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July 6th, 2009

To the Moon: How we built the technologies

Posted by Jason Perlow @ 10:05 am

Categories: Business, General, Science

Tags: Radio, Satellite, Exploration, John F. Kennedy, Advertising & Promotion, Network Technology, Marketing, Networking, Jason Perlow

The historic Apollo 11 mission in July of 1969 culminated in the first manned moon landing. While many of the proud Americans who were involved in that project are no longer with us 40 years later, the technologies they built still live on, will be further refined, and will return us to that lonely world and beyond.

Our commitment to space exploration began with a wake up call over five decades ago with a beeping sound.

Not with a clock radio, but with a transponder signal that could be tuned in by any ham radio enthusiast — the launching and ever present chirping of the Soviet Sputnik 1 satellite in 1957, the first artificial satellite. Shortly after, the Soviets followed with a dog, Laika, aboard Sputnik 2 and several follow on Sputniks, and then sent a man into orbit, Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, aboard Vostok 1 in 1961.

Click on the “Read the rest of this entry” link below for more.

Each of these important milestones in space exploration was accompanied by the Soviets proclaiming their technical and moral superiority over the capitalist and imperialist United States, which was fumbling with it’s own space program and could barely get it’s own satellite and manned rocket off the ground. Provocation from the Communists was all we needed to get our collective act in gear, and our President was ready to meet the challenge, even though our country wasn’t at the time.

We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too.

John F. Kennedy’s historic 1962 speech at Rice University which re-affirmed our nation’s commitment to space exploration and thumbed our noses at the “Reds” which provoked and stiffened our resolve rings as true and as moving today as the day he uttered it.

July 20th, 2009 will mark the 40th anniversary of the Apollo moon landing, a historic event that was the realization of over two decades of dedicated contributions from hundreds of companies. The engineering of the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo space vehicles and supporting systems involved not just large companies, but thousands of smaller subcontractors and hundreds of thousands of technology and aerospace workers who worked tireless all-nighter hours to solve tremendously complicated engineering problems for what many Americans felt was an insurmountable task which needed to be accomplished in less than a decade from when President Kennedy made his historic speech.

Also See: Kennedy Space Center (Gallery)

40 years after Apollo 11, Many of the larger companies that built the support systems and actual space technology no longer exist, or have been absorbed into others. Most of the key people who led the projects have passed on, or are entering their later years in life. But remarkably, some of the important firms which gave some of the most significant contributions still remain, and many of the technologies they built are still in use and will continue to be used as we enter the next era of space exploration.

Over the next several weeks up to and after the 40th anniversary, I am going to profile the key companies and the projects which made Apollo 11 a reality — from the firms that performed the systems integration, built and designed the avionics components, engineered and manufactured the powerful rocket engines which hurtled the mighty Saturn V into space, and created the legendary spacecraft  which made history. It should be a heck of a ride.

Read all Parts of “To the Moon”

Boeing: The Rocket Foundry

IBM and Univac: The Integrators

Rocketdyne: Keeper of the Flame

Grumman: One Giant Landing for Mankind

Which companies and individuals do you think made the most significant contributions to the Apollo program? Who needs to be remembered? Talk Back and Let Me Know.

Jason PerlowJason Perlow is a technologist with over two decades of experience integrating large heterogeneous multi-vendor computing environments in Fortune 500 companies. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations. Follow Jason Perlow and Tech Broiler on Twitter!

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 69 Talkback(s)
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies
Have we forgotten the Canadian engineers from the canned Avro
Arrow project. At the time, that plane was the technologically
advanced fighter jet on the planet. When the Canadian gov't
canned it the core team went to NASA. ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: ccouillard@... Posted on: 07/28/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Westinghouse  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/06/09
Westinghouse in name only.  singerap | 07/10/09
How Apollo project crashed Dollar in 1971  LBiege | 07/11/09
Dollar Crash in 1971 - Fiat currency paralleled today  acad2kman | 07/21/09
Misunderstanding history  frgough | 07/06/09
Wasn't it Jefferson who said:  rshores | 07/06/09
Five years I would have disagreed with you  frgough | 07/06/09
How hard line did Kennedy have to be to ...  Cayble | 07/10/09
Franklin  JJ Brannon | 07/07/09
Misunderstanding history  gertruded | 07/06/09
Your time markers place you  chrome_slinky@... | 07/07/09
Your view is far to simplistic.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 07/07/09
The nice thing about history  frgough | 07/07/09
Re: Misunderstanding History  acampbell@... | 07/07/09
Not quite. Talent plays a part too.  osreinstall | 07/07/09
German Scientists  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 07/07/09
They didn't return home until years later.  osreinstall | 07/07/09
Do not underestimate  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 07/07/09
I didn't that much.  osreinstall | 07/07/09
Many cosmonauts died ... we'll never know about  niallfromdublin@... | 07/07/09
It is NOT conjecture.  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 07/07/09
You mean our German scientists  frgough | 07/07/09
OK frgouge, We had the better toymakers.  osreinstall | 07/07/09
Ehm...  kitko | 07/11/09
Ayn Rand  Jeff Richardson | 07/07/09
A spoiled brat that wanted things.  osreinstall | 07/07/09
HIstory Misunderstood  topaz_z | 07/10/09
You're punch drunk.  Cayble | 07/10/09
Robert H. Goddard  WiredGuy | 07/07/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  cb77305 | 07/07/09
Pride & Accomplishment vice Profit !!!!  GIGOmat | 07/07/09
Right  frgough | 07/07/09
The talent was less diffused  Takalok | 07/07/09
Things have changed  JimPeoples | 07/07/09
Sad to say that so little has been done  chrome_slinky@... | 07/07/09
Overstated.....  GIGOmat | 07/07/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  tim_bowler@... | 07/07/09
Without Sputnik nothing---no Internet or Cell Phones  BALTHOR | 07/07/09
Well  jdbukis@... | 07/08/09
outer space travel an invention?  bkn2000 | 07/10/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  Moonwalk1 | 07/08/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  oh_never_mind | 07/08/09
Grumman?  JimPeoples | 07/10/09
Yes, Grumman.  oh_never_mind | 07/13/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  herrbob | 07/10/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  bkn2000 | 07/10/09
one more comment  bkn2000 | 07/10/09
Did you not understand  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 07/10/09
re did not understand  bkn2000 | 07/11/09
I'm almost 30 years old and even when I was a kid this was a myth  worldnick | 07/10/09
40 years later  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 07/10/09
It didn't happen at all.  Bozzer | 07/11/09
Why is it so inconceivable  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 07/11/09
You fail to grasp reality...  DonRupertBitByte | 07/12/09
Then you shouldn't work in technology...  DonRupertBitByte | 07/12/09
Ask Buzz  oh_never_mind | 07/13/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  art.denzau@... | 07/10/09
Agreed  konkreet | 07/10/09
APOLLO MOON LANDINGS  pabranchaud@... | 07/10/09
Space-food Sticks & Tang!  Peopleunit | 07/10/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  stee2000000 | 07/10/09
Ummmmm.....  Cayble | 07/10/09
What about now?  kitko | 07/11/09
We may have no choice  jperlowZDNet Moderator | 07/11/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  gertruded | 07/11/09
Rocketdyne  oh_never_mind | 07/13/09
Chrysler, believe it or not!  oh_never_mind | 07/13/09
And even IBM  oh_never_mind | 07/13/09
RE: To the Moon: How we built the technologies  ccouillard@... | 07/28/09

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