While many in the tech industry have their eyes on the cloud, Ester Dyson has set her sights on the stars.
The longtime tech pundit and investor on Tuesday said she is putting aside most of her day-to-day activities to undergo full-time astronaut training. She'll be a backup to another member of the tech industry, Charles Simonyi, who is set to make a second trip to the International Space Station next spring.
Dyson and Simonyi are indulging their cosmic interests under the auspices of Space Adventures, a company that arranges space flights for private citizens and in which Dyson is an investor. The cost of participating in the backup crew member program is $3 million, according to Space Adventures. (Simonyi reportedly paid about $25 million for his first trip to orbit in April 2007.)
"If, for some reason, he doesn't go (and I can scrounge up some extra cash), I get to go instead!" Dyson wrote on her Flight School blog, where she will chronicle her training, including a less-than-posh stay at Russia's Star City research and training facility. She reckons that her chance of getting into space next spring at about 5 percent.
I'm expecting it to be cold, staying in Star City through a Moscow winter, with a lot of detailed material to learn and exams to pass. Each Soyuz flight has three cosmonauts, and the other two want a colleague they can rely on to do the right thing in an emergency. By all accounts, the food is "stolovaya" (canteen), and the accommodations are spartan.
Dyson says she'll be heading to Russia soon to watch the October 12 launch of Space Adventures' next client to venture into orbit, video game developer Richard Garriott.
The interest in space flight is hardly out of the blue for Dyson, who ran the PC Forum conference for more than two decades. More recently, she launched the Flight School conference for entrepreneurs focused on air and space undertakings. Troubles in that business sector led Dyson to cancel this year's conference; she's aiming to revive it, eventually, she wrote, "but probably not until 2010."
Software industry veteran Charles Simonyi is ready to go back to outer space.
In April 2007, Simonyi spent close to two weeks in orbit, in a very expensive round trip via Russian rocket to spend time aboard the International Space Station. The trip reportedly cost Simonyi $25 million, and apparently he considers the money very well spent: Space Adventures, the company that organized the junket, announced Tuesday that he has signed up for another trip, this one coming up sometime next spring.
Charles Simonyi (seated) on his way to a post-space flight medical exam, April 21, 2007.
(Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls)Space Adventures had little else to say on the matter for now, save that Simonyi would be training with the Soyuz TMA-14 crew. A press conference is scheduled for Monday.
Simonyi got his first big payday years back through his work on the Excel and Word programs at Microsoft, where he eventually spent two decades. In 2002, he founded the software engineering company Intentional Software.
His interest in outer space isn't limited to his own occasional travels. In January, Simonyi's Fund for Arts and Sciences gave $20 million to the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope project--twice as much on that occasion as Microsoft co-founder and fellow billionaire Bill Gates. The Chile-based LSST, which is expected to be ready for service in about 2014, will be on the lookout for dark energy and dark matter.
Space flights and rocketry could be the ultimate status symbol among the Silicon Valley crowd. Game designer Richard Garriott, the son of an astronaut, is set to journey to the International Space Station on October 12, according to Space Adventures. Google co-founder Sergey Brin is also a Space Adventures client--over the summer, he plopped down $5 million to book a blastoff.
And over the weekend, entrepreneur Elon Musk was finally able to celebrate after getting a cargo-carrying rocket into orbit. Three previous attempts had failed.
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