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60 years ago, I never got to debug my first assembly program, which had 1 syntax error and an unknown number of bugs, because NASA launched a weather satellite, data from which monopolized the 7090 which the high school enrichmment program was having programs run on. Still rankles a bit.



I’ve recently been disillusioned in my admiration for NASA.

How NASA used a child math prodigy back in the 1970s: “ At that time, I led my life like a machine – I woke up, solved the daily assigned equation, ate, slept, and so forth. I really didn’t know what I was doing, and I was lonely and had no friends.”

Career scientists and engineers using a kid like this? Pretty scummy in my book.

Compare that to how Srinivasa Ramanujan was treated nearly a century earlier by the British.

Sadly, your schools’s computer time wouldnt have made anyone blink.


If it's the British and the treatment of the brilliant people, the story that comes to mind is of Alan Turing.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing#Homosexuality_and_...


Very poor example.

Technical brilliance didn't protect Alan Turing from a badly-written sex law pushed out in 1885, but technical brilliance wasn't the cause of his mistreatment.

Whereas it was technical brilliance that made a young, 8-year-old 210 iq child the target of exploitation by NASA in an era where child-exploitation was already frowned upon for decades.

And of course, in the height of irony one of the aims of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criminal_Law_Amendment_Act_188... was to protect the very young; so a very poor example indeed.




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