Talk:International Space Station

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Former featured article International Space Station is a former featured article. Please see the links under Article milestones below for its original nomination page (for older articles, check the nomination archive) and why it was removed.
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[edit] Edit / talk page notices

The page notices for British, and ATTitude / ALTitude, are not needed as far as I can see. Is there anyone who can give a good reason for them to be retained ? Attitude is easily replaced with the word orientation, it seems to work very well so far. Like 'Crew' instead of Astro/Cosmonaut. There seems to be no need to be contentious with the editors. Also, there is no need to have any more spell checker attacks and the whole British Vs American thing anymore. Penyulap talk 04:30, 20 September 2011 (UTC)

Gw, rather than call it a big rehash, I'd rather hear it stated one time by the man who changed it without consensus (but I think perfectly justified) why he chose British. Searching the archives will provide no light on this single subject. Penyulap talk 21:23, 5 October 2011 (UTC)
Come to think of it a pointer to the consensus that was reached to change it to british would be interesting too, although I know myself what he did was cool. Just the silence isn't so much. Penyulap talk 00:50, 6 October 2011 (UTC)
If I recall correctly, I don't think there was a consensus. I think it was changed ad hoc, and then when people changed it back, it started getting "reverted" to British despite that the original change to British should have been what was reverted, as it was without consensus. This article is a monument to the failure of the Wiki process. Jason Quinn (talk) 20:57, 8 October 2011 (UTC)
Well thank you for some sense on the matter. That is precisely what happened, and it's caused problems ever since. I fully intend to do precisely the same thing, that is, to return it to it's former state. ad hoc. I'll do it with precisely the same platform used, so that any argument that can be used to defend the first change will apply to the second change I make, and go 3R over it too. Let's see them argue that one with their mommy. I will make this article and it's talkpage a peaceful place where everyone is welcome and comfortable editing, and I absolutely will not give up, or be silent, or stop, or compromise, until that is the case, or I find Sarah Conner, either one is good. At the moment however, I'm trying to find if the EPIC:FAIL, sorry, ENG:VAR guidelines can be changed first, to fix this problem if I can, for everyone, and I'm using this article as an example of the need for change. Penyulap talk 06:51, 9 October 2011 (UTC)
...And "programme" just took another hit. Penyulap talk 05:50, 15 October 2011 (UTC)

[edit] Intention to remove all ENG:VAR related talkpage templates and edit notices

Letting everyone know that I'll remove these templates soon. Consensus was not gained first to change the variant, and no consensus has been gained since then. Consensus must be gained before change, (or failing that after). If anyone wants to show me where consensus for a change to the current variant was gained I'd appreciate it. Penyulap talk 05:50, 15 October 2011 (UTC)

{{editprotected}} Symbol declined.svg Declined

Requesting removal of edit notice templates. Commonality has been used for attitude/altitude. It's working fine. The phrase 'orientation (attitude)' doesn't get corrected the way phrases like 'control the stations attitude' used to get changed all the time. Not even one little 'orientation (ghey)', 'nothing but net' there.

As per Jason Quinn's remarks above, there never was a consensus to change the article to a eng:var. After a great deal of discussion and searching and asking the editor who inserted the notices in the first place, no consensus for change has been found. No consensus for the change existed and no consensus is likely to occur any time soon.

There is more discussion related to this issue on the MOS discussion page, which is now in archives, here looking for a proper solution to the ongoing problems this is causing. Looking for a proper solution here as well, in accordance with the proper procedures for ENG:VAR, these notices should never have been inserted in the first place. Although it's a fix for this page, the problem will still go on everywhere else and needs addressing. If the notices aren't removed this is just going to drag out longer. It's not going away. If it's left it will be here long after I'm gone, editors hit this article on a regular basis. All other spaceflight articles are without notices. All daughter articles of this one have no notices. That works well. Penyulap talk 01:18, 17 October 2011 (UTC)

There's no apparent consensus to make the changes you're proposing above, and no reason to remove the edit notices. This has been discussed repeatedly. Sorry, declined. --Ckatzchatspy 06:40, 17 October 2011 (UTC)
Always makes me smile when you come out of the woodwork my friend. You are missing the point here Ckatz, there was no consensus for the change. Please, feel free, correct me on that one, one little diff to a proposal for British, love to see it. If there was no consensus for the change, why on earth does there need to be consensus to fix it ? Or if consensus was not needed for the change, why is it suddenly necessary now ? You've got the perfect catch-22 right here on this page, and that's your platform is it ? A little too shaky for me. I'll go with the policy, the one stated on the template itself. That ENG:VAR "should not be changed without broad consensus." well, where is the "Broad consensus" tell me and I'll shut the hell up. Otherwise I'm going to keep looking for the answer either here or off on the policy pages or wherever. The article keeps getting ENG:VAR hits, even if you could shut me up over this, I can't see how you can shut up ALL the editors and force your stated British preference on them. Penyulap talk 09:35, 17 October 2011 (UTC)
I am not going to ask 'why British' that would be like asking poly why he wants a cracker. Penyulap talk 12:32, 17 October 2011 (UTC)
Actually, you've all but stated that you intend to edit war until you get your way. That would be highly inadvisable, especially given that you did not receive support for your position when you brought it up at a MOS page. --Ckatzchatspy
"(Standardize to BrEng, per Penyulap's observation of inconsistencies in the text) " Oh that made me laugh so hard I almost laid an egg. When did I ever notice anything inconsistent in the text ? seriously ? Why do I get the credit for an idea like that ? I've never ever had a problem with the text of that article. Have I ever put the apostrophe in the right place for it's or its' or is it its ? Who knows, not me, the copyeditors, who do such a brilliant job are handling that. The only thing I notice is that these little flags cause a lot of trouble. If editors didn't arrive at this battlefield and see the flag, they wouldn't grab their popgun and start charging about in a huff to defend their homeland. It's the editors I observe, not the text. I have no clue if american is the -ize or the -ise, I would kindof guess -ize, am I right ? And these problems are easy to fix too. Do you remember how everyone used to attack the lead section where it said "Assembled"?... every 5 minutes they'd go nuts over it. I fixed that problem good and proper by taking away that word, I took away the word and the year and anything that caused trouble for them, and now look at the lead, when was the last time that got hit ? I can't even remember. I'd have to look it up. Do you remember the ATTitude ALTitude problem ? I changed that to orientation, and who has attacked that eh? I put orientation(attitude) and haven't even got one orientation(Gay) yet from some little kid. This isn't Brain surgery, it's just rocket science. If an article is well written, you don't even need refs for it, except to satisfy the rules. When it's craply written, editors attack it constantly to fix it. Vandalism==crapo. warring==crapo. Even I used to war over how many space station projects there were, we all did. Nobody knew, even editors. Lolz. Now it's well-written we can all see what is correct. Anyhow, as to warring, you'll have to pick the spot better, and it's not "Program" vs "Programme" though I'll wait until some other editor wars with you over that, and then I'll show you both how it's done properly. I love you Ckatz, I just wish you'd get to pick the winning horse once in a while. I feel bad when someone I so admire looks a bit silly(were not talking look silly like me mind you, nothing as monumental or professional as that) but this program+me thing just looks like, well, beneath you. Personally, I would have picked uncivil or something, you can get closer on that one, because I'll support you, heck, I have reported myself to ANI for uncivil. And the MOS thing is such a totally separate issue, I don't look for support there for changes to the article here. I look for a global cure to this childish problem, and I am getting closer. I've got a lovely idea about it now, can't wait to see if it's a workable cure. (P.S. please do get me banned, but make sure it's global, because I want to get some Real Life stuff done, and I think I'd hang about and fix this article in it's 76 other languages, I am that addicted) Penyulap talk 00:43, 18 October 2011 (UTC)
Not sure why the multi-paragraph bit above was needed; you wrote "And "programme" just took another hit" in the preceding section. A quick check revealed that there were a number of such inconsistencies. --Ckatzchatspy 05:32, 18 October 2011 (UTC)
I'm left wondering why it can be interpreted as any kind of suggestion that I'm not NEUTRAL in all of this BRIT vs US stuff. I didn't suggest the editor did the wrong thing, he's doing what so very many do, so how can it be wrong. If anything, people could make the opposite inference, and be left thinking I support that editor. The whole thrust of my observation is, that whatever it is this ENG:VAR is supposed to be doing, it is so failing, it's swimming against the tide of the stream of editors who are arriving and changing the article. When I read your edit summary "(Standardize to BrEng, per Penyulap's observation of inconsistencies in the text)" it looks like your trying to use me to get around the 3RR yourself, although I'm not keeping count of how many times you've done the +me thing, are you ? If the edit summary was read on it's own, it looks like I may have suggested there was a problem. Anyhow, the whole thing kind of gives me some more ideas about the mos, so it's all great. Penyulap talk 10:21, 18 October 2011 (UTC)

I have a fair idea that concensus on the VAR is likely to change. That aside for the time being, I'd propose the Attitude/Altitude is removed, as the commonality solution of orientation works just fine, it hasn't been edited over as far as I know, ever since I popped it in there, which was a long time ago now. Penyulap talk 17:41, 3 November 2011 (UTC)

Why do you think it is likely to change? What circumstances are different now to when this was originally discussed? You've already raised it twice, other discussions have also taken place, but no consensus has emerged, and nothing new has been stated. Repeating the same discussion solely in the hope that it might yield a different outcome is simply disruption and abuse of process. --GW 20:36, 3 November 2011 (UTC)
Well the article's largest contributor, colds7ream (I know you know this, but others don't) was always pro-British and changed it to British. He seems to have given up on the idea now. I'm not saying he has anything more than one vote, but he has the most respect from me, and a few others. The consensus always got carried through as locked by the 'status quo' idea. (some mistakes are built to last). I'm not saying that Ckatz is getting tired of arguing with people who slice off the 'me' from program, I think he has plenty of energy for it. Anyhow, it becomes less of a 'thing' as time passes and I fix things up on common ground. I'm changing 'program' to 'project' everywhere it works well in the article next time it 'gets hit' as I call it, to see how that goes. Project seems to be reasonably stable, it has a good few mentions now and no-one seems to mind. Plus, whose native language is British anyhow, or what was/is the national tie, who is here to wave the flag for British as a content writer. There are some, but how many of them care. I keep pushing commonality into the article and orientation rather than attitude, and it seems to matter less and less. Penyulap talk 02:37, 4 November 2011 (UTC)
Trying to convert to US in that manner won't fly, and would be considered disruptive and abuse of process. There have been enough discussions resulting in "keep it British" to make any future ones more-or-less moot. --Ckatzchatspy 04:25, 4 November 2011 (UTC)
Well suit yourself. I'll not spoil the party by taking away those '+me's you so enjoy. But naturally I'll continue to write 'project' where it's suitable as I go along adding material. I just don't see these arguments as a good way to spend my precious time on earth. If there was a more stable article, people could use their energy where it's needed more. You say moot, I say change is not only a law of the universe, but inevitable in this article's VAR, the '-me' editors are a constant flow, there is no chance they will stop. Penyulap talk 11:20, 4 November 2011 (UTC)

Repeating my request for the removal of edit notice template. Commonality has been used for attitude/altitude. It's working fine. The phrase 'orientation (attitude)' doesn't get corrected the way phrases like 'control the stations attitude' used to get changed all the time. Not even one little 'orientation (ghey)', 'nothing but net' there.

It's been about 7 weeks from my original proposal and there haven't been any objections. So I'd like to see how it goes without this template, I expect it's one less thing we need. Penyulap talk 06:36, 4 December 2011 (UTC)

(Inserting clarification note)This repeated request is not for Eng:var it is for attitude/altitude The request made in this section was a two part request. The repeated request, here, is specifically and only for the second part of the original request. (but consider either as you wish) Penyulap talk 00:42, 5 December 2011 (UTC)
  • I would be inclined to oppose this. There is clearly no consensus to remove the en-GB template, and I don't see what harm the continued presence of the attitude/altitude template is doing - such terms could come up again in the future. --GW 08:13, 4 December 2011 (UTC)
  • Pictogram voting info.svg Administrator note: I might suggest that in the absence of consensus either way, the default should probably be no edit notice until a consensus does develop. I would also be inclined to give Penyulap's request (as a major contributor to the article) some added weight. However to help me evaluate the situation it would be helpful if someone could point me towards the previous discussions on this issue. — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 11:02, 4 December 2011 (UTC)
    Martin, here are some archived discussions on the issues: Early 2009 RfC, Dec 2009, end of 2010, June 2011. I find it unfortunate that American English wasn't simply used from the start, because then nobody would really complain. But the WP:ENGVAR guideline points to British English: The first edit in the article's history where there is a difference in English varieties is this 2002 edit, where the word "kilometres" is used. Also the article's "first major contributor" (which one could argue was Colds7ream) used British English (which is what was used when it was promoted to FA). And as I argued in this thread, the guideline WP:TIES doesn't really apply to the ISS.
    But unfortunately this whole discussion will keep coming up, and is a waste of editor time; which is why I find it unfortunate American English wasn't used, because then the problem would go away. Mlm42 (talk) 22:36, 4 December 2011 (UTC)

(inserted edit....Removing my request for a moment until GW has a chance to say if he still objects Penyulap talk 12:18, 4 December 2011 (UTC)) Sorry guys it seems I wasn't being clear enough about this, the original request 7 or so weeks ago was a twofold request, to remove two notices, one had been discussed and it's like some people haven't really given up on eng-GB as yet, which is all good, I'm not asking for any change there, I'd much prefer everyone agrees first really. My request today is referring to the other half of my original request, I guess it was overlooked really. It's for this notice here:

This is the part I am asking about today, just this part. I've pretty much discussed it above, and it seems there aren't any comments or concerns regarding my thinking on it's removal. Penyulap talk 11:59, 4 December 2011 (UTC)

GW, it is still in the article, as attitude, but it seems that qualifying it with orientation (attitude) worked really well, the places it's unqualified are doing well as it's in more technical sections. I'm figuring that people who are attracted by the launch table are reading and learning, and then know whats going on. I am thinking that it's easier to add a tiny note, in the article, so that the article does what an article is supposed to do, that is, explain what it is talking about. That way we don't need a warning notice. If there are less warning notices then people are more likely to read them, no ? The GB will be more prominent (nudge) (nod). Penyulap talk 12:15, 4 December 2011 (UTC)
I have removed this notice for now. Please continue to discuss the ENGVAR issue. — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 11:22, 5 December 2011 (UTC)
Thanks for that, I'll keep an eye out and ask for it's return if it's causing any extra workload. As for the Eng:var, I'm not up to anything there, just waiting for a few editors to run out of steam on the issue. relaxing on the issue is inevitable, I can wait. Penyulap talk 20:35, 5 December 2011 (UTC)
I have reverted your most recent attempt to remove one of the talk page templates without further discussion. You have provided no evidence that the template is doing harm, and from your comment that you are "waiting for a few editors to run out of steam", I would suggest that the real reason you want to remove the template about discussions being restated is because it harms your position if you keep trying to restart discussion yourself and that template is there. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 14:41, 26 December 2011 (UTC)
I think this is an interesting discussion, I gave my reasons, now you've giving my reasons, I'm thinking at some point the 'reliable source' for what I'm thinking is going to be... wait for it...'me'. Anyhow I didn't need to prove the altitude / attitude template was causing damage before I had it removed, is there some reason you don't want a civilized discussion on ENG:VAR to take place ? Are you thinking what I'm thinking, like someone will ask "What has the ISS got to do with Britain ?" Personally I think we could eventually switch off the batman signal, so that our Heroic SuperHamster might return to his real superhero duties, rather than fighting the IP masses. Meh, but that's just me, I don't like to make unnecessary busywork for other editors. I kind of think it's polite to let them know why it needs to be done. Penyulap talk 13:13, 27 December 2011 (UTC)
Franky, I couldn't care less which dialect it is written in - at the end of the day, what does it matter since both dialects are so similar that anybody can read either - why are you so worked up about it? Past discussions have determined the current choice of dialect, and have determined that the article does not have strong enough national ties to the US to justify changing. Therefore, it should remain the same, since there is no good reason to change, per WP:ENGVAR. Despite there being no change in circumstances, several other editors have raised the issue, presenting absolutely nothing new, simply because they do not like the arrangement. Such discussions have found no consensus to change, and have merely disrupted the functioning of the talk page with editors attacking each other like you are doing now. It would be extremely counterproductive to have discussions on this every few months, and in situations where the same editor is constantly raising the same issue, it is seen as disruptive editing.
Your analogy between this and the altitude/attitude template is flawed in that it did not relate to a controversial issue, and its removal was less likely to cause harm. I have tried to assume good faith of you this far, but since you have stated that you intend to keep raising this question until you get the response that you want, I have to question whether your removal that template was intended to remove something causing harm to the article, or to your personal goal. It could even be interpreted as trying to boil a frog by slowly removing templates and words relating to the current arrangement, until it reaches a stage where a complete change can be achieved without provoking discussion until it is a fait accompli. I doubt if that is your intention, but that is how it could be interpreted.
In principle I have absolutely no objection to holding a civilised discussion on the issue, but I do object to holding one (civilised or otherwise) every few months, which is why that template is present. We just go around in circles, while wasting time arguing points of policy versus nationalism, and nothing constructive comes out of it. I'm fed up of it, and I'm fairly sure that most of the other editors involved are fed up as well. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 14:01, 27 December 2011 (UTC)
In regards to "and have determined that the article does not have strong enough national ties to the US to justify changing. Therefore, it should remain the same, since there is no good reason to change," this seems to make the false assumption that the article needs to be British or American, that is not the case. The article could be brought into line with all it's related articles, sub-articles and all spaceflight articles. That is, no VAR. Pick a link on the ISS article, and then look at that articles variant, and you'll see there is no variant.
"like you are doing now." I'd like to know who ? or how ? and happy to apologize in advance to said party.
In regards to "In principle I have absolutely no objection to holding a civilised discussion on the issue," I'd like to ask you in a civilized manner what is the national tie to ANY nation, be it British or American. This article was tied to British as it is James's preference, and so that's a logical choice, the circumstances that have changed, which you seem unaware of, is James's changing stance on the issue, his somewhat reduced rate of editing, and my creation of many new sections and the complete re-writing of others. I'm not suggesting my own preference, I'm just saying why James's preference is still required when he doesn't care for it any longer. Or for that matter, back to the beginning WHAT NATIONAL TIE. seriously, I would like 1, repeat ONE. civilized answer. Not the Variant, the national tie. There is no 'round in circles', there is no previous discussion, I have searched the archives and I find no answer to the ISS having a British National tie. One answer, One explanation, is one too many answers to ask for ?
I'm kind of thinking that there oh, may not actually be a national tie. I'm thinking that the endless reediting of the article by the general public, and the re-editing of the article by other editors to reverse it is the "round and round". That is the actual problem here. THAT is what goes on and on and on and on. I'm thinking that new readers have better things to do then endlessly fix what they perceive to be spelling mistakes in the article. I'm thinking that wikipedia editors have better things to do than endlessly argue with the never ending stream of new readers, to keep this particular article alone as a sore thumb amongst all other spaceflight articles, it's the only one with a stated variant.
So please, civilized discussion time, why is the International Space Station as a subject tied to any particular nation ? Lets just settle the issue ONCE. just one time, just for one simple explanation is all I'm after. So it's like please complete this sentence for me "The International Space Station has a national tie because......" Penyulap talk 14:49, 27 December 2011 (UTC)
( crickets ).......It's more than a week, and I'm still racking my brain to come up with a national tie. I'm sure that can't be it. Any help here ? anyone ? National tie to Britain ? Penyulap talk 11:42, 5 January 2012 (UTC)
There are some words which cannot easily be made dialect-neutral, and attempting to do so would only make the language cumbersome and be severely detrimental to the article's quality. Apart from that, your three paragraph rant completely missed the point, so I was just ignoring it. There are no national ties to the UK, but as has already been discussed ad nauseam, the station's ties to the United States are not strong enough to justify changing from the established dialect. British English isn't being used because it is "James's preference", or mine, or anyone else's. It is being used because it is the dialect which Wikipedia policies and guidelines dictate we should use in this situation. Nothing new here, I just wasted five minutes of my life replying. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 13:16, 5 January 2012 (UTC)
Oh my, I missed your reply, there was so much going on when I just checked the tp history, and saw me yapping away last as usual I didn't notice your reply, so forgive my tardiness. Firstly, thanks for mentioning there is no national tie to Britain. That's pretty much what I had been thinking too, and was at the end of my rope trying to think of one. But as for the MOS mentioning 'in this situation' I'm sure it does not. In fact I don't think the people writing it at the time they typed on their keyboards ever foresaw the ISS talkpage. I'm thinking if they did, they might have paused for a moment of reflection, hesitating long enough to stand up and get themselves a drink of water, or a jug full, before returning to their computer, (and pouring it all over the motherboard). Anyhow, at the moment, what I am wondering, is do you understand that almost all sub-articles of the ISS don't have a VAR template, and that that situation is actually a possible situation for the ISS talkpage ? I, personally, can picture the day when the Talkpage, is once again like it was long long ago, free from any VAR template of any kind. I'm not saying it will occur by 2020, but I can see the day (well, I can also see the end of the world before that day but anyhow). What I am wondering is can you imaging this talkpage without that template ? Is that a possibility ? can we cleave asunder the article from the template without destroying the internet, I really want a serious consideration of the possibility.
What I'm thinking, is it is possible. Part of my secret plan to have a look at what occurs, and find the natural state of the article, what readers themselves prefer. If it looks like peril or impending doom, I shall personally petition our Heroic SuperHamster to assist, and quickly replace the template myself. How does that sound ? Penyulap talk 14:25, 11 January 2012 (UTC)
What do you mean by "natural state"? --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 17:58, 11 January 2012 (UTC)
When force is not applied to an article, such as editing restrictions, templates, locking the article, basically when everyone is free to edit as they please, the article finds it's natural state, a baseline for the article can be established. You can gauge how much the article sucks then, if it is terrible or pushes one point of view, people try to edit it a lot. If it is a work of art that explains every aspect of a topic from all viewpoints, and all readers are learning from it, they just leave it alone. Like attitude in the article, if we explain it in the article, people just leave it alone. So I'm looking for the 'natural state' of the article, I don't much care what we as editors want, as we can write either way, I can write, and often do, in languages I don't even speak. But I want to know what natural state is best for the article according to the readership. James said he was sick of the war against the natural state ages ago. Me, I'm building the article, and just laughing at the people who waste their time in pointless battle. But I do love superhamster. That makes me smile. Penyulap talk 07:51, 12 January 2012 (UTC)
No, that's not how it works; frankly that would be a disaster for the quality of the article, and worse than changing to American English directly. We'd either end up with dubious editors trying to violate WP:ENGVAR by stealth, an edit war, or an article using several dialects. I fail to see how any of these scenarios are in the interests of the article, or Wikipedia - they only serve Americans editing the article, to make certain actions easier for them. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 08:42, 12 January 2012 (UTC)
Yes, these echo my own concerns that it will bring an end to the internet in general. Is there some way we can stop these 'Americans editing the article' ? maybe an IP based filter, would that work ? Still, in regards to edit wars, we can't say the current situation actually stops edit wars, as the article's history is something of a testament for the opposite viewpoint. Anyhow, I quite need to know more about their 'certain actions' so I can be more vigilant, I've done my best to use 'project' rather than 'programme' to prevent any more blatant defiance using the word 'program', but the insidious creep of 'ize' or 'ise' I am embarrassed to confess to you I can't remember which is which, I just go with the auto-spell checker thing. I feel ashamed to be letting our side down, but I do what I can. Which other words can I bludgeon with commonality ? Can you think of any ? Penyulap talk 12:36, 12 January 2012 (UTC)
re "an edit war" well, that's already happened several times, so the current situation hasn't fixed it either, re "an article using several dialects" I think that has already happened. I figure it was unavoidable, plus, my own is pretty much exactly that, several. Unless you mean something else ? Or do you simply mean the spelling of a few words, and nothing else besides ? Penyulap talk 23:12, 26 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] New Template

Preempting any removal of the template, I'll ask anyone who does remove it to explain why here. Penyulap talk 11:59, 19 January 2012 (UTC)

  • You shouldn't really make an edit if you know it is going to be reverted - at least you recognise that you are being disruptive, the next step is to stop trying to make a point, and engage in a civilised discussion (you know, that thing you told me you were all in favour of). Your template is clearly designed to incite disruption, only presents your side of the discussion, and contains several factual errors. As has been discussed ad nauseum, the selection of dialect was in accordance with Wikipedia's policies and guidelines, and there was consensus to make the change. There was a subsequent discussion which showed that there was no consensus to override the previous discussion. Please stop being disruptive, and help to make the article better rather than just creating templates designed to incite bad-tempered discussions and incivilty, keep the talk page going round in circles and misrepresent the issue. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 16:38, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
My foresight has nothing to do with my point of view, don't confuse the two. Just because I can predict that you, personally, won't agree with me doesn't mean I am disruptive to other editors, it's just you. "Sho me the consensus" as they say, because you are making a contradictory argument there, claiming on one hand that there was some proposal, and on the other hand it was done in accordance with a guideline. The decision was arbitrary, there was clear opposition to it, which was ignored. And I'm not even on the 'American' side of the fence and yet the blatant disregard for consensus building has got me pointing this out. Now, are you wanting to discuss this seriously, or carry on with templates that claim anyone that disagrees with you, personally, is disruptive ? Penyulap talk 20:42, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
Now in regards to 'civilized discussion', I think, and James as far as I know, (don't forget he doesn't like me) seems to think that the article has stability issues in regards to how does he put it, masses ? I can't recall, lots of Americans changing the spelling. What do you think, is that a fair statement to say there are lots of people who change the spelling (I don't mean people who change it because of the established VAR, but because they naturally think there are grammatical errors) ? Penyulap talk 21:02, 19 January 2012 (UTC)
WDGraham, I just noticed you say 'and there was consensus to make the change.' may I ask where that is ? Penyulap talk 01:37, 28 January 2012 (UTC)
It is somewhere deep in the archives, or one of the FACs or PRs. I can't remember where off the top of my head, I'll look later. As for there being "lots of [American] people who change the spelling", if the article were in American English, what makes you think British editors wouldn't change spellings for exactly the same reasons? --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 08:18, 28 January 2012 (UTC)

Would this be any better then, because you won't need to find it, other people can help out too. As far as the British changing it for the same reason, I think that's not the case, Yes, there would be some, somewhere sometime possibly, although it would surprise me, but I think overall, the vast majority of the convert to British editing is done by eng:var editors, not 'natural state' editors. That's what I foresee, and would quite like to check it out. But I would think that leaving the article without a template would avoid the opposite effect, where Americans war just for eng:var, rather than natural state. Anyhow, that's something I'd like to test out. Penyulap talk 21:58, 28 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] My Observations

I think these are fair statements :

  • The talkpage shows many strong objections to both British and American ENG:VAR.
  • A tally of the objections over the course of the last few years shows there is no clear majority on either side.
  • If there ever was a consensus of sufficient size to overwhelm all objections, it can't be found.
  • The use of an ENG:VAR template on the talkpage is not exempt from consensus.

No talkpage ENG:VAR template should be used until a consensus can be established on which VAR to use. Obviously the article will be written in some var or the other, I'd suggest that the spelling be left up to the newbies and guild of copy-editors to arrange as they see fit, so long as they aren't involved in the conflict. Editing just to war over the spelling is considered naughty and is subject to glaring -(O)-(O)- and the other stuff, but I can't see that being necessary, I foresee the war pretty much dissolving once the flag is taken away. If that is not the case, and the internet does come to an end, I'll assist in a new solution.

If nobody can find fault with this clear thinking, then in a little while I shall repeat the other half of my original request. Penyulap talk 06:28, 1 February 2012 (UTC)

  • Given that British English was the first dialect used in this article, that is considered its natural state, and in the absence of a consensus to change, WP:ENGVAR states that it should be retained, regardless of objections or a lack of continuing consensus to support it - you don't seem to understand how this works, but it must start somewhere, and it is this starting state that is retained if there is no consensus to do otherwise - the template is just clarifying this. Decisions on Wikipedia are made by consensus, not majority, so it should only be removed if a clear consensus is formed to remove it. Indeed the presence of the template is not exempt from consensus, but one against one is not consensus, so you have no consensus to remove it. From your comment about the "flag" causing the edit war, perhaps you should take your objections about the design of the template up on the template's talk page rather than making cavalier decisions to remove the template from articles, regardless of the damage that its removal could do. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 07:48, 1 February 2012 (UTC)
I have no real objections to the dialect of the article, it's the template that is the bother. It is the red flag to the bulls. It promotes the warring and that is something we can do without. I shall be making some suggestions regarding changes to the MOS later, to address things like "WP:ENGVAR states that it should be retained, regardless of objections" for example. As it is, I do not believe that the MOS needs clarification to overturn the addition of the template itself. It's clearly unpopular, any template is unpopular for this article, and I shall be sort-of surprised if the next admin to answer my request also believes there is a great deal of "damage that its removal could do." I just looked at the Mir article, and it's a good article, with no template, I can't see the impending doom quite as clearly as I can see a settling. I think that vandalism for the article has dropped off to something like once a month, but I might be wrong, I'd like to see it drop off entirely (well, maybe a quarterly, or annual event). Penyulap talk 08:44, 1 February 2012 (UTC)
I just went off and had another read of ENG:VAR, and I couldn't find the phrase "regardless of objections". I found regardless a few times in abbreviation and punctuation sections though. But I did find the eng:var paragraph says "When an English variety's consistent usage has been established in an article, it is maintained in the absence of consensus to the contrary." it looks to me like if we were to go back and look at any few years we might find that the spelling over the years might not have actually been British who knows, I don't. I wouldn't want to have to go and pull out the rug and hand over the article to those "Dubious" sneaky Americans, but you know, if I am called upon to do as much, for the sake of the articles stability, I just might consider it. But I DON'T think that's a good idea really, I'd rather NO little flag at all. If I had to choose between a flag and no flag, and considered which flag would keep the article stable, I'm not sure. (even though it couldn't be too hard to look at the article every 6 or 12 months to see just which Variant applies to "consistent usage established in an article," I do know that at the moment people are fond of pointing to the spelling of one word, but I am not sure that a single instance can really define the word consistent quite as convincingly as I think I could define it. But I haven't checked, because I don't yet care. Penyulap talk 09:30, 1 February 2012 (UTC)
I can see where you're coming from, but I disagree. I think that while the template may encourage a troll or two, you're always going to get that. What it does do is prevent good-faith mistakes. With regards to consistent usage, I know for a fact that at the time of the first FAC (which occurred shortly before the dialect selection was made and the template was added), one of the quality issues raised with the article was that it contained a mixture of dialects. Either way, British English is now in consistent usage, so it should be maintained in the absence of a consensus to do otherwise. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 12:38, 1 February 2012 (UTC)

I feel uncomfortable going into this, as it only serves to highlight James possibly misunderstanding the MOS, which is poorly written, and I have respect for the contributions James has made to this article. What you refer to, about the mixture of dialects was noticed here in the FAC.

I just realized that there is quite a bit of "British" english in the article, while most of it is American oriented, especially the dates. analyse, programme, kilometres, tonnes, pressurised. I'm not quite into the finer details of US vs. UK spelling. I'm not sure what to do in these cases.

--TheDJ (talk • contribs) 20:12, 9 December 2008 (UTC)

So what TheDj was pointing out, is that the article was written in American English("most of it is American"), and TheDJ had noticed James had been inserting "quite a bit of" British.

The Manual of Style says that you should decide upon a dialect and stick with it; I think the general unspoken agreement was that given the article also discusses European and Russian spaceflight, which are predominantly written in British English (see Salyut 6, for instance), that was the best way to go.

Colds7ream (talk) 00:08, 10 December 2008 (UTC)

Here, James refers to Salyut 6, where the talkpage even today has had only 25 edits, hardly an analogue of the ISS. James inserted the British banner onto the Salyut 6 talkpage when he created that talkpage, so no discussion was required at all.

I don't see bringing this up as helpful, because James stating "the general unspoken agreement" shows there was no consensus. Clearly here where he makes a declaration The dialect has been standardized to en-GB and inserts the template, there is no consensus on the talkpage regarding the change. Are you just trying to get the article changed over to American English ? I thought you were in the British camp, at least if I didn't have to drive my point home this far, it could have stayed with the British spelling for a while longer, as it is now, I've had to rip apart the British army's little fortress. The pro-British side is hardly going to thank me for all of this, and it paints me as pro-American, which I'm not, I'm neutral.

I am sure many editors are aware that I am multi-lingual, and can also speak many dialects of English (and spell most of them badly) like when I speak with newbies, I try to match their dialect, so imagine the situation if you would, that as someone who has written a good deal of this article, I was simply to shove in for example, a different template onto the talkpage. Then quote "most of the spaceflight articles are in Hong-kong English" or "there is a general unspoken agreement that Jamaican English is the standard." Then all of the same uproar would result as the British decision did. Just because no template was on the talkpage previously doesn't give license for this soft of thing, consensus must be considered. I see nothing about the British decision that follows consensus. I don't care for any variant whatsoever, but at the rate it is going we'll have an american article in no time if I must keep discussing this. Penyulap talk 21:37, 1 February 2012 (UTC)

Regardless of that interpretation (the later discussion established that British English was correct since both British and American were present in significant quantities, and the first dialect to be introduced was British), the article is now established in en-GB, and internal consistency has been achieved. How we got here is irrelevant, and trying to use your interpretation of a comment made in an FAC over three years ago would at best be a case of shutting the stable door long after the horse has bolted, and at worst wikilawyering. For the record, I am pro-status quo, irrespective of dialect, which is the only justifiable position afforded by WP:ENGVAR. I would also point out that it is illogical to propose a change away from the status quo whilst claiming to be neutral. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 23:50, 1 February 2012 (UTC)
Well, the essay makes me think if that is what passes for an essay on a good day, I should try my hand at writing some. I couldn't possibly work out what it is trying to say, so how hard can it be to write one of those things. I couldn't see how it related to the 'case' in hand, so if you can point that out, cool. What I don't really agree with is the part where you say "How we got here is irrelevant" because along with the status quo position, I see my first staunch supporter for when I drink too much coffee and decide the article would look best with a Jamaican flavoring. Am I right to say it won't matter how I do it, you'll support it no matter what ? I'm pretty sure I can find lots of typical historical Jamaican expressions in the article, along with plenty that I've introduced along the way as well. As far as the horse has bolted, how long do I have to hold the article in Jamaican before it can't be challenged anymore, how far does the horse have to get from the gate measured in weeks or years ? Penyulap talk 01:09, 3 February 2012 (UTC)

[edit] New section - Work

I think there should be a new section in the part where there are Food, Exercise and Hygiene. I want to entitle it Work and de,rive it mainly from the crew timelines here. Any help and/or comments would be welcome.--U5K0'sTalkMake WikiLove not WikiWar 14:26, 20 September 2011 (UTC)

Cool, go for it, I'm happy to help, we have to keep away from lists though, the big brass in the project seem to hate lists
  • So if it looks like this
  • they won't pass it for a featured article someday
  • they really don't like lists
But if it looks like this, all the different things in sentences, they'll love it. If each item has a sentence and they all follow each other. That's what I've learnt from the FAR and PR. I have seen those schedules before, when I was looking for the answer to who controls orientation of the station, like from which control center. There are ones that give a layout of a standard day, rather than a specific day. I'll try to find it too. The Canadian site here gives some good info on exercise. Some of the other stuff is on the shuttle though, and certainly some is old(which doesn't necessarily rule it out if things haven't changed, but fresh is better) A good example of a day laid out in paragraphs rather than a list is here on the ESA site. Something like that would be awesome. It's a good read, interesting and entertaining. Don't worry if you copy too much into this article though, I can help move what's too big into a sub-article if you have trouble. The summary that gets put here in this article is pretty much a cut and paste copy of the first paragraph of the sub-article. So what you write here will get copied there for the heading, or the other way round. Then anything too big for here will go there, and not be deleted. I'll keep looking for the schedule if it's not enough, or if you don't find what your looking for.. the link that you gave with specific timelines would go into the specific mission pages i would think, do you think so ? Penyulap talk 23:19, 20 September 2011 (UTC)
The new section called work just went in, although tracy doesn't seem to be getting the idea about 'I' in team, lolz. Plus, they seem to spend a lot of that section asleep. Anyhow, the life support section has taken away the parts that are part of the life support system, and safety aspects has taken in exercise, as exercise counters the medical problems from zero G. All needs a bit of polish though... Penyulap talk 18:42, 14 October 2011 (UTC)
I found the perfect pic for the section, they're well prepared for all those things that fall on them in zero-gravity. Lolz.Penyulap talk 15:39, 22 October 2011 (UTC)
There's got to be a better title than 'work' like activities, daily routine, typical crew schedule, life/living on the station, a day in the life of an ISS crewmember :)... some combination thereof. Something that reflects the daily aspects of this *amazing* high wire research and maintenance and yet connects to the reader on the ground without inflation or hype. There's a tall linguistic order. It was my assumption meals for instance were personal downtime rather than 'work' even as part of their schedule. Doesn't NASA refer to it as 'Station Activities' or 'Crew Activities'? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Doyna Yar (talkcontribs) 03:59, 17 October 2011 (UTC)
'flight activities' might be a bit confusing, 'schedule' I'm sure will turn up as although it's boring, used everywhere in the article already, encyclopedias are a bit that way. 'Itinerary' is that too fancy ? as in 'crew itinerary'. Lets see what everyone else comes up with too. (but yes, work and schedule are a bit boring, although certainly clear and minimalist). Penyulap talk 05:51, 17 October 2011 (UTC)
any further ideas on the name of the section ? who likes / dislikes the suggestions that have been made so far .. Penyulap talk 15:39, 22 October 2011 (UTC)
I like Crew activities. --U5K0'sTalkMake WikiLove not WikiWar 21:48, 7 December 2011 (UTC)
well go for it. Penyulap talk 01:02, 8 December 2011 (UTC)
Craigboy, you mention in your edit summary that the image is 'unencyclopedic', why ? I can't see any problem with it, the lads are all clearly working. It's clearly 3 times better than the replacement, as there is 3 times the work being done.
Pen I'm not going to play these games.Craigboy (talk) 05:52, 24 December 2011 (UTC)
It's not a game Craigboy, it's a proper picture of the actual station with real crew activities and it's a fair indication of the working environment. What I need now is a real reason from you as to why it's 'unencyclopedic' or 'inaccurate'. It's not a word game, I'd like an actual reason. Penyulap talk 15:31, 27 December 2011 (UTC)

The picture shown here is clearly a better representation of work on the Space station. By all reports I have seen the crew enjoy working 400kms above the earth with a view that can't be beat. Anyone would be stoked to be up there working. There are workplaces that are rather ordinary, or racked with worry and sorrow, Coal mines in the third world come to mind as a subject needing illustrations that reflect the oppressively difficult working conditions and danger, however that doesn't seem to be the case on the ISS. Being happy about it is a fair and proper representation of work on the ISS, as the lads demonstrate with their yellow hats. Does anyone else have a problem with this image ? or does anyone like it ? Penyulap talk 18:23, 20 December 2011 (UTC)

Image is inaccurate, and has been reverted.Craigboy (talk) 05:52, 24 December 2011 (UTC)
What do you mean by 'Inaccurate' ? Penyulap talk 13:17, 27 December 2011 (UTC)
Crew members do not wear hard hats on the ISS (except for when they were posing for this picture).Craigboy (talk) 00:29, 28 December 2011 (UTC)
Will you support the picture if I find you at least 3 pictures of them wearing other hats on the ISS ? (I do not yet have such pics, and will have to find such pics, I think I can, and I am just picking the number arbitrarily) Penyulap talk 03:12, 28 December 2011 (UTC)
No.Craigboy (talk) 05:07, 28 December 2011 (UTC)
Cool, then I'll put it back in as you have no reasonable objection to it. If someone else wants to assist by providing a third, or just an actual reason cool, it's history, otherwise you haven't explained why it's 'unencyclopedic' 'inaccurate' or why they don't wear hats on the ISS, which photographic evidence disputes. Penyulap talk 05:36, 28 December 2011 (UTC)
Stop twisting my words, I said hard hats. I have given you a reason. But yet you choose to continue to play this game. I'm reverting your edit.Craigboy (talk) 06:38, 28 December 2011 (UTC)
Sorry, I apologize, I missed the word 'hard' on the first read. Didn't mean to twist your words. Anyhow, they're not hard hats that they are actually wearing in that picture. (I mean I can't get over your totally disputing the photographic evidence, I mean, this is not one of my own pictures I made, I'm not THAT good with GIMP, it's from NASA I think, just look it up) anyhow they are not hard hats, they are yellow hats. They can't have got onto the station without being 100% Mission control approved I'm sure. If I can get a ref saying they aren't hard hats, they are just yellow hats, can I have your support for the picture, and should I get a ref saying they wear hats on the ISS, you know, aside from this photo ? Also, I'm pretty darn sure the 'reason' has to be something to do with 'policy' or, to make it easy, any essay more than 3 days old will do too, probably. Wait, is it the caption ? I don't think I said anything about 'hard' hats, I do think I mentioned the commanders mustache though. How about I review the description so it doesn't mention hard in relation to hats. Penyulap talk 18:37, 28 December 2011 (UTC)
Pen, I didn't say it was photoshopped. Re-read my original comment ("Crew members do not wear hard hats on the ISS (except for when they were posing for this picture)"). I don't know what you mean by "yellow hats" (and don't tell me they're hats that are yellow). They're clearly hard hats, and they're most likely wearing them to make it a humorous photo.Craigboy (talk) 12:53, 29 December 2011 (UTC)
I'm looking at the article right now and I'm seeing 5 hats across 2 photos. (Because the Christmas template is showing). There are plenty more hats here and if it is included that's going to make 10 hats in the article, I'm thinking some different colors would be nice, I mean they are all red hats, with white trim and a bit of green, I'd love a picture with some yellow hats to balance the article a bit. Penyulap talk 12:18, 29 December 2011 (UTC)
Pen you're hard enough to follow as it is so can you please keep the jokes to a minimum.Craigboy (talk) 12:53, 29 December 2011 (UTC)
Well how about start making sense ? I mean what's "Image is inaccurate" or "Crew members do not wear hard hats on the ISS" all about ? oh come on, I am asking serious questions here, and what am I getting in return ? Penyulap talk 13:06, 29 December 2011 (UTC)
You're getting very obvious answers and responding with things like "It's clearly 3 times better than the replacement, as there is 3 times the work being done" and talking about the balance of different kind of hat pictures in the article.Craigboy (talk) 00:05, 30 December 2011 (UTC)

──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── I can hardly see where this can go except into new additions, either some lecture about how they improve crew morale with all sorts of things like this, or some complete exhaustive section on humor on the ISS. Am I going to be writing that whole lot all by myself ? How about lets do it together, are you with me ?

But for the time being, I think people can 'get the joke' that the crew are making here. How about some mind-numbingly boring caption like "Unlike on earth Hard hats in Zero-G serve a different purpose, boosting crew morale and preventing psychological problems" ? Something like that ? It would certainly spoil it for me, how about you ? I recall on some hollywood movie, conair I think it was, that humor, or more specifically levity, can cause pain. Is that the concern here ? That readers will find it somehow distracting when they get to it, and it's like they get an instant owch ?

Anyhow, it's not all cube farm mentality up there, there are plenty of "serious" pictures of "serious" work and that's not a balanced representation of the ISS workplace as a whole. I feel a NASA lecture coming on. Can you feel it ? Penyulap talk 13:39, 29 December 2011 (UTC)

WOW a quick look and there is like a gazillion, or ok, 1.8 million gazillion hits for this sort of stuff, it's a goldmine, this is so cool. I mean I have nothing against treadmills for crew health but this is so totally overlooked. This kind of stuff goes into crew health, oh man this is a brainstorm right here, cool. I'll stick it into the crew health section with an appropriate paragraph, how about that ? nothing but net! Penyulap talk 13:49, 29 December 2011 (UTC)
So now after your long tirade above you realize its meant to be a humorous picture? I'm not sure if you're serious about the humor section being added to the article or if this is another jokes of yours. Are you claiming that without a humorous picture, the article is imbalanced? I don't know what you mean by a "NASA lecture".Craigboy (talk) 00:05, 30 December 2011 (UTC)
Tirade is a rather insulting word to use.(inserted text:actually it's fair enough coming from Craigboy, but nobody else should try it!) It's also strange after you didn't want to move any of our extended conversation to userpages. Now as for the picture, it's a real picture, not doctored. What the lads are up to is, I think, fair to describe as happily working. Anyhow, I have in front of me "Psychology of Space Exploration" Edited by Douglas A. Vakoch, it's a NASA book, so I'm sure more readers will like it as a Ref. Now in Chapter 8, "Spaceflight and Cross-Cultural Psychology" about culturally shaped behavior, with a part about Remek returning to Earth with “red hands” disease. and when flight surgeons asked how he had acquired this malady, Remek explained, “Well, in space, whenever I reached for this or that switch, the Russians cried ‘Don’t touch that!’ and slapped me on my hands.” and the chapter goes on to explain "prejudices against members of other cultures, in addition to conflicting values and preferences. How would emotionally controlled astronauts react to highly expressive Russians?" and so forth.
So there are some great parts about "Cultural problems that the astronauts reported pertained to personal hygiene, food preferences, and chosen activities as well as to interpersonal distance, privacy, and work styles." and "Differences in decision-making and problem resolution, for example, were tied to differences in national culture and the backgrounds of crewmembers and personnel."
Now that's great stuff isn't it ? about the different ideas on working styles and all, across cultures and so forth, maybe that's how the Russian crew get on with the job, whereas smiling or having fun is a serious problem in American culture. Although, to be fair, although I can reference it properly and qualify it correctly with it's clinical behavioral context, I think a caption such as 'Deviant behavior by Russian Crew members' would be somewhat misleading to laypeople reading the article, so I don't support that kind of thing. Penyulap talk 06:30, 30 December 2011 (UTC)
The hats were sent on the Nasa shuttle, I guess they had plenty of spare upmass as usual. Penyulap talk 11:08, 19 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] Sourcing problem: astronautix.com

There are many citations of astronautix.com in this Wikipedia article. That website is written by a single author who doesn't list his credentials. According to the Wikipedia article Encyclopedia Astronautica, the author is an enthusiast. This doesn't make him an expert. I think the website fails to meet the requirements in the policy WP:SOURCE, so all of these citations should be removed. Would anyone like to discuss? Pinetalk 07:18, 6 December 2011 (UTC)

  • The website has been cited by several other publications, it is generally considered to be reliable, and I believe this was discussed in one of the FACs. --GW 09:14, 6 December 2011 (UTC)
  • In my experience Astronautix has a lot of inaccuracies. I know this from researching info on space suits (he also doesn't make corrections if you contact him).--Craigboy (talk) 00:37, 15 December 2011 (UTC)
  • I think we used this to justify it. Assuming the claims are true (and indeed, NASA have cited the website elsewhere which supports the first claim on the page), it would suggest that we can consider it notable. --GW 09:48, 6 December 2011 (UTC)
This is an alternative source I have been meaning to work in somewhere, but for the time being Mark Wade is da man ! I mean, what IS a good source if he isn't ? (don't say nasa don't say nasa don't say nasa) Penyulap talk 17:07, 6 December 2011 (UTC)
NASA is a very reliable source when you move away from their general audience articles and into their published documents (NTRS).--Craigboy (talk) 00:37, 15 December 2011 (UTC)
Their pics are lovely, everything else, I mean everything else needs to be checked, so whats the point, you have to find refs to prove if nasa is right, there is that much spin. Just go straight to the unbiased refs in the first place and just take the pics. The 'Nasa Brochure' article doesn't get much praise from the higher-ups. Easier to get to the truth fast by reading everything, from all 'sides' and many many sources. The technical articles about their own stuff is great, their coverage of other countries is appalling. Penyulap talk 18:54, 17 December 2011 (UTC)
(Cough) Brad commented in the recent FARC here that "There is an over reliance on a single source of information (NASA) and several sources that are questionable in meeting the requirement of "high-quality and reliable". But I don't think he meant that one. I try to include ESA JAXA RSA and so forth. Actually I try to check a lot of what NASA comes up with because they come up with a lot of crap and half truths sometimes. They'll say things like "Nasa controls the space station" but what do they mean ? There often is more in what they don't say than what they do, right now, I'd dearly love to know the dollar amount, the budget, the receipts for Zarya, because they didn't foot the bill for it's design, part of the cost of construction for sure, but was it really all of it ? Hmph. Question everything. Of course, it's a global thing, the Russian media does sometimes overlook the Chinese program too I've seen. Please do pop onto the talkpage any that are ok, as I personally go on instinct and that's not enough for everyone else. Penyulap talk 17:12, 6 December 2011 (UTC)
From my experience Pen you have always seem to have had an vendetta with anything pro-NASA. And whenever you've been asked to provide a contradicting source you either cannot find one or the only you can find is from a popular source with little insight into the subject. But you usually don't back up any claims you make.Craigboy (talk) 06:06, 24 December 2011 (UTC)
  • The website is widely cited, but just because everyone believes it doesn't mean that it's accurate. The website has very few external citations that I can find, making its reliability even more questionable than the average self-published source. Furthermore, a chapter in Critical Issues in the History of Spaceflight at http://history.nasa.gov/SP-2006-4702/chapters/chapter15.pdf says, "Mark Wade’s online Encyclopedia Astronautica has become a popular Internet source for space history. Unfortunately, while it contains a great deal of information, not all of it is correct. Space historians have noticed a variety of factual problems, and unfortunately these problems have not been consistently repaired. Since this is not a peer-reviewed source and historical errors have not always been fixed, this cannot be considered a reliable source, despite its impressive appearance." Also GW, the question is not if the source is notable, the question is if the source is reliable. I'd say that it clearly fails WP:SOURCE because it's self-published, cites few other sources, and received the criticism above. Pinetalk 07:57, 7 December 2011 (UTC)
Well, cool, he's not perfect, (actually I haven't even seen his butt and I'm not gay either,) but who is perfect ? Is there any particular statement or material that can be improved ? Is there some mistake in the article that you have other citations for, everyone can have a look and change it over if there is a mistake. What errors have you found ? Penyulap talk 18:44, 17 December 2011 (UTC)
Pine, by your definition ("because it's self-published, cites few other sources"), that would make NASA, RSA, ESA, JAXA and so many other websites used as sources unreliable. While there are some inaccuracies, if its something that is correct then why can't Encyclopedia Astronautica be used?--NavyBlue84 22:12, 17 December 2011 (UTC)
User:Navy blue84, WP:IRS says,
"Self-published or questionable sources may be used as sources of information about themselves, especially in articles about themselves, without the requirement that they be published experts in the field, so long as:
1. the material is not unduly self-serving;
2. the material does not involve claims about third parties (such as people, organizations, or other entities);
3. the material does not involve claims about events not directly related to the subject;
4. there is no reasonable doubt as to the authenticity and source of the material;
5. the article is not based primarily on such sources."
For example, Information on NASA's website would often be in this category because NASA is publishing information about itself. There are exceptions, for example a NASA press release which praises the agency's safety record might be considered "unduly self-serving." By comparison, Astronautix is a self-published source that isn't publishing information about itself, so Austronautix doesn't get this exception, especially since its reliability as a third-party self-published source is questionable. Pinetalk 09:14, 19 December 2011 (UTC)
  • Cool sweet, you've made your point, so cough up a challenge to Astronautix, find any statement referenced to Astronautix, then find any other reference on the 'net that disputes that statement, and we'll be off and running going somewhere towards removing potentially unreliable info from the article. Cool. However, if everything Astronautix says remains unchallenged, then it just stays as it is. It's there, it's referenced, end of story. Stuff stays in the article whether it's poorly referenced or not referenced at all. If there is no reference at all (glare Craigboy) you pop a "citation needed" thingy at that point. But before you do, please check if the ref is kindof easy to find like on the next line :) Penyulap talk 16:39, 20 December 2011 (UTC)
Pen I am not responsible for finding refs that you choose not to place in the article.Craigboy (talk) 07:17, 28 December 2011 (UTC)
You are responsible for deleting the references I put there in the first place. (GLARE CRAIGBOY) like here there are plenty here is another It's all Glareworthy. More Oh it's glareworthy all right. -(o)-(o)- is not enough. -(O)-(O)- is more like it. It's very Glareworthy indeed. Penyulap talk 19:13, 28 December 2011 (UTC)
For the au.af.mil ref I did not remove it on purpose. You do not need to source that APAS is Russian designed, its very unlikely to be challenged and is sourced in its main article. See When a reliable source is requiredCraigboy (talk) 13:01, 29 December 2011 (UTC)
Hm, I think that we should replace all references to Astronautix with a "citation needed" template. The material itself can stay in the article unless someone finds a reference that opposes a specific item that was sourced from Astronautix. In this way, the current content of the article can be gradually checked over time with references other than Astronautix, and the "citation needed" template allows us to show that the material is currently not referenced by a reliable source so someone needs to check it eventually. I think that this is the smoothest way of eliminating references to Astronautix while minimizing the disruption to the article. Pinetalk 12:11, 22 December 2011 (UTC)
Hmm, how about just replacing all citations with a link to the original diff where I said it. If I didn't say it, then we should use citation needed, failing that, I support what is going to happen after you do it, by pretty much every other editor, some of which have responded above. Penyulap talk 23:56, 22 December 2011 (UTC)
I'm trying to follow your comment and I'm lost. Can you restate that in a different way? Pinetalk 09:21, 23 December 2011 (UTC)
Sorry, I mean that often statements are referenced when they first appear, but the reference gets trampled underfoot and lost when there is an argument. like the recent Russian designed APAS in the china section, I'm quite sure I refd it for russian design at some point, but it's like been trampled. I think the same person that trampled it is asking for it to be ref'd now.
Pen everyone knows APAS is a Russian design (and this is not a disputed claim), I was asking for a source that stated Shenzhou even used APAS.Craigboy (talk) 01:19, 28 December 2011 (UTC)

Like that. As for removing Astronautix references from the article be my guest, the chances that any other editor won't just put them back is zero. Personally I don't care, do as you please, be my guest, I care more about something being fairly represented to the public than the refs, but seriously, Astronautix is good stuff. You'd just make useless busywork with the cn tagging, asking other editors to reference what is already referenced to their satisfaction. Penyulap talk 05:16, 25 December 2011 (UTC)

The point about references getting trampled is a good one. An idea that's been troubling me is that if I replace all Astronautix references with CN, then what's a better reliable source? If NASA has problems also then we'd need some way of finding an alternative reliable source to both NASA and Astronautix. Can you or anyone else suggest one, or do we want to accept these sites on the risky assumption that their error rate is as low as we can reasonably get? Pinetalk 10:32, 27 December 2011 (UTC)
They just have to be left as is, as crappy as they are, until something better is found. Then you have to decide which is better. The way I personally do it, is first off, read everything nothing beats research. That gives you a good base to work from so you can spot the crap. Then a good way to test out something is just to look at what is being said, like if it's giving lots of facts and figures and names, it's a good bet that it's well researched. If it's just giving opinion and hype, chances are it's rubbish. Then there are sources that become known liars, you have to be wary of them. Penyulap talk 16:13, 27 December 2011 (UTC)
Penyulap is vastly understating NASA's reliability. For most information, especially when it relates to NASA programs, they are the best source. Avoid information that looks like its made for the general public (engineers usually don't write these articals).Craigboy (talk) 01:19, 28 December 2011 (UTC)

[edit] Picture perfect defining example of what happens when you rely on NASA

In regards to the multiple comments of multiple editors in two or more talkpage sections, ladies and gentlemen I present for your consideration the article formerly known as "Electrical system of the International Space Station" it relied on NASA documents galore, and a Boeing, lots of lovely pics, web and pdfs. Cool, it's a great article. And all I needed to do to make it compliant with POLICY, not guidelines, was change it's title to reflect it's pristine American-centric viewpoint. here is the article which, being (a goofy) human, I spelled wrong, lol. It's a great read to compare to the power supply section of this article which is very crude I admit, but has elements of both sides of the story. Penyulap talk 02:12, 29 December 2011 (UTC)

I'm not seeing how that article is so bad. If the criticism is because of a lack of information on non-American parts of the station, that shouldn't be a criticism of using NASA as a source, but it might mean that additional sources for non-American information is needed. Pinetalk 03:38, 3 January 2012 (UTC)
You seem to have posted both your question and it's own answer. The only thing missing is a careful consideration of the policy I often quote, and the conclusion that heavily relying on NASA leads to policy violation. Penyulap talk 05:57, 3 January 2012 (UTC)
In this case my concern is about astronautix for source reliability, not a lack of sources other than NASA due to problems with NPOV. I see that as a legitimate but separate concern. I would rather cite NASA than astronautix, but I would welcome other non-American reliable sources also. Pinetalk 08:19, 6 January 2012 (UTC)
In the Sep 12 2011 review, Brad mentioned "There is an over reliance on a single source of information (NASA) and several sources that are questionable in meeting the requirement of "high-quality and reliable"." So it's both ways, but I'm pretty sure astronautix is not our worst source, and not what he was referring to. There are some seriously much more trashy ones here. Still, considering the lack of GF I've had recently in trying to improve the ref section, maybe we can just delete most of them (evil grin) I'll help there. I'm so busy away from that section that I have for sure done pairs and maybe triplet refs to the same place. Penyulap talk 05:26, 10 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] New section "Christmas on the International Space Station"

I've created a new section for the article, that appears at Christmas when such material is notable, and not at other times of the year, when people probably won't care. The section without it's heading is at Template:Christmas on the International Space Station and please do add, edit and so forth. Ignore the warnings you will see about references, when it goes into the article they show up normally if they are done in the usual way. Anyhow, it all works although I will no doubt improve it's technical implementation, and might get help from others too. Or just go ahead and delete the lot if you feel the urge to ! whatever. Temporarily there is a way to view it on my talkpage ISS workspace, but I'll copy it out of there soon if it looks like a good idea, to aid in editing. Penyulap talk 07:39, 29 December 2011 (UTC)

woops, it's gone live sooner than I thought, thanks to technical help, and another take on which days are good, I'd better spruce it up, it was just example stuff really. Any comments on this section? Penyulap talk 10:56, 29 December 2011 (UTC)
As I've just reminded another editor, notability is not temporary, so if it is not notable enough to include year-round then I don't think it would be notable enough to include just over Christmas. Instead, how about just mentioning any specific celebrations in any given year in the article about the expedition then occupying the station. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 13:57, 29 December 2011 (UTC)
A very good idea, but I'm lazy to do the first part, adding it to those articles, and although I am not into protesting I certainly want to occupy the station, sign me up for sure !! Penyulap talk 16:32, 30 December 2011 (UTC)
See, this is one of those quiet, insane scientist moments, when you've electro-jolted the monster and it has vital signs and you just wait to see what it does. Like, that Falcon idea just got up and ran out to pillage, probably smashed the pop-culture glass window on it's way out I dunno, I heard something break. Much better than the green monster with tentacles that got kneecapped instantly and totally died in the a**, and with good reason too I might add. But the External links monster idea was hilarious, just as soon as I had put the electrical cables down on the bench it picked up the remote control and started watching TV like it had been there the whole time. We could easily kill this Christmas monster right now if I helped you and told you where to aim the shotgun, but I figure on waiting to see if more than just the two other editors who are helping with it turn up. It'll take a while as the whole thing disappears until maybe for a day in January for orthodox Christmas ? what do you think GW ? It has vital signs, but it's just sitting there blinking, we could kill it now, or let it be, either way. What does everyone else think ? I reckon it can't go the usual sub-article with a set amount of real estate, cause who wants to know about it the rest of the year ? I mean who has a Christmas tree in their house in March ? Am I wrong ? anyone ?
Anyhow this all just points out the need to explain cultural differences of the crews on the ISS, I mean, Mission control in Moscow(I'm arbitrarily assigning blame here) approved the funding and 'upmass' and sent up those Yellow work hats for the lads to wear whilst they do their real and proper work on the ISS, and well, nobody except me seems to understand the whole point of it. I guess Americans don't see it so much for what it is, but maybe see it with something closer to the clinical behavioral definition of 'deviant behavior'. Penyulap talk 05:30, 31 December 2011 (UTC)
I wonder what an average hat weighs, the kind as in the photo, and how much it cost to send that many kilograms to orbit. Penyulap talk 06:02, 31 December 2011 (UTC)
I'm sorry, I don't understand what you are talking about. To clarify my position, I have nothing against including the section in principle, but I do not like the idea of a "secret section" - content should either be notable enough to inclide year round, or not notable enough to include at any point. If it is not notable enough, then it is still notable enough to be included in sections on expeditions which occupied the station at Christmas, such as Expedition 30, however it should be worded to apply specifically to those crews. --W. D. Graham (previously GW) 12:32, 31 December 2011 (UTC)
Fine no problem, then for now I'll just respectfully note that it is already a collaborative effort, and I can't see it causing trouble, so I'll move on. If it does at some point cause trouble I'll use the shotgun myself, as there are better more obvious ways than that. Penyulap talk 00:14, 1 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] APAS cite needed

Well, to summarize the APAS use in the article, I'd say It's a fair statement to say that the ISS, Tiangong, the NASA Shuttle and the Shenzhou all use the APAS-89 version, with minor mission-specific modifications to the connectors (like pinouts on electrical connectors) and the APAS-89 was the one designed for the Russian Space shuttle and MIR-2 station. But I would need help finding suitable sources and refs for that which we can use in the article. Barnstars are on offer :) Penyulap talk 09:46, 30 December 2011 (UTC)

Oh, and the -89 bit is the year Russia/the soviet union upgraded it. Think of crappy windows software like 'windows-95' and 'windows-98' same kind of thing as that. But it needs a cite too, (but not as much really) barnstar optional :) Penyulap talk 09:49, 30 December 2011 (UTC)
I don't know how true that is. APAS-95 seems to be more of an evolution than a missions specific modification. Chinese APAS (they haven't seem to have released a name for it) may or may not be compatible with APAS-89/APAS-95 (see here). Although I feel all of this is irrelevant to the ISS article and more appropriate for the APAS article.--Craigboy (talk) 03:10, 3 January 2012 (UTC)
Also as an somewhat irrelevant side note but this is something you may be interested in. Boeing has being trying to push for a modified APAS-95 mechanism to be used for the Commercial Crew Program. They have stated "the existing APAS avionics which uses an extensive array of electronics relays and switches would be replaced by a more modern microprocessor or logic based system using fewer components, lower power consumption, increased fault detection capability, smaller footprint and volume for installation, and reduced weight". APAS probably won't be used because NASA has been really been pushing for the implementation of NDS since it is not been burdened by ITAR restrictions, allows for low impact electromagnetic docking and is compliant with the International Docking System Standard.--Craigboy (talk) 03:10, 3 January 2012 (UTC)
OMG you're a total GENIUS, that whole "the rendezvous and docking project hardware is compatible with the International Space Station." - Jiang Guohua, a professor and chief engineer at the China Astronaut Research and Training Center in Beijing. is brilliant. Stick it in the article man ! I can't steal your thunder there, you've had that since march ? good thing you remember/mention it ! That is brilliant ! Especially since it's the first specific mention of the rendezvous system. Which suggests more than it reveals as to where the docking would occur, yes, because as far as I know, there is no (automatic) rendezvous system whatsoever on the USOS, it's strictly Russian.
Anyhow as for the public domain thing, it's like 'So totally too late' horse has bolted and so forth. The Americans are simply trying to make their version the standard, however, JAXA is the only agency I can see being told to take it up. The ESA, Russians and Chinese have the standard and are far too busy going to MARS to backtrack for no reason whatsoever, except to help America avoid the requirement to use the Russian designed system on it's craft in future if it wants to co-operate. If they get that onto the station, or if it is scheduled to go, like on the new commercial craft, then it's in the article, but as it is, can't see it's relevancy. (even though it is released into the PD it is still a US idea, and gives them boasting rights)
ITAR is just another way to say 'we don't like you' after all you can only copy answers in class if you are copying off someone who knows more than you, whats to learn from the ISS that 921 and tiangong 3 heavy don't already demonstrate ? Still if there is a page for ITAR, a link is good for the impediments that America makes towards Chinese partnership.
Re the technical incompatibilities, that's to do with the rendezvous system, is the Shenzhou optical whilst the Russian is RF, making it an obvious (and easy) requirement to EVA attach the appropriate fittings to the ISS first, they are always fiddling with the Kurs furniture up there, so it's no big hassle. Penyulap talk 05:09, 3 January 2012 (UTC)
I see you missed the quote below it Yang said technical hurdles remain in pursuing such collaboration. Specifically, he emphasized that China’s space station standards and the ISS docking standards do not agree. The unification of standards is the first problem to solve in the effort to carry out future space station cooperation, Yang said, according to China’s Xinhua state-run news agency. “This is the first time I am aware of that any high-profile official associated with the Chinese space program has made such a strong statement to the Chinese public on ISS participation,” Gregory Kulacki, a senior analyst and China Project Manager for the Union of Concerned Scientists’ Global Security Program in Cambridge, Mass., said in an interview. “And, as far as I know, it is the first time I have heard a Chinese official confirm that the docking hardware they will be using in the upcoming mission is not compatible with the ISS.”. I don't know why you keep on assuming Shenzhou cannot manually dock and why you you keep on neglecting the fact the the hardware is not compatible with the Russian segment (that is if its compatible at all). We can debate space policy on our userpages but its irrelevant here.--Craigboy (talk) 02:45, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
It continues here I learn lots of new stuff, and explain a lot too, and so forth. In the end however, I think there are a lot of things that might be said in the article like
  • If Chinese craft are using APAS they could dock at the USOS until '15 or '16 per Craigboys explaination.
  • If the Chinese adopt the PD system they could do it after that.
  • If they came up with other ideas like going Probe and Drogue they could do it.
but it all depends on if they are allowed, and I think it all boils down to 'if it becomes politically feasible'. Penyulap talk 08:07, 27 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] Support for falling morale Rfc

Expedition 15 crew in orbit wearing yellow hard-hats sent from earth to protect them against falling morale

"There has been considerable evidence that psychosocial stressors are among the most important impediments to optimal crew morale and performance."

I'm proposing this is a good picture related to the text and wonder if anyone supports or opposes it in it's current form. A link to morale is included, just in case, as this would be necessary for many people. I'm sure I can find some refs for crew morale rising and falling if required. Penyulap talk 15:02, 2 January 2012 (UTC)

I like the joke but this is supposed to be an encyclopedia, not a joke. I'm certain there are better images to put in that section and if not, there's no requirement for an image anyway. It's a nice picture, but not very serious. It seems to me that there are more important influences on morale than props [1]. --U5K0'sTalkMake WikiLove not WikiWar 00:59, 6 January 2012 (UTC)
I object to it being called a joke. If you leave the humor aside for a moment and examine it as clinical encyclopedic content, it is proper. It's well referenced, accurate, a fair summary of the available references, properly linked. The joke, which will apparently go completely unnoticed by some, is just icing on the cake, and not much of it too. It's a very dry piece of humor if it is at all, by wikipedia standards, it's not getting onto the list of funny articles anytime soon. Well considering the extreme care taken to make it encyclopedic, and the fact that this IS a genuine subject, I mean, why are they wearing these hats in Zero-G, why were the crew sent these hats, rather than the space in the supply craft used for something more clinical and scientific ? These are subjects of importance, and that ref, fantastic ! The final report has fantastic leads and anecdotes to add to the section, the New-scientist article (NSA) has a very interesting summary and comparison, the whole thing about the Americans getting the blues as the mission progresses, but the Russians pretty much don't, because of the different approaches to deal with it. I mean, they (the Russians) have done the studies mentioned in the NSA, they have had long term crews before, beyond 3 months, they have had the results of the crew making their own fun on MIR, So it's interesting to read those reports and see the different approaches. Thing is, the ISS is not a single space station, it's 5, although people can't see that, they can at least see it is three, there is the ROS and USOS with everything from docking to ballistic shielding to systems and crew all being completely different, that's even before you get to planet Kibō, which is different yet again, with their 'art is a serious pursuit in orbit' approach. The Europeans, and of course I always ignore the Canadians. Now not only does the ISS have great lessons in teaching the rescue crew and miners how to survive per NSA, but it has great lessons for expert retention on Wikipedia. Wikipedia itself is certainly in it's infancy and going downhill right now. The Cosmonauts on MIR have the right idea using the stations vacuum cleaner as a jet-pack doing laps, but hey, if you don't take notice of these things, and send the crew some hard hats like the Russians do, recognize the importance of it, you get a sit-down strike on Skylab, expert loss on Wikipedia, or crews coming home early from Salyuts. Penyulap talk 04:56, 6 January 2012 (UTC)
I have little if any idea what you're talking about. All the same, you asked for input and I provided it. I think the picture is not serious and inappropriate. --U5K0'sTalkMake WikiLove not WikiWar 11:13, 6 January 2012 (UTC)
That's ok, I still want comments on it, because, this is an aspect of the Russian workplace that clearly is not well understood by westerners. When I work out how to explain it to you guys, I shall have worked out how better to explain it in the article. For example, to oversimplify, if I were to ask, why did they spend so much to send the hats into orbit, I'm thinking at the moment there are a lot of people wouldn't know why. There was good reason however. I just haven't explained yet, plus, I'm still busy reading my way through that excellent doc you posted. Penyulap talk 12:10, 6 January 2012 (UTC)

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Per the RfC: I support the idea of the article dealing with the topic of morale, whether high or low, falling or rising, as long as we have verifiable sources for the claims. On the other hand, I don't believe that particular photo, which represents a routine kind of send-up from the mission controllers to assist in social connection and comraderie, is a very useful photo for that section. N2e (talk) 17:50, 6 January 2012 (UTC)
What kind would you suggest ? I do hope it's not a cheesy group photo for comraderie, as people are so accustomed to looking at that kind of thing the point would be be lost. Anyhow, the reasons behind the activity (in the photo) will need further explanation it seems. Penyulap talk 05:08, 7 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] Start?!

I can understand why this article was demoted as FA, but why has it been assessed as Start? I've been through all the articles on Wikipedia:Vital articles, but this is the craziest one I've seen. Lampman (talk) 23:38, 5 January 2012 (UTC)

Agree, it's very funny, so funny in fact I can't believe it wasn't my idea in the first place. If, at this time, you were to examine the article you'd find the references are in disarray, many in the wrong place, or missing. It would be a lot of work to fix it all, I know the refs are on my own list of things to do, but they are so totally not at the top. But as a temporary improvement to the situation I suggest and support stub class, sure, it's also just as inappropriate, but it improves the 'falling morale' and may add the inspiration needed to fix the situation. Penyulap talk 04:05, 6 January 2012 (UTC)
And by all means you have my support to change it to anything else you like, anything would be better, I pay no attention to the class of an article until it gets in the way of progress, then KA-POW ! Go for it, how is it worked out anyhow ? Penyulap talk 05:01, 6 January 2012 (UTC)
If you read the definition of a start article, it's described as an article that "[p]rovides some meaningful content, but the majority of readers will need more." That is certainly not the case with this article, no matter how problematic the references may be. If article assessment is to have any meaning at all, as a guide for users and editors alike, it needs to give a reasonable reflection of article quality. It should not be used as a way to highlight articles in need of cleanup, if this means ignoring the assessment scale. That's called crying wolf. I would suggest changing it at least to C, which means that "[c]onsiderable editing is needed to close gaps in content and address cleanup issues." I am not a member of this project, however, so I'll leave it to others to decide. Lampman (talk) 18:04, 7 January 2012 (UTC)
Well, I've messed with them a bit, are they more realistic now would you say ? There are still topics not covered, like technology transfer between countries, Canada (a.k.a. who?), although architectural approaches is on my list of things to do, ah, who am I kidding the article is a mess, but I've extrapolated everyone else's view on what the class should be, not my own. It'll do. Penyulap talk 06:11, 8 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] recent edits

  1. (cur | prev) 09:47, 26 January 2012‎ Craigboy (talk | contribs)‎ (208,305 bytes) (→Expeditions and private flights: Removed "a term they generally dislike". "NASA stated it was "not interested" in private spaceflight from the beginning of the ISS and has not changed its position." Your source is 12 years old.) (undo)

That's pretty much when they started flying there, they've never carried tourists, and the NASA shuttle has retired. Have they mentioned any NASA replacement will be taking tourists ? we can mention that. Dragon is commercial, not NASA, maybe we can mention spacex's position as well ? It seems like a fair statement overall. Would it be better to go with something like "NASA stated it was "not interested" in private spaceflight at the beginning of the ISS and their shuttle never carried tourists ?" use the 12 year old reference for the beginning and use the link through to the other article for the unlikely to be disputed 'they have never carried tourists ?' still, it's real easy to ref that bit as well, but it goes in the overkill direction for me.

  1. (cur | prev) 09:33, 26 January 2012‎ Craigboy (talk | contribs)‎ (208,052 bytes) (→China: "Comprehensive" is a peacock term. You need to cit the "saved the station" part (although it is true). Contradicting claims have been made about if Shenzhou could dock to ISS. You never sourced that they use APAS.) (undo)

Well spotted, what adjective would be a fair summary ? For saved the station, yes I agree with you there too, how about reffing a dime a dozen nasa 'we can't afford it' kind of thing ? There are plenty to choose from for freedom. Or what about going down the sm path, they never developed one. The proposed zarya alternatives wouldn't provide advanced life support, nasa like europe, they are using the iss to develop reprocessng and it's silenced any fresh crit of elektron eh? or go down the experience running a space station path, 171 days versus, gosh, how much is it, mir ten years, I know they have averaged more than one since '71. I dunno the total, should we go one of each or is that overkill too ? which way is best for you ?

Overall at some point there will need to be notes, I'll have to get to that, and intend to, unless anyone wants to help ?

What have you found for Shenzhou ? also I think maybe it's better to go with the until 2015,16? 'without modification' but whichever. sorry I have been distracted with the text and flow mostly, do you want to help go over all the refs with me for the whole article ? if that's the case, we can reboost it back through FA way ahead of schedule. Penyulap talk 13:33, 26 January 2012 (UTC)

"Chinese participation in this project is blocked by America." well it's embraced by esa, and american laws galore prevent it, what about all 5 would need to agree before china could, esa is for and america is against ? Because you know me and canada eh ? "Who knows" what they think :) would something like that be better ? Penyulap talk 13:41, 26 January 2012 (UTC)

(→Docking: Robot is the incorrect nomenclature. Automated docking with what separates the the Russian and European crafts from the American and Japanese. There will only be five ATV flights, unsure about HTV.)

Really ? The guy from wikiproject robotics was saying that a robot is a machine that exhibits a reasonable amount of autonomy, and robotic (station arms) don't. So the arms would be robotic arms, not robot arms, and the ships would be robot ships not robotic ships, because the only thing that the mc and iss crew do for them is supervise with buttons marked stop and retreat and so forth. They climb into orbit by themselves, adjusting into a chase orbit until they detect the iss, and then plot their own trajectories and approach. Unless someone says hey stop, they dock by themselves. It's all per Mars, it has to be built that way and refined now rather than later, that's why they do it.

To the space station is fine and true, although it's only the ROS. There are no automatic dockings on the usos, and no berthing on the ROS.(sept rass) So maybe it's good to specify there. Fair enough about the 5, what comes after that ? Penyulap talk 13:59, 26 January 2012 (UTC)

"NASA stated it was "not interested" in private spaceflight at the beginning of the ISS and their shuttle never carried tourists ?" I prefer this over whats in the article now. I believe NASA has mentioned the ISS as a possible destination for tourists aboard the American Commercial Crew vehicles. --Craigboy (talk) 04:10, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
cool, but nasa shuttle ok? they were so last century, everyone had one, the russians, the europeans, the japanese, good to go with nasa shuttle. add about commercial vehicles might as you please, though they aren't nasa are they ? does nasas new get a mention for tourism ? Penyulap talk 05:49, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
I don't understand what you're saying. NASA has to give the go ahead if tourists want to visit the USOS side. The development of the Commercial Crew vehicles is partially by NASA.--Craigboy (talk) 09:46, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
"what adjective would be a fair summary ?" A adjective isn't needed, I think it's fine as it is now. --Craigboy (talk) 04:10, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
coolPenyulap talk 05:49, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
"For saved the station, yes I agree with you there too, how about reffing a dime a dozen nasa 'we can't afford it' kind of thing ?" I don't know what you mean. --Craigboy (talk) 04:10, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
Well it's easy to find NASA saying they can't afford something, anything really, regardless of how much they are given by the government they still declare it's not enough. People always seem happy when you tell them something was canceled for lack of funding, rather than the real reasons, which they'll argue all day long. Goes for freedom, goes for buran, goes for anything really. Penyulap talk 06:37, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
I thought you referring to the Soyuz spacecraft being able to service ISS while the Shuttle were grounded and after their retirement?--Craigboy (talk) 09:46, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
"What have you found for Shenzhou ? also I think maybe it's better to go with the until 2015,16? 'without modification' but whichever." Maybe we should have something like "there have been contradictory claims about whether Shenzhou is able to dock with the ISS". I have a source that mentions this.--Craigboy (talk) 04:10, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
who is it from, what does it say? Penyulap talk 05:49, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
In a July 8 press report, China’s first astronaut, Yang Liwei, was vocal regarding his country’s interest in ISS cooperation. Yang, who is also deputy director of the China Manned Space Engineering Office in Beijing, made his comments to a domestic audience in an online interactive broadcast. Yang said technical hurdles remain in pursuing such collaboration. Specifically, he emphasized that China’s space station standards and the ISS docking standards do not agree. The unification of standards is the first problem to solve in the effort to carry out future space station cooperation, Yang said, according to China’s Xinhua state-run news agency. “This is the first time I am aware of that any high-profile official associated with the Chinese space program has made such a strong statement to the Chinese public on ISS participation,” Gregory Kulacki, a senior analyst and China Project Manager for the Union of Concerned Scientists’ Global Security Program in Cambridge, Mass., said in an interview. “And, as far as I know, it is the first time I have heard a Chinese official confirm that the docking hardware they will be using in the upcoming mission is not compatible with the ISS.”--Craigboy (talk) 09:46, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
"Chinese participation in this project is blocked by America." well it's embraced by esa, and american laws galore prevent it, what about all 5 would need to agree before china could, esa is for and america is against ? Because you know me and canada eh ? "Who knows" what they think :)" I prefer what you put recently over what was there before because we don't know how the Canadian and Japanese agencies feel about Chinese participation. --Craigboy (talk) 04:10, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
they both follow the us as a rule, esp japan. (look at their military foreign policy) so it's basically ok now ? Penyulap talk 05:49, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
Its okay now but eventually we will need to see with those agencies have made any mention of Chinese cooperation (also Japan and China hate each other).--Craigboy (talk) 09:46, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
"The guy from wikiproject robotics was saying that a robot is a machine that exhibits a reasonable amount of autonomy, and robotic (station arms) don't. So the arms would be robotic arms, not robot arms, and the ships would be robot ships not robotic ships, because the only thing that the mc and iss crew do for them is supervise with buttons marked stop and retreat and so forth. They climb into orbit by themselves, adjusting into a chase orbit until they detect the iss, and then plot their own trajectories and approach. Unless someone says hey stop, they dock by themselves. It's all per Mars, it has to be built that way and refined now rather than later, that's why they do it." A lot term use depends on the field they're being used in, the space agencies don't call them robots, they call the "unmanned spacecraft" or "uncrewed spacecraft". Sometimes they are simply called "crafts". -Craigboy
too broad outside the industry, could read as watercraft for sailors, aircraft for pilots, and so on. what about autonomous spacecraft, see the problem is that the manned craft fly themselves too, so if you say just automatic, its like a car, but if you say robot, nobody thinks there is a man inside, like that. more ideas ? Penyulap talk 05:49, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
"There are no automatic dockings on the usos, and no berthing on the ROS." You can make it more specific if you want, the changes I made were only to fix previous inaccuracies and vagueness.--Craigboy (talk) 04:10, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
"Fair enough about the 5, what comes after that ?" ESA doesn't know. That's why there was talk about them providing the vehicle to de-orbit the ISS. --Craigboy (talk) 04:10, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
I don't understand that comment. Penyulap talk 07:28, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
Barter agreement means that ESA needs to provide something to NASA (see here). A de-orbiting vehicle, which something NASA will eventually need, could help fulfill that obligation.--Craigboy (talk) 09:46, 27 January 2012 (UTC)
Quoting from the article linked " "NASA made the decision to put an end to the shuttle program," Dordain said. "The Europeans made the unilateral decision to develop the ATV. The Japanese made the unilateral decision to develop the [H-2 Transfer Vehicle]. It is anarchy really. Let's be clear about it. Everyone developed systems on the basis of their own needs without any discussion among partners on what we actually collectively needed." "Ha! he should stamp his foot when he says that and threaten to tell his mommy. Now when you keep this in mind, from the article "The space station was also going to tie the emerging European and Japanese national space programmes closer to the U.S.-led project, thereby preventing those nations from becoming major, independent competitors too" it looks like Dordain is almost singing a NASA song (plus, I got other refs per america wanting to tie china into a dependent relationship using the ISS). When you look at it this way, seems China, who is left out, got the better deal. Penyulap talk 01:16, 30 January 2012 (UTC)
Speaking of looking good, (well I almost was) that Orion is not looking good except for its launch escape motors, it's the ugliest thing I've ever seen. Now the Dragon started off as ugly as sin too, but the nutty CEO they weren't watching totally pimped up dragon no end, it's the sexiest spacecraft by far. The full story is here, (keep an eye out for the phrase "Dragon’s solar arrays generate up to 5,000 watts of power — enough to power over 80 standard light bulbs.") anyhow, that's what NASA needs, less stuffed shirts soaking up all their cash and more nutcases who do it for the chicks (CEO pictured, title loaded with innuendo). Well, governments the world over are pretty much the same, it will be interesting to see if there is an impact in the media from Dragons arrival. I'd like things to look like Babylon 5 myself, hmmm. Penyulap talk 02:25, 30 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] Exciting news, Google streetview for the ISS

Well, like that, but it's a D.I.Y. project amongst the editors. It's the annoted image idea revisited, this time with an editor capable of showing us all how it's done. Z made this one here so this is brilliant. Best thing to happen to this article since James got to work. Yeah.!

So the idea is that we will use TheAnarcat's choice of picture he did before, and have clickable links through to whichever articles exist, plus labels for the furniture on the outside of the station, plus links to go from one image to the other image ( I think that works, can't see a problem) so you can work your way around the station identifying things like the horizon sensors, multilayer scintillation spectrometer, plasma-wave diagnostic thingy, radiometric sounder and which window is a window and which hatch is a hatch, this is the most exciting thing since the X-3 class solar flare and the millennium falcon and I don't know what else. This is so COOL! (oh yeah, I'm shoving in a space odyssey sort of feel as well soon. Penyulap talk 07:52, 27 January 2012 (UTC)

Ladies and gentlemen, may I present to you the INGENIUS work of the master programmer, Z
If you click on the pirs module, it goes through to another one.


Soyuz Zvezda Module Soyuz Poisk MRM 2 Click to go inside! Rassvet MRM Soyuz Pirs docking module Soyuz
Russian Orbital Segment. Click to zoom in!
Russian Orbital Segment
Zvezda SM
Soyuz / Progess
Pirs
Soyuz / Progess
Rassvet
MRM 1
Poisk MRM 2
Zarya FGB
Soyuz / Progess


Huh, Huh ? is this BRILLIANT or what ? Penyulap talk 23:27, 28 January 2012 (UTC)

This is the best thing that has ever happened, and when you click to goto the Zarya module picture, we'll have things on that picture you can click to move about as well. We will be able to select views out of a window of the ship, like look at London at night or see the aurora and watch a robot ship arrive. OMG this is fantastic. Penyulap talk 23:39, 28 January 2012 (UTC)
We will need help to identify all the bits and pieces of the station that can be seen in images. I dearly wish Lee was here, because I have no hope of identifying all the spare parts and Truss bits and pieces. Also, there are all the pictures of the insides of the station, lots of panels and experiments to label. This will be quite a fun challenge I expect !!!
I am thinking some of the images go into articles, but some don't really. Also it would be kind of hilarious if images that are click to zoom are used on non ISS articles, like geography and so forth, and people click them and make their way back to the ISS. HA! Penyulap talk 19:14, 29 January 2012 (UTC)
There are more pictures, Template:Zvezda aft and template:pirs help with labeling is appreciated. Penyulap talk 21:41, 29 January 2012 (UTC)

[edit] Luch satellite constellation

Does anyone know what the status of the Luch satellites is ? Are they back online ? Penyulap talk 01:51, 28 January 2012 (UTC)

  • The Luch 5A satellite is still in checkout phase I believe. Probably will be used starting sometime this year. Luch 5B is to launch either this year or next year. Other then that there are no Luch satellites that can be used. All others have re-entered or are in a graveyard orbit.--NavyBlue84 15:22, 28 January 2012 (UTC)
Thank you, Navyblue. Penyulap talk 20:59, 28 January 2012 (UTC)
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