Pence Goes to Kennedy Space Center

Yesterday, Vice President Pence visited Kennedy Space Center. He was given a detailed tour1 of the spaceport and updates on its on-going evolution into a multi-user facility.

At the heart of that evolution is NASA’s relationship with private companies, including SpaceX and Boeing. Both are part of the Commercial Crew program, which will fly American astronauts to the International Space Station aboard non-NASA vehicles.

Pence spoke about this program in a lengthy speech that took place in addition to his tour. “In conjunction with our commercial partners we’ll continue to make space travel safer, cheaper, and more accessible than ever before,” he said.

Eric Berger at Ars Technica commented on this section of the Vice President’s remarks:

This seems to be a nod toward efforts by the commercial space industry, led by SpaceX and Blue Origin, to develop reusable launch vehicles that have the potential to substantially cut the cost of access to space and provide launch-on-demand services. “I think he pretty clearly gave advocates of cheap access a shout-out,” said James Muncy, the founder of PoliSpace, and a commercial space supporter.

I agree with this way of viewing Pence’s comments, and I believe the Trump administration will lean heavily on commercial companies to take over some of NASA’s work.

That isn’t new, however. NASA had been handing this work over to its partners as it focuses on the Space Launch System, a new heavy-lift rocket, and Orion, a next-generation capsule that will send crew members around the moon in the next few years.

There have been many complaints lodged against the SLS. It is incredibly expensive, but more importantly, is being built without a clear mission in mind. After the initial test launches and a crewed trip to cis-lunar space, NASA will still be left without the additional hardware needed to go to Mars.

The Obama administration holds the blame for this, but Trump hasn’t done anything to move the ball forward yet, either.

This was evident in Pence’s speech, which was heavy on something close to patriotism and light on details:2

Let us do what our nation has always done since its very founding and beyond: We’ve pushed the boundaries on frontiers, not just of territory, but of knowledge. We’ve blazed new trails, and we’ve astonished the world as we’ve boldly grasped our future without fear.

From this ‘Bridge to Space,’ our nation will return to the moon, and we will put American boots on the face of Mars.

Pence did not mention the SLS, which I found a little surprising. There are few things as American as building a giant-ass rocket and blasting crew members into space.

Moreover, it’s been unclear what sort of mission the new executive branch may have in mind for the SLS. Republicans, historically, have favored returning to the moon, complete with landing on its surface once again. Is that what Pence meant? Then again, he specifically mentioned landing on Mars, which is a plan set forth under Obama’s leadership.

This confusion is made worse by the fact that the Trump White House still has not named an administrator for NASA. Here’s Loren Grush at The Verge:

[Pence] didn’t mention any new additions to NASA’s leadership team either, which means the space agency is still left without a permanent administrator and no clear direction for its future under President Trump. “Usually you have a leader visit, tour, and give a speech to roll out a detail-oriented policy after it’s been developed,” Phil Larson, a former space advisor for the Obama administration and assistant dean at the University of Colorado’s college of engineering, tells The Verge. “This is backwards.”

The only concrete news out of the speech was that the National Space Council will be meeting in the coming weeks. The NSC — first founded in the 1960s and briefly resurrected by George H.W. Bush — is tasked with shaping US space policy.

Perhaps then we will see what Trump and company have in mind for NASA and its commercial partners. Until then, there are far more questions than there are answers about what this executive branch wants to do with America’s space program.


  1. Don’t miss this real head-into-desk moment captured by Mike Brown of Reuters. 
  2. As is this White House’s general style. 

Introducing Query

Serenity Caldwell has a long background in helping people with their Apple products. She started out as a Creative at Apple retail, teaching classes and training individuals on how to use the software that came on their devices. After writing at Macworld, she now works as the Managing Editor at iMore.

Before I was a professional podcaster, I had a career in IT. Like Serenity, that started at my local Apple Store, but behind the Genius Bar.

Today, we’re both getting back to our roots and launching a new podcast named Query. I’ve wanted to work with Serenity for as long as I can remember, and we are both super excited about this show.

Each week, we will be answering two community-submitted questions, then knock out three quick ones during the Speed Run. The show notes for each episode will be full of the resources we discuss. We’re serious about our homework, but sidebars and nerdy jokes are going to be par for the course on Query. It’s a little part help desk, a little part Car Talk, and we’re keeping the runtime to just 30 minutes each week.

We just launched the first episode:

This week, Serenity and Stephen help Tyler with some personal hotspot concerns and share their excitement over iOS 11’s features. Then, they tackle Mac backups for Richard, help Doug make a cinemagraph and pick out an iOS device for Daniel.

Here’s how you can subscribe:

Be sure to follow the show on Twitter and ask questions using the #askquery hashtag!

Connected #149: Caramel

This week on Connected:

Will the next iPhone eschew TouchID for facial scanning? Is Stephen keeping his Echo Show? Can Ticci explain CoreML in a way that normal humans can understand?

My thanks to our sponsors this week:

  • Mack Weldon: Smart underwear for smart guys. Get 20% off with the code CONNECTED.
  • Hover: Domain names for your ideas. Get 10% off your first purchase.
  • Igloo: A digital workplace platform Free for up to 10 people.

Sinclair Broadcast Group

John Oliver spent some time looking at Sinclair Broadcast Group, the company that is buying up a huge number of local TV news stations around the country. It is a fascinating — and scary — look behind the scenes of media. The views this company holds and and forces into the homes of their viewers are horrifying.

MarsEdit 4 Public Beta

Almost every word I publish on 512 Pixels goes through MarsEdit. I’m excited to see this beta:

Because the update contains many new features that my patient users have been waiting to get their hands on, I want to give folks the option of trying it out early. I think the beta release is very stable, but you’ll have to forgive a few rough edges while I finish things up.

Day One Moving to Subscription Model

Day One boss Paul Mayne:

Day One is evolving. We’re transitioning to a more stable subscription business model to ensure this app and these services always stick around.

This week we’re releasing the Day One Premium subscription service. It includes the ability to create more than ten journals and access all future premium features.

Day One has been on my iPhone’s home screen for years. It’s a fantastic journaling app for iOS and macOS. Version 2 was a paid upgrade, bringing a new design to the app, as well as a revamped sync service.

Unfortunately, this service only added end-to-end encryption in the past few weeks. Some features, like publishing a journal entry to the web for public sharing haven’t resurfaced after the change.

The subscription model has been named Day One Premium. Here’s a bit from the company’s FAQ:

What’s included in Day One Premium?

Unlimited journals, unlimited photo storage, 25% off book orders, the Mac app ($49.99 value), and more. Day One Premium users also have exclusive access to all future features including: audio recording, writing prompts, video entries, and more.

In short, if you want new features in the future, you’ll need to move over to the subscription. That will run you $49.99/year, but first-time buyers can get it at 30 percent off, coming in at $34.99/year.

If you’re like me and bought the 2.0 apps, the first year is even cheaper, at $24.99/year.

Without Premium, the Day One apps will be pretty limited. According to the FAQ, those accounts “are limited to one photo per entry, one journal, no cloud services, and no access to other Premium features.”

When Apple announced app subscriptions, Day One came to mind. It’s an app I use very often, and one that I want to see enjoying on-going development. I hope that this allows the company to continue adding features to an app that I genuinely enjoy.

I’m willing to give Day One Premium a shot, but my guess is that not everyone will be. I expect to see features like web publishing and online editing sooner rather than later. 2.0’s launch was a little rough with syncing issues and the aforementioned lack of end-to-end encryption. Any developer who moves to this model needs to prove to their users that the on-going investment is worth it.

Connected #148: The Grand Scheme of Screens

I missed this week’s Connected, but enjoyed listening to it last night:

The Prompt Curse strikes again! Find out what has been struck down, as Myke and Federico discuss the current state of iOS 11, Ticci’s keyboard woes, reviews of the Echo Show, and ARKit.

My thanks to our sponsors this week:

  • Pingdom: Start monitoring your websites and servers today. Use offer CONNECTED to get 20% off.
  • Away: Travel smarter with the suitcase that charges your phone. Get $20 off with the code ‘connected’.
  • Igloo: A digital workplace platform Free for up to 10 people.