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- Date: Wed, 7 Aug 91 20:11:05 CDT
- From: edtjda@MAGIC322.CHRON.COM(Joe Abernathy)
- Subject: text of chron-spacemail
-
- Electronic mail beams shuttle's message home
- 8/5/91, Houston Chronicle, Page 1A
-
- By JOE ABERNATHY and MARK CARREAU Copyright 1991, Houston Chronicle
-
- Electronic mail networks, the message medium of the information age,
- made their debut in the space age Sunday aboard the shuttle Atlantis
- as part of an effort to develop a communications system for a future
- space station.
-
- Details of the test were being closely guarded because of concerns
- over a possible hacker incident or "public free-for-all'' on the
- nation's computer networks, according to one engineer involved with
- the project. Privacy and medical ethics also loom large as issues.
-
- Astronauts Shannon Lucid and James Adamson conducted the first
- experiment with the e-mail system on Sunday afternoon, exchanging a
- test message with Marcia Ivins, the shuttle communicator at Johnston
- Space Center.
-
- The connection flickered out of focus after only a few minutes because
- of alignment problems with one of the satellites in the communications
- link, according to the flight director at JSC.
-
- The messages follow a winding path from the shuttle, to a satellite in
- NASA's Tracking Data Relay Satellite System, to the main TDRSS ground
- station in White Sands, New Mexico, back up to a commercial
- communications satellite, then down to Houston, where they enter one
- or more computer networks.
-
- Further tests of the system will be conducted on each remaining day of
- the flight, which continues through Sunday.
-
- The shuttle tests are part of a larger project to develop computer and
- communications systems for the space station Freedom, which the agency
- plans to assemble during the late 1990s.
-
- "These are all steps toward that goal, how we work in space,'' said
- Byron Han of Apple Computer, whose machines are being used for this
- stage of the experiment.
-
- Electronic mail offers a new way for astronauts to stay in touch with
- their families, Mission Control, and potentially, the millions of
- people who use the nation's interlinked computer networks. It could
- produce far-reaching change in the way scientists and others interact
- with the space program.
-
- Currently, only the shuttle communicator is allowed to talk with the
- astronauts during a flight, except for a private medical conference
- each day. E-mail could change that by letting any number of people
- exchange information, while scientists and engineers on the ground
- could assume direct control over their experiments in space.
-
- One drawback is the potential for NASA to impose a virtual reign of
- silence regarding sensitive information without anyone realizing that
- such had been done.
-
- E-mail, which is becoming commonplace in offices, is simply the
- transmission of messages via computers to one or more people, using
- electronic addresses. Users linked to the right networks can send
- electronic messages or other data to specific recipients nearly
- anywhere in the world ^-and now to space.
-
- Han and fellow Apple employees Michael Silver and James Beninghaus
- have donated their time to the project. They are using low-cost,
- commercially available products, rather than the costly custom
- products often used in science.
-
- The e-mail will play a role in controlling experiments, electronic
- flight information, and transfer of experiment results to the ground,
- Han said, as well as sending data up to the shuttle.
-
- In the future, the system might be used to transmit and manipulate
- information from the many medical experiments NASA conducts. But this
- raises a number of problems regarding privacy and medical ethics.
-
- For example, one experiment in this flight seeks to correct a
- blood-flow problem associated with weightlessness that causes some
- astronauts to faint upon their return to Earth.
-
- But this experiment is being monitored with the same Apple computer
- that is playing host to the e-mail system. Even though the results
- aren't being transmitted over computer networks this time, they might
- be next time ^-and computer networks are notoriously insecure.
-
- Inquisitive computer enthusiasts -- hackers -- are in fact one of
- NASA's chief concerns in regard to the use of electronic mail.
-
- The space agency initially sought to conduct the tests without
- publicity, but word quickly percolated around the nation's computer
- networks -- perhaps indicating that the concerns were justified.
-
- A chorus of calls was heard requesting the e-mail address of the
- astronauts -- but that raised another problem more pressing than any
- threat from malicious hacking, that of capacity.
-
- "We have things we need to accomplish with the limited amount of time
- we have, and we do have a very limited amount of data we can move
- between Mission Control and the orbiter,'' said Deborah Muratore, an
- engineer in the space station support office at Johnson Space Center
- and the experiment manager.
-
- In addition to voice communication, the shuttles are equipped with
- Teletype and fax machines for the transmission and reception of
- printed material and even photo graphs.
-
- "Conceivably, everything they move that way could be moved from
- computer to computer,'' Muratore said. "From a space station
- standpoint it would be much preferable to transfer the information
- electronically without paper in the loop the way we do today on the
- shuttle.''
-
- "Paper is going to be a limited resource, something that has to be
- thrown away or reused on the space station,'' she said. "It becomes
- trash. So the more we can eliminate on the space station the better
- off we are.''
-
- The current experiment does not represent the first time that
- civilians have had a direct communications link with those in space.
- Since January, the Soviet space station Mir has maintained a "mail
- drop'' for ham radio operators to use in leaving messages for the
- cosmonauts.
-
- "It's very similar'' in function, said Gary Morris, a former member of
- the Johnson Space Center Amateur Radio Club who now lives in San
- Diego. "The packet bulletin board system on Mir allows an amateur (ham
- radio operator) on the ground to leave mail messages.
-
- "What they're doing with the Mac is different in that they're going
- through the whole (electronic mail) network. It's much more
- complex.''
-
- Sidebar:
-
- Send mail to Atlantis
-
- Computer users who presently have an electronic mail address of their
- own can send electronic mail to the crew of the shuttle Atlantis.
-
- The address to which your comments should be sent is:
-
- atlantis@applelink.apple.com
-
- If you don't understand how to use this address, ask the administrator
- of your online system to explain the proce dure and etiquette for
- sending Internet-style mail.
-
- Because of concerns over security, privacy and capacity, NASA has not
- revealed the specifics of the Atlantis e-mail experiment, but the
- information leaked out on the nation's computer networks. The e-mail
- address is being provided unofficially to accommodate the resulting
- flurry of inquiries. Using it sends mail to an earthbound network,
- not Atlantis itself, so capacity is not a concern.
-
- It is not known whether the astronauts will read their electronic mail
- while they are in space, or wait until they return.
-
- Atlantis is commanded by Air Force Col. John Blaha. His crew includes
- pilot Mike Baker, a Navy commander; flight engineer David Low;
- biochemist Shannon Lucid; and Army Col. James Adamson.
-
- Joe Abernathy
-
- ((Moderator's note: We send a message to the listed address and
- have not yet received a response))
-
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