The original mission for NACA (their predecessor) was to pursue research in order to ensure that private aviation
firms would be able to use said research without fear of lawsuits, etc. For instance, their airfoil information would be
made available to the general public and you wouldn't have to go through a lot of effort and expense to design it
into your airplane. Of course, the taxpayer does get stuck with the bill, and oughta have some say in it anyway.
Eventually, they became NASA, and rather than continue their tradition of using their efforts to *prevent* monopolistic
practices, they became a monopoly in and of themselves. For decades, it has been accepted that anyone interested in
space science pretty much HAD to go to NASA or maybe one of the smaller military groups to meet their full potential... or perhaps
a large corporation in existence to provide hardware to the agency.
and this robbed a couple generations of private industry of the brainpower needed to pursue a real, profitable (i.e. sustainable)
space effort.
I'm hoping, seriously hoping, that they'll get a shot, as I'm one of the nutjobs who sees space travel as the only way the human
race is going to be able to survive as time passes.
I think this "shift" of NASA could be potentially a good thing depending on how it's developed.
If NASA is going to be doing the research end of things from now on, what happens to their results? Does the new material they invent become public domain, or does it become property of the US Government. If the latter, how then does it translate to public companies getting their hands on it to further space missions. Who trains our new astronauts? Lots of questions to have answered.
I see more potential for good than bad here.
With that said, I have already made plans to see the last shuttle launch in Sept. Anyone else planning on gong?