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Digital Apollo
- Human and Machine in Spaceflight
- Narrated by: Kyle Tait
- Length: 13 hrs and 36 mins
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Summary
As Apollo 11's lunar module descended toward the moon under automatic control, a program alarm in the guidance computer's software nearly caused a mission abort. Neil Armstrong responded by switching off the automatic mode and taking direct control. He stopped monitoring the computer and began flying the spacecraft, relying on skill to land it and earning praise for a triumph of human over machine. In Digital Apollo, engineer-historian David Mindell takes this famous moment as a starting point for an exploration of the relationship between humans and computers in the Apollo program.
Digital Apollo examines the design and execution of each of the six Apollo moon landings, drawing on transcripts and data telemetry from the flights, astronaut interviews, and NASA's extensive archives. Mindell's exploration of how human pilots and automated systems worked together to achieve the ultimate in flight - a lunar landing - traces and reframes the debate over the future of humans and automation in space. The results have implications for any venture in which human roles seem threatened by automated systems, whether it is the work at our desktops or the future of exploration.
What listeners say about Digital Apollo
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- Amazon Customer
- 10-09-22
Excellent, very interesting
a fascinating insite into the moon landing computer and the development of the control systems.
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- Michael Falk
- 06-10-23
A brilliant analysis of human-machine interaction
I love Apollo, and this book has all the vigour and romance of the Apollo story. But it is also fearsomely analytical, and ruthlessly unpicks all our usual assumptions about the heroism of spaceflight. The performance is excellent too. Nice pacing, clear diction, elegant intonation.
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- Spice
- 23-01-20
Fascinating insight- painful listening experience
Buy the paper version... Its a fascinating subject especially of you work with or are involved in IT. I admit I persevered with this audio book and generally I can deal with the quirks of a narrator but there's no chance of me listening to this again.
The narrator just grates on me and puts an odd emphasis on the end of every sentence ( I cant describe it )
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7 people found this helpful
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- P. James
- 22-01-22
Outstanding!
Simply outstanding. The technical obstacles are to eloquently explained. On a par to David Woods How Apollo flew to the moon.
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- Mr H.
- 10-03-22
Meandering but interesting; let down by narration
The story shifted between technical aspects concerning the early days of computerisation in space flight to philosophical discussion on human control vs automation throughout. I found the technical aspects quite interesting, but the philosophical bits got rather repetitive after a while. While it was an interesting enough listen, it did feel like the story meandered somewhat drifting off into another 5-10 minutes of "pilot vs machine" debate at regular intervals throughout the book. As has been commented on previously, unfortunately, the book is let down by the narration. The narrator puts a prolonged, "breathy" emphasis on the last word of every sentence. It can be quite distracting and does make this a hard listen. Overall, worth a listen - but once is definitely enough.
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