Comment by BurningFrog

Comment by BurningFrog 2 days ago

10 replies

Important naming rule: Never call your version 2 "New Foo"!

Because the name will remain long after it was new. The naming scheme also crashes at version 3.

The New Glenn name is from 2016.

Ajedi32 2 days ago

New Glenn isn't a "version 2". The name is a reference to John Glenn, the first American to orbit earth. Think "New York" not "New iPhone".

  • BurningFrog 2 days ago

    Thanks!

    Still a weird naming scheme though. A rocket is not a new astronaut. Am I missing something clever?

    • placardloop 2 days ago

      Rockets aren’t birds either, and yet: Falcon 9 (the Falcon 9 also is the second iteration of the Falcon rockets, not the ninth, so…)

      Rockets also aren’t planets, and yet: Saturn V

      Rockets also aren’t mythological horse/man creatures, and yet: Vulcan Centaur

      You’re overthinking it.

      • 0xffff2 2 days ago

        >(the Falcon 9 also is the second iteration of the Falcon rockets, not the ninth, so…)

        Falcon 9 has nine first stage engines, Falcon 1 had a single engine. It's not a version number.

        Edit: I had to look it up because Saturn 1 is not a single engine vehicle. It turns out that the Saturn V is design C-5 of the Saturn family of rockets, with A, B and C1-4 designs preceding it (not all designs where built), so the "V" in Saturn V is basically a version number, despite the Saturn V first stage having 5 engines

        • placardloop 2 days ago

          Yes, it not being a version number is the entire point of this thread.

      • BurningFrog 2 days ago

        Side note:

        "Falcon" was almost certainly chosen so the BFR could be pronounced "Big Fucking Rocket", perhaps also influenced by the BFG in Doom/Quake.

        Also note how "SpaceX" is pronounced.

        • jjk166 2 days ago

          The "Falcon" name dates back to many years before the BFR concept. Then the BFR started out as "Big Fucking Rocket" and the F was retroactively changed to Falcon as a tongue in cheek way of keeping the acronym in respectable conversation. That said, BFR was always just a descriptive placeholder.

    • ttepasse 2 days ago

      Back in the 2010s Blue Origin had a naming scheme after the pioneering flights of American astronauts:

      The suborbital rocket New Shepard is named after Alan Shepard who was the first American astronaut and whose flight was a suborbital arc.

      New Glenn is named after John Glenn whose first flight was the first orbital flight.

      There was also talk of a New Armstrong rocket, although Neil Armstrong wasn’t the first American to "reach" the Moon. But then together with Buzz he was the first to land and the first to walk. I don’t know if New Armstrong's still getting developed.

giva 2 days ago

New York is from 1624

  • ascorbic a day ago

    The best one I know is the New Forest in England, which is from 1079.