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Mars probe running Windows 98 receives software update after two decades....


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"Patch management for the latest versions of Windows might be the concern of most of us located here on Earth, but meanwhile, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Mars Express spacecraft has received the first update to its Window 98-based system in 19 years."

 

Who needs Windows 11?? 😀

Edited by schuck6566
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I wonder if it freeze everytime it want to move 😅

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1 minute ago, bonami2 said:

I wonder if it freeze everytime it want to move 😅

They were wondering what hardware it was using and guessed it could probably play Doom.... 🤣 

"The space agency didn’t go into a great deal of detail regarding the specs of the hardware receiving the update, however Tom's Hardware speculated it could have a Pentium 90 processor, meaning it could potentially run classic games such as Doom as well as explore the secrets of Mars."

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1 hour ago, schuck6566 said:

They were wondering what hardware it was using and guessed it could probably play Doom.... 🤣 

"The space agency didn’t go into a great deal of detail regarding the specs of the hardware receiving the update, however Tom's Hardware speculated it could have a Pentium 90 processor, meaning it could potentially run classic games such as Doom as well as explore the secrets of Mars."

I wonder what kind of motherboard those thing got. Back then capacitor failure was high haha.

 

Maybe this thing is going to come back on earth one days.

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1 hour ago, bonami2 said:

I wonder what kind of motherboard those thing got. Back then capacitor failure was high haha.

 

Maybe this thing is going to come back on earth one days.

or itll just pop a capacitor and stop dead on mars forever. allowing humanity to efficiently dispose of old technology

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Uh oh, it BSODed.

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robot fail GIF

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11 hours ago, Sir Beregond said:

Uh oh, it BSODed.

Uh oh, Spaghetti O's

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I'm probably the only one here wondering......."hey, where can I get that patch?" :lachen:

 

Honestly, that's pretty cool that the Rover is running Win98 if you ask me.  I've been saying it for years, and I'll keep saying it....there's nothing at ALL wrong with using old hardware or software.  All depends on your usages. 🙂 

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I think Tech Radar is way off on this reporting. The Mars Express is not running Windows 98, and they seem to have gotten pretty far away from the original quote that lead to this reporting. 

 

"We faced a number of challenges to improve the performance of MARSIS," Enginium's Carlo Nenna said in a statement. "Not least because the MARSIS software was originally designed over 20 years ago, using a development environment based on Microsoft Windows 98!"

 

Only the software used to develop MARSIS was running Windows 98, not MARSIS itself. I don't think it should be a surprise to anyone that the computers they used to run their dev tools 20 years ago were running on the version of Windows that was around at the time. It looks like a few sites took this info and totally misrepresented it for click bait.

 

WWW.PCMAG.COM

A critical part of the spacecraft uses software designed on Windows 98.

 

I sent an email to Tech Radars chief editor to let them know their article is wrong. Wonder if they'll fix it. The headline for their article is blatantly wrong. 

Edited by UltraMega
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23 minutes ago, UltraMega said:

I think Tech Radar is way off on this reporting. The Mars Express is not running Windows 98, and they seem to have gotten pretty far away from the original quote that lead to this reporting. 

 

"We faced a number of challenges to improve the performance of MARSIS," Enginium's Carlo Nenna said in a statement. "Not least because the MARSIS software was originally designed over 20 years ago, using a development environment based on Microsoft Windows 98!"

 

Only the software used to develop MARSIS was running Windows 98, not MARSIS itself. I don't think it should be a surprise to anyone that the computers they used to run their dev tools 20 years ago were running on the version of Windows that was around at the time. It looks like a few sites took this info and totally misrepresented it for click bait.

 

WWW.PCMAG.COM

A critical part of the spacecraft uses software designed on Windows 98.

 

I sent an email to Tech Radars chief editor to let them know their article is wrong. Wonder if they'll fix it. The headline for their article is blatantly wrong. 

Welcome to journalism mate.  I've been complaining about headlines and faked information in news articles for years. 😉 

 

As far as the software in question, there's still lots of software designed to run on Windows 3.1 even that still works today on Windows 10 or 11.  So THAT really isn't that big of a surprise at all.

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16 minutes ago, pioneerisloud said:

Welcome to journalism mate.  I've been complaining about headlines and faked information in news articles for years. 😉 

 

As far as the software in question, there's still lots of software designed to run on Windows 3.1 even that still works today on Windows 10 or 11.  So THAT really isn't that big of a surprise at all.

Yea I think we're all well aware of how far journalistic integrity has fallen, but usually they don't state something that's totally false in the headline (or at least it usually doesn't happen outside of politics much). Tech Radar's article is just flat out wrong since it states directly that the space probe is running windows 98 which is simply not true at all. 

 

If they correct the article, it would be the second time recently that I have e-mailed the Chief Editor of a major website and gotten them to correct an error, both related to things about outer space. 

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Am the only one wondering how the lithium battery lasted 20 years 😶

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9 minutes ago, bonami2 said:

Am the only one wondering how the lithium battery lasted 20 years 😶

Being in space probably helps a lot. 

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11 minutes ago, UltraMega said:

Being in space probably helps a lot. 

True but still interesting. Running 24/7 the battery cycle must be insanely high. Meaning that current battery are just scam pushed to max voltage to die.

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19 minutes ago, bonami2 said:

True but still interesting. Running 24/7 the battery cycle must be insanely high. Meaning that current battery are just scam pushed to max voltage to die.

I don't think the battery cycle would be that intense. The probe doesn't have a standard orbit, and it spends the vast majority of its time on the further out part of its elliptical orbit (aphelion) meaning it's probably almost never in shadow and thus getting constant power from its solar panels. The battery probably acts most like a big capacitor rather than something that needs to hold a long charge for the whole thing to run off of.

 

Its orbital period is less than 7 hours. Even if it does go into shadow often, which is kind of unlikely, it would only do so at its closest and therefore fastest part of its orbit since with an elliptical orbit, the satellite will speed up a lot as it moves to its closest point to the planet (perihelion). 

 

Elliptic_orbit.gif

 

The probe does go into shadows sometimes, but it only happens when the orbit is in-line with the sun. The orbiter does not simply orbit on one plane so the time it would spend in shadow would be rare and probably only a couple minutes at a time. It's probably also safe to assume the probe doesn't do much during these times since it would not be idea to take pictures in the dark. 

Edited by UltraMega
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6 minutes ago, UltraMega said:

I don't think the battery cycle would be that intense. The probe doesn't have a standard orbit, and it spends the vast majority of its time on the further out part of its elliptical orbit (aphelion) meaning it's probably almost never in shadow and thus getting constant power from its solar panels. The battery probably acts most like a big capacitor rather than something that needs to hold a long charge for the whole thing to run off of.

 

Its orbital period is less than 7 hours. Even if it does go into shadow often, which is kind of unlikely, it would only do so at its closest and therefore fastest part of its orbit since with an elliptical orbit, the satellite will speed up a lot as it moves to its closest point to the planet (perihelion). 

 

Elliptic_orbit.gif

I need to read more on that. Really interesting stuff that i don't have any knowledge on.  Thank you for explaining to me 😄

Make sense that the solar panel are the main power source. Since relying mainly on the battery would increase the failure chance of the project.

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1 minute ago, bonami2 said:

I need to read more on that. Really interesting stuff that i don't have any knowledge on.  Thank you for explaining to me 😄

Make sense that the solar panel are the main power source. Since relying mainly on the battery would increase the failure chance of the project.

Sure thing. It is kinda surprising to learn that any space probe would use lithium ion batteries. Seems like it would make a lot more sense to use a nuclear power source like the Voyager probes do since radiation isn't an issue but that is definitely beyond my area of knowledge. 

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2 hours ago, UltraMega said:

Sure thing. It is kinda surprising to learn that any space probe would use lithium ion batteries. Seems like it would make a lot more sense to use a nuclear power source like the Voyager probes do since radiation isn't an issue but that is definitely beyond my area of knowledge. 

 

 

 

Googled a little and found this.

Quote

Since the launch of our first battery in 1966 on board the D1A “Diapason”, Saft has gained significant experience to become the top supplier worldwide of spacecraft batteries. We are a pioneer in lithium-ion batteries for space applications and offer advanced battery solutions with very long shelf-life (up to 20 years). As no two space missions are the same, so no two space-application batteries are. Saft knows this and always works with customers to design a solution for their specific space needs.

WWW.SAFTBATTERIES.COM

Procure space qualified lithium-ion batteries from Saft. Our spacecraft batteries will survive extreme vibration and shocks, vacuum and extreme temperatures.

 

 

Pretty strange to update the system when one of the battery manufacturer for space usage battery say they only have 20 years lifespan.

Wonder if it gonna die soon 😐

 

Elon musk satelitte will be fun when battery upgrade time come. 😆

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15 minutes ago, bonami2 said:

 

 

 

Googled a little and found this.

WWW.SAFTBATTERIES.COM

Procure space qualified lithium-ion batteries from Saft. Our spacecraft batteries will survive extreme vibration and shocks, vacuum and extreme temperatures.

 

 

Pretty strange to update the rover when one of the battery manufacturer for space us say they only have 20 years lifespan.

Wonder if it gonna die soon 😐

 

Elon musk satelitte will be fun when battery upgrade time come. 😆

I think you mean orbiter, not rover. 

 

If you consider how far past the planned mission timeframe the Voyager missions, or Huble, or almost any Mars rover have lasted, it's really not strange at all to expect these things to last well beyond their manufacturing goals. With that said, the Mars Express Orbiter is only 18.5 years old so still another 18 months before it even gets to that point assuming the batteries were designed to last 20 years. 

Edited by UltraMega

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1 hour ago, UltraMega said:

I think you mean orbiter, not rover. 

 

If you consider how far past the planned mission timeframe the Voyager missions, or Huble, or almost any Mars rover have lasted, it's really not strange at all to expect these things to last well beyond their manufacturing goals. With that said, the Mars Express Orbiter is only 18.5 years old so still another 18 months before it even gets to that point assuming the batteries were designed to last 20 years. 

Oh yea typed too fast sorry just edited it.

 

Probably can last more than 20 years will try to follow up on this 😀

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lol, ok, even windows central updated their story to reflect that it was a OS MADE using Win 98......

 

WWW.WINDOWSCENTRAL.COM

The Mars Express spacecraft has run on an OS built with development tools based on Windows 98 for 19 years.

 

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38 minutes ago, schuck6566 said:

lol, ok, even windows central updated their story to reflect that it was a OS MADE using Win 98......

 

WWW.WINDOWSCENTRAL.COM

The Mars Express spacecraft has run on an OS built with development tools based on Windows 98 for 19 years.

 

Yea, I noticed that when I looked it up and I also got a little chuckle. 

I knew the headline had to be wrong when I first saw it because there is no way a space probe would be running windows, but I didn't have a chance to look it up until today. 

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LOL, can't trust a thing you read nowadays. And people wonder why I don't watch the news, but I digress.

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CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 5900X
GPU: Nvidia RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition
RAM: G.Skill Trident Z Neo 32GB DDR4-3600 (@ 3733 CL14)
MOTHERBOARD: ASUS Crosshair VIII Dark Hero
SSD/NVME: x2 Samsung 970 Evo Plus 2TB
SSD/NVME 2: Crucial MX500 1TB
PSU: be Quiet! Straight Power 12 1500W
MONITOR: LG 42" C4 OLED
Full Rig Info

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CPU: E8400, i5-650, i7-870, i7-960, i5-2400, i7-4790k, i9-10900k, i3-13100, i9-13900ks
GPU: many
RAM: Corsair 32GB DDR3-2400 | Oloy Blade 16GB DDR4-3600 | Crucial 16GB DDR5-5600
MOTHERBOARD: ASUS P7P55 WS SC | ASUS Z97 Deluxe | EVGA Z490 Dark | EVGA Z790 Dark Kingpin
SSD/NVME: Samsung 870 Evo 1TB | Inland 1TB Gen 4
PSU: Seasonic Focus GX 1000W
CASE: Cooler Master MasterFrame 700 - bench mode
OPERATING SYSTEM: Windows 10 LTSC
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CPU: M1 Pro
RAM: 32GB
SSD/NVME: 1TB
OPERATING SYSTEM: MacOS Sonoma
CASE: Space Grey
Full Rig Info
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