15 thoughts on “Neil Armstrong”

  1. Armstrong was one of America’s greatest heroes ever, and was a hero for the rest of humanity, as well. We will all miss him very much.

  2. A man who used his skill, knowledge and experience to help make a success of a mission that also depended on the skill, knowledge and experience of thousands of others – and then, instead of basking in the glory, he quietly went back to work. In the celebrity-obsessed 21st century, almost unbelievable.

    Goodbye, Neil, and thank you.

  3. One of the rarest of earthlings, of Americans, is gone. Godspeed. You have slipped the surly bonds of earth forevermore.

  4. Pingback: Neil Armstrong, 1930 – 2012 « Series divergentes

  5. When you really think about it; he’s seen and experienced things that generation after generation will never get a chance to see or experience. Myself, my kids, my grand kids, and their kids; will probably never get the chance to see and feel what he felt. Maybe one day they’ll have regular trips to the moon, but it won’t be for a very long time. And when they finally do, it won’t be as ballsy as flying up there in the tupperware containers they did it in. It used to be that you could compare the computational power of the Apollo spacecraft to a digital watch, but even modern digital watches are more powerful.

    An impressive man achieving impressive goals.

  6. Perhaps it should be added that the inspiring things that need doing now include real science – unmanned missions such as the Mars mission Curiosity – but not manned missions.

  7. Rohan,

    Would you like to pay for that? Besides, he was a man who, perhaps, made his greatest contributions back here on Earth. And let’s not forget he has left behind many family members…back here on Earth.

  8. 43 years ago he had 50% chance of surviving, yesterday he died.

    Actually, Armstrong said he had a 50% chance of successfully completing the mission. The chance of dying, he estimated at 10%. The other 40% chance of failure would involve problems where they would not have been able to land on the moon, but would have been able to survive (as happened to Apollo 13).

  9. I never Neil Armstrong. I deeply respect his inclination to privacy as much as his lunar accomplishment.

    I’ve twice met “Buzz” Aldrin. On one occasion, we shared local radio air time.

    I’ve unbounded respect for his ’69 innate computational superiority over the navigational computers on ’11.

    Frankly, Aldrin’s ever since been just an attention whore.

    Never in the same class as Mr. Armstrong.

    Been up close, and seen it. Don’t bother telling me otherwise. You weren’t there.

Comments are closed.

Scroll to Top