simplicio 6 years ago

I've been reading "Rockets and People" by Boris Chertok from this collection, and would recommend it. Chertok was a high-level engineer in the Russian Space industry, and its a much different story than the American side of things, with engineers having to work through a constant churn in the leadership caused by the purges, and than having their factories literally packed up and moved to avoid the German invasion, and than the scarcity of the post-WWII years.

(on the downside, Chertok really likes pausing the narrative to map out the exact bureaucratic flow-chart of the different agencies and departments involved in rocket development, which is pretty tedious, but I've found I can just skim those sections without losing the ability to understand the rest of the story.)

  • pvg 6 years ago

    It's not on the NASA site but the book is also readily available online in the original Russian, for those who are into that sort of thing.

  • DylanSp 6 years ago

    This sounds like interesting reading; I've read Challenges to Apollo, which mostly covers post-WW2 Russian/Soviet history; I'm not as familiar with the earlier events.

  • jweather 6 years ago

    Same here -- it's absolutely fascinating to see the space race from the other side, as well as seeing Soviet impressions of the Apollo program and the Cold War. Highly recommended.

ByThyGrace 6 years ago

Why is pdf the default/de facto single-file publication format, even in public domain or copyleft works?

It has so many drawbacks: it's usually unparseable; it's usually unsearchable; incompatible with all sorts of format conversions; its rigid pagination makes it cumbersome to read when not in zoomed-in, especially on mobile; its best features require proprietary software when authoring them, yet most people seem to use generic pdf file export; it's been subject to exploits... and the list goes on.

  • _Microft 6 years ago

    My guess is that opening particular file formats is a much more common problem and PDFs just shine there.

  • Ididntdothis 6 years ago

    Totally agree. Mobi or ePub would be much better for most purposes.

  • WalterBright 6 years ago

    Some of them, like "Flights of Discovery", are clearly scanned book copies. It takes a lot of manual work to convert a scanned book into an ebook format.

  • daveoc64 6 years ago

    I clicked on a book at random, and it had ePub and Mobi formats available for download.

    I guess it's just down to whatever format the book is in within their archives.

filereaper 6 years ago

Highly recommend "Computers in Spaceflight: The NASA Experience" by James E. Tomayko

Had a newer version at my local library and got me interested in computer hardware in Middle School years.

xtiansimon 6 years ago

Oh Lordy! So many books, so little time.

For those who enjoy any one of these title, please post your thoughts and experience.

I just commented on another HN post, "Ask HN: Great fiction books that have had a positive impact on your life?" [1], with a recommended fiction book (series) that was even more enjoyable because of the three non-fiction books I was reading at the same time [2].

Right now I'm reading The Expanse series by (pen name) James S. A. Corey and watching the Picard series (streaming free on CBS right now). Any books from the NASA collection which crossed over themes from this fiction series would be AMAZING!

[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22718592

[2]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22719983

  • thaumasiotes 6 years ago

    > the Picard series (streaming free on CBS right now)

    I went to look at this, and it appears to be part of a $10 / month subscription, not free. Is there a giveaway somewhere?

    • Mountain_Skies 6 years ago

      The ad I saw was for a one month free trial. Maybe that's the source of confusion.

    • sixdimensional 6 years ago

      Using promo code GIFT gets you 1 month free but you have to sign up for CBS all access to get it. Best before 4/23 is what I think the ad said.

      • xtiansimon 6 years ago

        This is what I did (though I haven't checked my CC history yet :P)

  • WalterBright 6 years ago

    I like "Stages to Saturn" (which I already owned). It has good information on the engineering details which I like (cuz I'm an engineer), but has too much on organization and administration which doesn't interest me.

cptaj 6 years ago

I seriously recommend A Challenge to Apollo.

An in-depth look at the soviet space program. Its very gritty stuff and a story rarely told.