Contact Victor Williamson with your questions about simulator based experiential education programs for your school.
SpaceCampUtah@gmail.com

Thursday, September 26, 2013

New Pictures of the USS Leo, The Bridge Furniture is In. The Future of Film. Space and Science News. The Imaginarium

Hello Troops,
I've just received more photographs of the USS Leo, currently under construction at Lakeview Academy in Saratoga Springs, courtesy of Casey Voeks.

The bridge furniture is in, minus the black plastic covers

Another angle of the Leo's Bridge

Add caption

The front of the Leo with stations and the main viewer.
The USS Leo will be Utah Valley's 9th starship simulator patterned after the ones we created at the Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center over the last 24 years.  

Mr. Williamson

Space and Science News  


Wow, This is Amazing!  The Future of Film Making

This is a screen shot.  Click on the link below
Shared by Dave Daymont:
Lucasfilm shows off the future of filmmaking? Scenes get rendered out in real time, removing the need for post-production.  Watch this amazing short video





From Phys.org

The first scoop of soil analyzed by the analytical suite in the belly of NASA's Curiosity rover reveals that fine materials on the surface of the planet contain several percent water by weight. The results were published today in Science as one article in a five-paper special section on the Curiosity mission. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Dean of Science Laurie Leshin is the study's lead author.  Read More

The United States, the Last Hold Out



I hear a rumor that Burma and Liberia have switched to metric, which would make the United States the only country in the world that still sticks to imperial units.

Read more about this costly NASA blunder.


Phonebloks.  The Phone Worth Keeping.  A Revolutionary Idea





The Imaginarium
Ordinary to Extraordinary









The moon in 2215




Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Pictures from the USS Leo, Utah Valley's 9th Simulator. Warp Speed is Possible. The Imaginarium

Hello Troops,
     And a happy Tuesday to all you Troubadours, where ever you may be.
     I battled a fierce headwind on my cycling trek home from Renaissance this evening.  My legs pushed me forward three lengths and the wind pushed me back two.  I can't complain; I'm told the exercise will help make me less of a pudgy wind catching sail and more of a streamlined work of human art, aeronautically sculpted to slice through headwinds like a hot knife through butter.
     I'm sure I make an interesting sight on the road with my bike, helmet and BYU backpack.  I'll confess and tell you that riding roadside makes me nervous.  I imagine the day will come when one of my 6th grade students will see me, reach over, grab the steering wheel away from his parent and set a collision course with me, my bike and destiny.

Mr. W.
   
The USS Leo.  A Picture Update.      

     Casey Voeks, CEO of DSim, sent me a few new pictures of the USS Leo currently under construction at Lakeview Academy in Saratoga Shores.  The Leo is scheduled to open next week.  That will make it Utah Valley's 9th simulator.

I believe this is the entry into the Leo.  Notice the cool blue ceiling lights

The Bridge of the USS Leo.  The desks are patterned after the CMSEC's Magellan.
I like the lighting inset into the ceiling border

At work on the Leo Bridge installing the computer stations.

The Leo's main viewer waiting to be installed.
An update on the USS Leo by BJ Warner, Director of the Lakeview Academy Center.
     Well, my precious friends. It's time for me to poke my face out once again and say hello to you all! An update on our newest member of the fleet, the UCS Leo. The ship is white. Very white, and it looks good. I'll try to post some pictures soon as we install the black plastic, which should be happening sometime today. The lighting channels are a bit of a mess.. someone from the HVAC company installed the air conditioning unit in the middle of the room.. off center.. if our current idea of framing and boxing the unit into the center doesn't work we're going to have to get creative. Don't be surprised if you come one day and there are lights running down the walls.  The desk designs are pretty amazing, I must say. Cudos to Brandon Wright for his amazing attention to detail and his ability to take a great idea and bring it to life. Not all, but a majority of the work in the ship was, if not constructed, designed by Brandon. 
     Missions are being written, tacticals are being made, symbols and school calendars are being fabricated. It's coming along.
     We hope to be done with construction by Wednesday (cross your fingers). Friday at the LATEST. New controls are scheduled to be dropped in on the 7th and our first field test of the new set will be next Monday. Our very own Casey Voeks will be the honored first flight director of the Leo. Appropriate I must say. After that, the reigns will be handed to me during the day and back to him and a few others to run our after school program. We've got high expectations for these folks and I have no doubt they will exceed every one of them.
     You all are amazing. Don't loose sight of why we are here doing what we do. It's for the children. To expand their minds and re-write their definition of the word 'impossible'. When things get rough, think of them. Think of who you were before the center and work to make the change in our campers
                   The universe awaits!
BJ


Space and Science News



From Quarks to Quasars
In 1994, physicist Miguel Alcubierre proposed a new kind of technology that would allow us to travel 10 times faster than the speed of light, without actually breaking the speed of light. Sound confusing? Well, the Alcubierre drive does not actually propel the ship to speeds exceeding light; instead, it uses the deformation of spacetime permitted by General Relativity to warp the universe around the vessel. Essentially, when the drive is activated the spacetime behind expands, while in the front it contracts. In this respect, the path taken becomes a time-like free-fall. The ship hums along in a little bubble of space, and neither the passengers nor the vessel encounter inertial effects.  Read More

The Imaginarium
Taking the ordinary and making it extraordinary - kind of like what I do for bicycling!