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Maybe he's referring to the US needing to get rides to space on R-7s.Nobody in the US used those engines
Maybe he's referring to the US needing to get rides to space on R-7s.Nobody in the US used those engines
Recruiting is not the sole measure of workforce health, retention is an important component and overall stability is as often effected by the latter as the former. Part of the deal when you win mission-critical contracts is that you agree to oversight, and workforce stability is an oversight issue. Repeating myself, workforce disruption which threatens government missions is absolutely a government concern.Not. It is not the governments job to look out for me. It is my job to look out for me. I don't see any issues with SpaceX having recruiting problems. In fact, the evidence is to the contrary.
Have we learned this? Sure, Elon's said some things, I'm not entirely sure what level of seriousness one should ascribe to them. I do remember people bemoaning FWS having a say, and insisting that they were simply a beard for a "vengeful" administration determined to kill a company they keep giving contracts to. Instead it appears the team worked as fast as they could and now SpaceX will get a greenlight within days.My issue was not with the FAA, it was with the Fish and Wildlife Service. Who, which have since learned, was at least somewhat dubious on the merits of their concerns.
I said noting about outsourcing, shipbuilders and aerospace made plenty of silly mistakes with their workforces before even getting into an outsourcing discussion. I'm talking about retention, not just of people but of knowledge, skills, and practices. Skippy with a shiny, new 4-year degree may be enthusiastic as all get out about getting hired by SpaceX. might agree to whatever pay, benefit, and hours are presented just for the chance. But Skippy will need people who actually know what they're doing to provide the training and institutional know-how to get up to speed. If those people aren't around because SpaceY comes along offering space work with less BS, the company's going to struggle to get people like Skippy to the point where they can keep things moving.But that's the point. SpaceX doesn't outsource work to critical companies. SpaceX is remarkably vertically integrated. They do not drive down costs by arm-twisting vendors. They engineer better solutions. Your criticism is without merit in my opinion.
In this case "Space Y" would be Blue Origin. I don't see SpaceX in danger of everybody jumping ship to go there. It would have happened already. It's not like SpaceX just started working hard a year or two ago.Recruiting is not the sole measure of workforce health, retention is an important component and overall stability is as often effected by the latter as the former. Part of the deal when you win mission-critical contracts is that you agree to oversight, and workforce stability is an oversight issue. Repeating myself, workforce disruption which threatens government missions is absolutely a government concern.
Have we learned this? Sure, Elon's said some things, I'm not entirely sure what level of seriousness one should ascribe to them. I do remember people bemoaning FWS having a say, and insisting that they were simply a beard for a "vengeful" administration determined to kill a company they keep giving contracts to. Instead it appears the team worked as fast as they could and now SpaceX will get a greenlight within days.
I said noting about outsourcing, shipbuilders and aerospace made plenty of silly mistakes with their workforces before even getting into an outsourcing discussion. I'm talking about retention, not just of people but of knowledge, skills, and practices. Skippy with a shiny, new 4-year degree may be enthusiastic as all get out about getting hired by SpaceX. might agree to whatever pay, benefit, and hours are presented just for the chance. But Skippy will need people who actually know what they're doing to provide the training and institutional know-how to get up to speed. If those people aren't around because SpaceY comes along offering space work with less BS, the company's going to struggle to get people like Skippy to the point where they can keep things moving.
In this case "Space Y" would be Blue Origin
The FAA has given license authorization for the second launch of the @SpaceX Starship Super Heavy vehicle. The FAA determined SpaceX met all safety, environmental, policy and financial responsibility requirements.
Targeting Friday, November 17 for Starship’s second flight test. A two-hour launch window opens at 7:00 a.m. CT → https://spacex.com/launches
A system also known as taxation without representation.It is not the governments job to look out for me. It is my job to look out for me.
I despise the way everything is run like a burger joint these days in America, and to add insult to injury the unremitting chorus praise of this management credo, usually delivered with bloodshot eyes and a frozen plastic smile.I also know that "everyone" wants to work there and at Tesla. Every young engineer I've spoken to has applied.
Precisely. long term retention is of the essence if an engineering firm is to found a design school and philosophy where knowledge is transferred from one generation to the next.Skippy with a shiny, new 4-year degree may be enthusiastic as all get out about getting hired by SpaceX. might agree to whatever pay, benefit, and hours are presented just for the chance. But Skippy will need people who actually know what they're doing to provide the training and institutional know-how to get up to speed.
new grad kids who have one dream "work at spacex" get used like a condom (or can't cut it), grow disillusioned and are fired not so-long there after (w/ a massive and crushing NDA).What is a "cult-of-Elon" type?
All I'm seeing is people wanting to work for the world leader (by far) in rockets. Do you call people who want to work for Intel cultists? Disney? Just how shitty does a company have to be before the people who want to work there are no longer "cultists" in your eyes?new grad kids who have one dream "work at spacex" get used like a condom (or can't cut it), grow disillusioned and are fired not so-long there after (w/ a massive and crushing NDA).
they are a small minority, but spacex is a hungry place unafraid of turnover. another big class of burnouts that are people who get promoted into management and implode under the pressure. i loosely know a guy who lost his hair working there, and watched it return as he's "coasted" as a sr manager at boeing.
Recruiting is not the sole measure of workforce health, retention is an important component and overall stability is as often effected by the latter as the former. Part of the deal when you win mission-critical contracts is that you agree to oversight, and workforce stability is an oversight issue. Repeating myself, workforce disruption which threatens government missions is absolutely a government concern.
Have we learned this? Sure, Elon's said some things, I'm not entirely sure what level of seriousness one should ascribe to them. I do remember people bemoaning FWS having a say, and insisting that they were simply a beard for a "vengeful" administration determined to kill a company they keep giving contracts to. Instead it appears the team worked as fast as they could and now SpaceX will get a greenlight within days.
I said noting about outsourcing, shipbuilders and aerospace made plenty of silly mistakes with their workforces before even getting into an outsourcing discussion. I'm talking about retention, not just of people but of knowledge, skills, and practices. Skippy with a shiny, new 4-year degree may be enthusiastic as all get out about getting hired by SpaceX. might agree to whatever pay, benefit, and hours are presented just for the chance. But Skippy will need people who actually know what they're doing to provide the training and institutional know-how to get up to speed.
If those people aren't around because SpaceY comes along offering space work with less BS, the company's going to struggle to get people like Skippy to the point where they can keep things moving.
That's not how that works. "Representation" isn't the government taking care of us or telling us what to do. It's the government doing what we damn well TELL them we want them to do. I.E. they're representing us.A system also known as taxation without representation.
They have. automatic 30% raise.In this case "Space Y" would be Blue Origin. I don't see SpaceX in danger of everybody jumping ship to go there. It would have happened already. It's not like SpaceX just started working hard a year or two ago.
No, the cult is the internet fanbois.new grad kids who have one dream "work at spacex" get used like a condom (or can't cut it), grow disillusioned and are fired not so-long there after (w/ a massive and crushing NDA).
And yet SpaceX motors on so it must not be a significant enough problem to matter.They have. automatic 30% raise.
Anybody could have, just nobody took that path.Boeing could have made Falcon had they wanted to.
I heard it said there was a woman at Boeing that said that the company didn't need engineers anymore.
because they already have a high turn overAnd yet SpaceX motors on so it must not be a significant enough problem to matter.
That wasn't Darleen...a Boeing employee who calls himself Trebuchet at Cosmoquest talked about this years ago.Stop it.
Where do you get that nonsense?
Darleen Druyun was there less than a year and didn't do anything that mattered as a Boeing employee.
Which doesn't appear to be affecting them negatively.because they already have a high turn over
You believe a lot of nonsense.That wasn't Darleen...a Boeing employee who calls himself Trebuchet at Cosmoquest talked about this years ago.
I believe him.
Given my experience with Boeing and the relative direction of SpaceX and Boeing in the last couple of decades, that definitely checks out.i loosely know a guy who lost his hair working there, and watched it return as he's "coasted" as a sr manager at boeing.
If your sense of self worth is tied to your job, you risk for health for it, and the pay isnt competitive, it is a cult. And I have in fact, called people who worked at Disney as members of a cult. Intel folks aren't cultists, as they don't worship a leader/the holy texts - it's some sort of weird ego play in my experience.All I'm seeing is people wanting to work for the world leader (by far) in rockets. Do you call people who want to work for Intel cultists? Disney? Just how shitty does a company have to be before the people who want to work there are no longer "cultists" in your eyes?
cmon spacex hitting schedule on the first launch? rushing to launch is a bad idea, and they made that mistake once when they blew up their own launch pad.Knew it was too good to be true. Slightly mind-boggling that they're not more reliable.
No, well _written_ documentation is how knowledge is transmitted. SpaceX pays people to document, and they pay technical writers well.Precisely. long term retention is of the essence if an engineering firm is to found a design school and philosophy where knowledge is transferred from one generation to the next.
You're making all kinds of assumptions to support your bias. I thought you were a serious person. Ah well.If your sense of self worth is tied to your job, you risk for health for it, and the pay isnt competitive, it is a cult.
They're getting lots of practice so they're getting better at it.
My initial thought as well. But we really don't know exactly what part of the component is failing.Knew it was too good to be true. Slightly mind-boggling that they're not more reliable.
sea-water and sea-air are very corrosive...My initial thought as well. But we really don't know exactly what part of the component is failing.