thereβs a certain joy in plugging in a nice chunky cartridge that you just canβt beat.
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As part of our Local Stories, Legendary Strains series, Lindsay MaHarry visits Sol Spirit Farm in the Emerald Triangle to see their special take on Blue Dream.