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Sophia Systems Design & EngineeringEnabling the Revelation of the Heavenly City
May 20 The Other Two Music VideosI wrote these three haiku back in 1983 in response to the Challenger disaster. They're just as appropriate now as they were then, and they go quite well with the music I improvised on my Casio WK8000 keyboard not long ago.
Enjoy!
And when you finish that one, here's "On Wings Like Eagles," my call to action for all you space activists and entrepreneurs. May it inspire you when you're feeling blue after a setback or frustration. Been there, done that--which is why I wrote this song after the demise of Clipper Graham.
Again, enjoy!
I'll have more videos later this week when I try semi-live blogging from the International Space Development Conference in Dallas, TX.
Ad Astra per Levitas Nostra!
Theresa May 19 Check Out my New Video Project!I've been waiting for ages for technology to catch up with me, and finally it has. I've just uploaded my first Music Video. It's quite primitive in that all you get are the words and the music on a nice background--but that's because I don't have a voice worth speaking of (especially after a nasty bout with a cold, bronchitis, sinusitis--you name it, I got it). This is an experiment to see how well YouTube works for hosting a variety of my videos. Enjoy!
P.S. The actual video looks a lot better than the title shot YouTube picked!
March 18 The SSTO (Save for your Seat To Orbit) Project...
...is Ba-ack! As part of my responsibilities as a member of the SSAC, I’ve submitted a paper to ISDC ’07 titled "Selling Space Out There by Selling Space Down Here: The SSTO (Save for your Seat To Orbit) Project.” In it I will show exactly how I am applying all the principles of marketing I’ve learned over the last 15 years to the problem of reaching the general public with our message that the exploration, development, and settlement of space will help them improve their lives.
I’d like to ask for your help. I’ve set up a mini website called www.save4yourseat2orbit.com where people can sign up for my ezine “The View From The Top!” I’d appreciate it if you would take a look at the site and let me know the answers to the following questions:
1.) Was the site easy to reach?
2.) Was it easy to read?
3.) Did it interest you enough to sign up for the ezine?
4.) If you signed up for the ezine, was the confirmation process easy?
5.) Did you get your welcome issue in timely manner?
6.) Did you find that the content kept your interest?
7.) Do you look forward to the next issue?
8.) Would you be interested in contributing to the ezine?
9.) Would you be interested in helping arrange interviews with space celebrities for the ezine?
10.)Would you or your organization be interested in being profiled in the ezine?
11.)Would you or your organization be interested in advertising in the ezine or on the website?
12.)Would you or your organization be interested in telling others about the website and the ezine?
13.)Any suggestions for improving the copy on the website and the ezine to increase the level of interest for other readers?
That’s a lot of questions, I know, but the answers will help me improve both the website and the ezine, and do my part to help us sell space out there by selling it down here. Even better, I’ll be sharing everything I learn with the rest of you at ISDC.
If we help each other, we can all save for our seats to orbit and beyond that, help build our places in space.
I look forward to reading your answers to these questions.
Ad Astra per Levitas Nostra! Theresa Holmes
You can also check out my blog at www.save4yourseat2orbit.com/vfttblog.html
I've had a lot of fun this last week putting all the pieces together to revive the SSTO Project. The best part is that it really hasn't cost a thing beyond the cost of my domain name.
Anyway, I look forward to your comments and the answers to my questions above. February 11 The Consequences of Playing Tag...I got tagged by Peppermint on my Townhall blog (http://phoenix-rising.townhall.com) and had to come up with six "weird" things about myself, as well as tag six other folks. That was fun! Not only that, but it certainly got the attention of fellow bloggers about me and my work on space development and settlement, because I borrowed Don Davis' painting showing the interior of a Stanford Torus and posted it in that entry.
Meanwhile, the debate over Kim Peart's proposed campaign to educate large numbers of Earth's population about the value of space development and settlement continues apace at the SSAC online. The problem was that Kim is gravely concerned about Global Warming and its likely effects on the world economy. I inadvertantly sparked a "loud" discussion about just how serious the threat from Global Warming actually is. My take is that a.) climate change happens, b.) while humankind probably has contributed something to the process, our contribution is tiny compared to non-human controlled contributing factors such as the Sun's energy output, the shape of Earth's orbit, and the angle and direction of tilt of the Earth's rotational axis. And c.) we'd be far better off to plan on adapting as needed, using the free market to encourage human ingenuity, than to struggle to freeze things to a steady state by killing the economic freedom of the US. Global warming may or may not be real in the scientific sense, but as a political movement, it is both real and very dangerous because it's a badly disguised excuse for socialism. The Chinese and Indians can pollute all they like because they're exempt from the Kyoto Accords, but the US is supposed to destroy its economy in a draconian effort to return our output of greenhouse gases to pre-2000 levels? What's wrong with this picture?
Be that as it may, the fire fight seems to be dying down some, for the moment. I made the comment fairly late in the debate that I'd love to see everyone on both sides put as much energy and passion into why we should settle space as they did into whether global warming is real and dangerous or nothing but a lot of hot air. We'll see if anyone takes me seriously.
Al Globus, chair of the committee, made an interesting comment to me in a private email that space development doesn't actually have any short term answers to the problem of global warming. I told him it didn't need to have short term answers because what it does provide is hope of escape, not only from global warming, but also all the other conflicts in the world. It is the third alternative, and if presented as such, in a positive manner, has the potential to cut off debate on almost every other problem in favor of working together on this bigger challenge.
I believe it was Albert Einstein who pointed out that nothing seen as a problem can be solved on its own level of logic. You have to move up to the next level of logic in order to see solutions to any given problem. All of the major conflicts in the world are a consequence of the need for a frontier. The third alternative to the wars in Europe during the 15th and 16th Centuries was the exploration and settlement of the Americas. The third alternative to the wars and threat of nuclear warfare in this century is the exploration and settlement of the Solar System. It's this message that we need to share with all the passion in us.
And Bart Leahy, another member of the SSAC, proposes to do just that with a book called "A Shining City." I expect to be providing a lot of encouragement and commentary to him over the next few months as he works on this project. I'll keep everyone posted on his progress from time to time.
Meanwhile, I recently got a Casio WK8000 88 key keyboard workstation and can now do some serious music composition and development. I've already started developing a couple of my space songs into pieces that can form the cores of music videos once I get my super system rebuilt so I can do the video development. It's my hope to have at least one of these two songs, preferably both, available for ISDC '07 in Dallas, after which I plan to make them available for download from Phoenix Lady's Nest, along with my novels. Who knows, maybe there's a new career for me in multimedia productions.
So far, 2007 shows every evidence of being a very interesting year for me and for space development and settlement. Keep checking this space for more updates. January 26 UpdatesI've spent the last couple of days checking out space art on the NSS Space Art Calendar Gallery, then looked at Google Moon and Google Mars. I've added them to my list of space places, along with a site from which you can download a movie that takes you through Valles Marineris on Mars, done by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Check them out and enjoy!
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