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Space Flight Design Challenge ROCKSAT C-17 Update
In an effort to provide students with the stepping stones necessary to carry out the goals of the Space Flight Design Challenge, academic institutions have been provided with the opportunity to gain hands-on experience through RockSat-C. The NASA IV&V Space Flight Design Challenge is an initiative aimed towards engaging students of West Virginia in the STEM disciplines needed to successfully build and test critical systems. By enhancing the knowledge and capabilities of students through hands-on spacecraft development, they will be enabled to compete in the development of their own flight systems in space. Primarily, the overall goal of this initiative is to foster innovative advancements in both high school and college students across the nation. As a result, students will be equipped to compete in the fabrication & operation of flight systems in Low Earth Orbit via amateur radio operations.
In an effort to provide students with the stepping stones necessary to carry out the goals of the Space Flight Design Challenge, academic institutions have been provided with the opportunity to gain hands-on experience through RockSat-C. The NASA IV&V Space Flight Design Challenge is an initiative aimed towards engaging students of West Virginia in the STEM disciplines needed to successfully build and test critical systems. By enhancing the knowledge and capabilities of students through hands-on spacecraft development, they will be enabled to compete in the development of their own flight systems in space. Primarily, the overall goal of this initiative is to foster innovative advancements in both high school and college students across the nation. As a result, students will be equipped to compete in the fabrication & operation of flight systems in Low Earth Orbit via amateur radio operations.
Issue #5
There are two images in the original. Unfortunately, one of them is missing in the IV.
- Accepted by admin
- Source: http://telegra.ph/Reports-4-08-02
This issue was created as part of our final processing of appeals on our earlier decisions submitted by the contestants. Thank you very much for taking the time and effort to participate in our contest!
Please note that we no longer accept submissions of new issues in any form. As of this stage, we can only process appeals on our decisions about the issue for which the appeal was submitted.
- ☄️
- Yes, my mistake. I tried to be smart about <figure>s here. The fix is trivial, and I've applied it, though I obviously can't resubmit it.
However, this issue can only occur of two images are packed into single paragraph.
I checked several dozens of posts just now and couldn't locate a single other page with this issue.
Probably eligible for "one-off case" exception?
- Declined by admin
- We have studied the last five pages of posts on each of the NASA blogs supported by this template, going back several years:
https://blogs.nasa.gov/pluto/
https://blogs.nasa.gov/ISS_Science_Blog/
https://blogs.nasa.gov/orion/
https://blogs.nasa.gov/Rocketology/
https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacex/
https://blogs.nasa.gov/educationsciencewow/
https://blogs.nasa.gov/Watch_the_Skies/
https://blogs.nasa.gov/womenatnasa/
https://blogs.nasa.gov/educationexpress
Consecutive images were rendered well in all posts we've checked, e.g.:
http://bit.ly/2wbl4sE
http://bit.ly/2uo8ZOT
We could find exactly 4 exceptions on the Women at NASA blog, all posted in 2012:
http://bit.ly/2u8kv5D
http://bit.ly/2wb6TUx
http://bit.ly/2fbqkbE
http://bit.ly/2vtN1Ox
Pages from 2012 are out of the scope of this contest and we've routinely declined issues in the cases where the template supported content posted in more recent years (e.g. http://bit.ly/2uoue2L). Therefore, this issue does indeed happen only on one page in rather obscure section.
- Type of issue
- IV page is missing essential content
- Reported
- Aug 2, 2017