I ported the Fortran and assembly code to 'C' for computing stress on orbiter (aka the space shuttle) based on winds aloft data. We received the data from a weather balloon sent up on launch day.
We even rolled our own work balancing and coordination system based on NQS. The UNIX code was far faster due to hardware speedups and parallelizing the code but it was much more resilient as well due to our putting in checkpointing and restart and recovery logic into the work manager and code.
The project won a Silver Snoopy because we retired a Honeywell mainframe that was costing NASA $5 MM/yr in maintenance fees. I assume there was a guy or team of guys prepared to fabricate any component required at that price. :-)
Because I was a contractor working for a contractor I did not receive a Silver Snoopy. Trust me, I regularly look for those little guys on ebay because I'd love to have one. I'm still cheesed about it twenty years later.
Although it's a fun anecdote (and admittedly not nearly as cool as your example) I don't think it's garnered much more than a "that's cool" reaction from people. Probably too many other people running around Houston who've done similar things. If it would get me a job at Google I'd jump, but in a town full of ex-NASA employees it's nothing remarkable.
We even rolled our own work balancing and coordination system based on NQS. The UNIX code was far faster due to hardware speedups and parallelizing the code but it was much more resilient as well due to our putting in checkpointing and restart and recovery logic into the work manager and code.
The project won a Silver Snoopy because we retired a Honeywell mainframe that was costing NASA $5 MM/yr in maintenance fees. I assume there was a guy or team of guys prepared to fabricate any component required at that price. :-)
Because I was a contractor working for a contractor I did not receive a Silver Snoopy. Trust me, I regularly look for those little guys on ebay because I'd love to have one. I'm still cheesed about it twenty years later.
Although it's a fun anecdote (and admittedly not nearly as cool as your example) I don't think it's garnered much more than a "that's cool" reaction from people. Probably too many other people running around Houston who've done similar things. If it would get me a job at Google I'd jump, but in a town full of ex-NASA employees it's nothing remarkable.