Re: 2008 Symposium deadline
One could hope that the new administration coming in January might fix ITAR. At least one candidate has mentioned it in his space policy. ( http://www.fladems.com/page/-/Obama_Space.pdf page 6). The other candidate may also be willing to listen to reason.
I suppose you could project blank slides just to make a point, sort of like what the student newspaper in college did when facing censorship issues. Or maybe Amsat could schedule a "US only" session with proof of citizenship required for admittance to also drive the point home.
We have to present some evidence of progress on these projects. If that means speaking in bland generalities, or shooing non-citizens from the room, we have to do something. Explaining how ITAR has hurt Amsat projects would itself be a valid topic for a presentation.
Since screwdrivers and wrenches can be used to assemble satellites, I wonder if my local hardware store has the proper export controls in place to ensure national security?
Dan
------ Original Message ------ Received: Sat, 06 Sep 2008 12:48:51 PM EDT From: Lyle Johnson kk7p@wavecable.com To: Frank Brickle brickle@pobox.comCc: Daniel Schultz n8fgv@usa.net, eagle@amsat.org Subject: Re: [eagle] Re: 2008 Symposium deadline
Hello Frank!
I don't mind being controversial :-)
My take on all things AMSAT for the past couple of years is:
- ITAR prevents us from any meaningful exchange of ideas, projects or
design with any non-U.S. citizen. While there are ways to do this, they assume very deep pockets and a large full-time staff devoted to satisfying unreasonable, unrealistic and arbitrary government demands.
Feedback from meetings with people who ought to know strongly suggest that while Amateur satellites are not the intent of the ITAR rules (duh!), absolutely no one in a position to help us is willing to go on record with that interpretation.
The practical result is that ITAR has killed the IHU3 since it was dependent on cooperation from a non-NA group. P3E and whatever Eagle was to have been were dependent on the IHU3. The impact is pretty easy to extrapolate.
- For the same reasons, ITAR prevents us from making a presentation at
any AMSAT Symposium with any technical content except perhaps the most general. If there is technical content, we have to be ready to cite chapter and verse of the publicly available source of anything we utter that might be construed as potentially revealing of any level of technology that might possibly be applied to any spacecraft in orbit or supporting such a spacecraft on the ground.
Unless of course we clear the building of all non-U.S. citizens.
Sigh.
73,
Lyle KK7P (who now does terrestrial stuff)
One could hope that the new administration coming in January might fix ITAR. At least one candidate has mentioned it in his space policy. ( http://www.fladems.com/page/-/Obama_Space.pdf page 6). The other candidate may also be willing to listen to reason.
One hopes both will. I suspect this is not very high on any candidate's priority list, and once the election is over will fall down to the bottom. We have 5,000 or fewer members. Not many votes...
I suppose you could project blank slides just to make a point, sort of like what the student newspaper in college did when facing censorship issues.
My non-attendance is my way of making the point.
Or maybe Amsat could schedule a "US only" session with proof of citizenship required for admittance to also drive the point home.
That's when I resign my life membership!
We have to present some evidence of progress on these projects. If that means speaking in bland generalities, or shooing non-citizens from the room, we have to do something. Explaining how ITAR has hurt Amsat projects would itself be a valid topic for a presentation.
I agree. Perhaps one of the officers or others who were in the various meetings could make such a presentation.
Since screwdrivers and wrenches can be used to assemble satellites, I wonder if my local hardware store has the proper export controls in place to ensure national security?
:-)
Only if they pack instructions showing how to make a controlled device using that tool.
---
All of my life I have been a "glass half full" person with respect to AMSAT and what we can do in space as Amateurs. From July 28, 1983 when we started on UoSAT-B/OSCAR-11 we cooperatively designed built and delivered to the launch pad a satellite in 5 months, which waited 3 months for a launch and operated for over two decades, proving a battery technology crucial for our later spacecraft. US, Canada and UK working together.
The last few years with ITAR and Eagle have made me a "glass half empty" person in this context. Years of work, and we keep going back to the very basics. Heck, we don't even know the size or shape of what Eagle will be, or what its probable payloads might be. We keep re-starting and never finishing. IHU-3 was really a device intended for P3E and P5A that could also be used for Eagle, at least in the format that Eagle was originally going to have been, and what its next two or three definitions suggested it might be.
Frankly, I have *no* idea what Eagle even is anymore, or what state it is in. Can anyone tell me its size, shape, or name its three primary payloads? Is it CC-Rider? SDX? Analog transponders? Cube, hexagon, or tri-star? Or... Or even what its probably uplink or downlink bands migh tbe, much less its frequencies?
I have to put my limited time into efforts that I think will bear fruit. After several years of hard work for Eagle with essentially no results to show, I have to say, Enough!" and move on.
If the climate changes and it is possible to work on this sort of project cooperatively with non-US nationals, and if AMSAT is still viable by that time, I'll undoubtedly be asking to be allowed to participate, if only to mentor and share what I've learned before I go the way we all eventually go.
Sorry to be so negative. But I couldn't present anything about this project. I don't believe it exists in any viable form. I don't know who is actually working on it. I have not seen any hardware apart from a tremendous effort by Stephen and Bdale (and Chuck and a few others) to make CAN controllers (many flight-ready examples of which exist, and are gathering dust), and a complete IHU3 waiting, as always, on software to test it to see if it all work (there is only *one* piece of the hardware that has not been verified -- and this status has not changed at all in well over two years. Or has it been three? I've lost count). But why write the software if there is no satellite that will use the IHU3? And why build the satellite if we can't launch it? Look at P3E.
ITAR destroyed the U.S. Amateur space program, with the possible exception of Cubesats and perhaps some Microsats. It certainly destroyed large projects (P3E, Eagle, ...).
AO-40 destroyed our confidence.
And running in circles (see Eagle, above) has depleted most of our volunteers and good will.
Perhaps a Phoenix will arise.
Perhaps not.
Sadly,
Lyle KK7P
Dan
------ Original Message ------ Received: Sat, 06 Sep 2008 12:48:51 PM EDT From: Lyle Johnson kk7p@wavecable.com To: Frank Brickle brickle@pobox.comCc: Daniel Schultz n8fgv@usa.net, eagle@amsat.org Subject: Re: [eagle] Re: 2008 Symposium deadline
Hello Frank!
I don't mind being controversial :-)
My take on all things AMSAT for the past couple of years is:
- ITAR prevents us from any meaningful exchange of ideas, projects or
design with any non-U.S. citizen. While there are ways to do this, they assume very deep pockets and a large full-time staff devoted to satisfying unreasonable, unrealistic and arbitrary government demands.
Feedback from meetings with people who ought to know strongly suggest that while Amateur satellites are not the intent of the ITAR rules (duh!), absolutely no one in a position to help us is willing to go on record with that interpretation.
The practical result is that ITAR has killed the IHU3 since it was dependent on cooperation from a non-NA group. P3E and whatever Eagle was to have been were dependent on the IHU3. The impact is pretty easy to extrapolate.
- For the same reasons, ITAR prevents us from making a presentation at
any AMSAT Symposium with any technical content except perhaps the most general. If there is technical content, we have to be ready to cite chapter and verse of the publicly available source of anything we utter that might be construed as potentially revealing of any level of technology that might possibly be applied to any spacecraft in orbit or supporting such a spacecraft on the ground.
Unless of course we clear the building of all non-U.S. citizens.
Sigh.
73,
Lyle KK7P (who now does terrestrial stuff)
participants (2)
-
Daniel Schultz
-
Lyle Johnson