correctiveshoes621: (Default)
correctiveshoes621 ([personal profile] correctiveshoes621) wrote2016-06-09 09:12 pm

(no subject)

OMGah. Now, I *know* I gotta learn this stuff! According to Wikipedia:

SpaceX uses multiple redundant flight computers in a fault-tolerant design in the Falcon 9 rocket. Each Merlin engine is controlled by three voting computers, with two physical processors per computer that constantly check each other's operation. Linux is not inherently fault-tolerant (no operating system is, as it is a function of the whole system including the hardware), but the flight computer software makes it so for its purpose.[119] For flexibility, commercial off-the-shelf parts and system-wide "radiation-tolerant" design are used instead of radiation hardened parts.

AND:

In addition, Windows was used as an operating system on non-mission critical systems—​​laptops used on board the space station, for example—​​but it has been replaced with Linux; the first Linux-powered humanoid robot is also undergoing in-flight testing.[120]

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory has used Linux for a number of years "to help with projects relating to the construction of unmanned space flight and deep space exploration"; NASA uses Linux in robotics in the Mars rover, and Ubuntu Linux to "save data from satellites".


The nerd in me sings :)

Yea for nerds!

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_lyra_b/ 2016-06-10 06:25 am (UTC)(link)
Okay, so I love that the engines are called Merlin. And anything where Microsoft is not involved has to be good IMO. I tend to get to know the computer system people wherever I work (self-serving interest, of course) and it's always Linux all the way for them. Go, you!!!

Re: Yea for nerds!

[identity profile] indiwise.livejournal.com 2016-06-10 10:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree with the Yay for Nerds! Love that this OS is, 'for the ppl, by the ppl' all open-source and freeware - thankfully, it's supported 'til 2019, too...