Voyager's 15 Billion Mile Software Update

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  • Опубліковано 9 тра 2024
  • Get NordVPN 2Y plan + 4 months free here: nordvpn.com/primalspace
    Have you ever wondered how NASA updates Voyager's software from 15 billion miles away? Or how Voyager's memories are stored? In this video, we dive deeper into the incredible story of how a small team of engineers managed to keep Voyager alive, as well as how NASA could perform a software update on a computer that's been cruising through space for almost half a century.
    So tune in to learn more about Voyager’s 15 billion mile software update, and stick around until the end for your chance to win in the next exciting giveaway!
    Enter to win at the link below.
    primalnebula.com/giveaway/
    Short on time? Feel free to skip ahead in this video using the chapter links below.
    00:00 Voyager's 15 Billion Mile Software Update
    01:27 Voyager's Computer System
    04:00 How Voyager's Software Works
    05:51 Voyager Programming Languages
    07:00 Voyager Updates and Patches
    Thanks for watching this Primal Space video. If you enjoyed it, let me know in the comments below, and don't forget to subscribe so you can see more videos like this!
    Support Primal Space by becoming a Patron!
    / primalspace
    Twitter:
    / theprimalspace
    References:
    primalnebula.com/updating-voy...
    Written and edited by Ewan Cunningham ( / ewan_cee )
    Narrated by: Beau Stucki (www.beaustucki.com/)
    3D Modeler: Orkun Zengin
    Music used in this video:
    To Loom Is To Love - The Mini Vandals
    Inspiring Cinematic Asia - Lexin Music
    Lemon Drops ft. Jacquire King - Stephan Sharp
    Amalthea - Van Sandano
    Go Down Swinging - NEFFEX
    Stratosphere Voyage - Spirits Of Our Dreams
    #NASA #NasaUpdates #Voyager
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,6 тис.

  • @primalspace
    @primalspace  5 місяців тому +324

    Where would you send Voyager today? - Shoutout to NordVPN for supporting this vid, check them out here: nordvpn.com/primalspace

    • @KadenPlaysRBLX
      @KadenPlaysRBLX 5 місяців тому +2

      I use nordvpn it’s so good

    • @nerdest
      @nerdest 5 місяців тому +5

      me personally, i would send the voyager 3 towards venus. let it crash. and while it is still in the atmosphere free falling. take some great photos and scientific data. probably 'cause we haven't seen venus' surface yet because of its clouds.

    • @vighneshpokale5287
      @vighneshpokale5287 5 місяців тому +2

      I would just send it into a black hole just to see how everything looks and how massive it is mainly because I have never been able to fully grasp the size of a black hole

    • @NanoCubeOG
      @NanoCubeOG 5 місяців тому +7

      @@nerdestbut we... have??

    • @ymodnar
      @ymodnar 5 місяців тому +1

      @@nerdest venera

  • @JimmyZNJ
    @JimmyZNJ 5 місяців тому +3577

    As a software engineer for several decades, I have great respect for the technical complexity the Voyager team has dealt with over the many years. Voyager never ceases to impress and inspire me as to what is possible!

    • @scottharvey-davies1607
      @scottharvey-davies1607 5 місяців тому +35

      I'm an old comms guy from the 90's (modem era) and I agree. We don't make 'em like we use to bud !!

    • @ryelor123
      @ryelor123 5 місяців тому +26

      I was worried he'd have said COBOL but then I remembered that Voyagers 1 and 2 aren't ancient banks.

    • @zlackbiro
      @zlackbiro 5 місяців тому +7

      You sould be more smarter than that, believing in NASA craps!

    • @tompsheridantsheridant7354
      @tompsheridantsheridant7354 5 місяців тому +4

      Replying to @JimmyZNJ:
      You have been software engineer for 7 decades.

    • @libertymouth6826
      @libertymouth6826 5 місяців тому

      Are you taking some mind bending substances or are you naturally unintelligent?

  • @varmaranjeet168
    @varmaranjeet168 4 місяці тому +899

    50 years ago 70 KB of memory took voyager across the solar system.
    Today - my HP laptop with 16 GB RAM cannot run Chrome without getting stuck at least once.
    Much respect to the engineers of that age and to the team that built this incredible masterpiece ❤

    • @strategistaow3520
      @strategistaow3520 4 місяці тому +29

      Its because Hewlett Packard

    • @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv
      @TessaractAlemania-hd7tv 4 місяці тому +20

      hahaha it's so true ^^ What for a bad OS (Microsoft)...

    • @bradsmith1314
      @bradsmith1314 4 місяці тому +4

      software -_-

    • @BubbyLive
      @BubbyLive 3 місяці тому +1

      My PC with 32GBs of memory

    • @I_killed_that_beard_guy
      @I_killed_that_beard_guy 3 місяці тому

      ​​@@unops1archiveTo be honest, I find Chrome more fast and lightweight (it feels light and clean) although for the majority of the time I use Edge because of MS Rewards and it syncs everything across my computers.

  • @OlNoName
    @OlNoName 5 місяців тому +578

    Old computers always impress me more than modern ones because it felt like they were pushing waaay beyond their limit, one super basic computer doing so much. And to see it still running is incredible

    • @ClassyJohn
      @ClassyJohn 5 місяців тому +15

      yep, thats why assembly programmers were more common back then than today.

    • @NikPower-gs6hs
      @NikPower-gs6hs 5 місяців тому +16

      ⁠@@ClassyJohneven if you write assembly language today it would be useless on something like Windows or any operating system really. You can write a micro-kernel or just bare-bones and implement only a few important things but then you would still need to learn thousands of assembly instructions for x86 in particular (SSE-AVX and more) and learn to use them all in an optimized way, which would take 5-10 years. By then who knows if x86 will be still around

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 4 місяці тому +1

      The joy I felt when I managed to get 624k base memory free on my DOS machine while maintaining mouse, CD and audio functionality while also allowing boot into Windows without any changes of the configuration.
      The fact that the keyboard driver takes only 880 byte and the mouse driver only 3328 byte is just amazing. In fact, the total memory usage (in base and upper memory is only about 55.3 kb)

    • @NikPower-gs6hs
      @NikPower-gs6hs 4 місяці тому

      @@HappyBeezerStudios a mouse driver from the era should not be that much

    • @1marcelfilms
      @1marcelfilms 3 місяці тому +7

      Its still impressive how super inefficient and crap modern software is.

  • @joeyager8479
    @joeyager8479 5 місяців тому +192

    I'm a retired machine designer and it's incredible that the Voyagers are still operating today and that IT engineers can keep these spacecraft updated to continue to perform at a high level for almost 50 years. Also, not too often mentioned, much credit should go to the craftsmen, machinists and assemblers that put these together. Excellent work!

    • @ncard00
      @ncard00 4 місяці тому +2

      Heard that Voyager 1 travels at 17km/s. It we sent out a cutting edge space probe tomorrow, how much faster would it travel, and how long would it take, before it caught up to Voyager 1?

    • @witchcraftanditsconsequenc4280
      @witchcraftanditsconsequenc4280 4 місяці тому +1

      ​@@ncard00I have a feeling that you'll need to ask an engineer about that instead... One that isn't retired. Not to spread hate or anything of course, I might be wrong.

    • @user-cj9cl9fg1y
      @user-cj9cl9fg1y 3 місяці тому

      @@ncard00 Современные аппараты быстрее не полетят. Но зато они могут быть мощнее и у них будет больше памяти.

  • @pjimmbojimmbo1990
    @pjimmbojimmbo1990 5 місяців тому +4151

    Launched over 45 yrs ago and still ticking. The Engineers that designed it, and those that keep it running, certainly deserve a Round of Applause.
    Edit/addon
    The Voyagers, and the Pioneers, will likely be the Only Things created on Earth that will still Exist, long after the Earth is gone

    • @RamiKattan
      @RamiKattan 5 місяців тому +193

      While all earth operating systems and apps fail continuously with 100s of engineers and quick update 😅

    • @tihomirrasperic
      @tihomirrasperic 5 місяців тому +143

      voyager is like the pyramids
      just like we don't know how they built the pyramids
      new generations will not understand how Voyager works and how with those computers we got to the moon in the first place

    • @eldergeektromeo9868
      @eldergeektromeo9868 5 місяців тому +21

      or at least a drink!

    • @mikeoxmall69420
      @mikeoxmall69420 5 місяців тому +69

      ​@@RamiKattanmore parts, more points of faliure

    • @orangejjay
      @orangejjay 5 місяців тому +67

      ​@@tihomirraspericNot necessarily. It's not like Voyager doesn't have documentation on it. Pretty much anything coded back then came with a hefty manual and those were designed to help people then and in the foreseeable future to be able to keep things going.

  • @alanlowe9716
    @alanlowe9716 5 місяців тому +1185

    50 years ago I was writing perfectly functional control programs in assembly language where I only had 1kb of memory. When they upgraded to a 2kb memory, I thought it was amazing and allowed me to put so much more functionality into the program. If I had the 70kb of Voyager's memory to play with, that would have felt like an infinite amount of space at the time.

    • @MarisZadinans
      @MarisZadinans 5 місяців тому +32

      Nice! How old are you man?

    • @Pyranders
      @Pyranders 5 місяців тому +137

      @@MarisZadinans At least 50, I'm guessing.

    • @alanlowe9716
      @alanlowe9716 5 місяців тому +86

      @@Pyranders At least... 😁

    • @alanlowe9716
      @alanlowe9716 5 місяців тому +194

      @@MarisZadinans Old enough to remember when 2kb was a lot 😃

    • @TheRailroad99
      @TheRailroad99 5 місяців тому +32

      I'm rather young, but used to embedded development and also thought 70kB - thats not too bad. About the same a modern MCU has.
      If you had to deal with MCUs a lot you start to optimize your code. Even my rather complex automation/industrial software for Win32/Unix uses just a few megabytes, never more than 40-50MB for the really large programs.
      All while the browser I use in parallel to develop the thing easily pulls 2GB, sometimes even up to 8GB.

  • @matthewgumabon7498
    @matthewgumabon7498 5 місяців тому +373

    I image the people recruited by NASA to do this update as actual wizards.
    Masters of forgotten (programming) languages tasked with bringing an ancient machine adrift in the void realm back to life…
    Absolutely epic

    • @Hit_by_a_Parked_Car
      @Hit_by_a_Parked_Car 5 місяців тому +49

      Techpriests

    • @NikPower-gs6hs
      @NikPower-gs6hs 5 місяців тому

      @@alaamrouenever mind I read the comment wrong but still it is written as Fortran

    • @alecepting1371
      @alecepting1371 5 місяців тому +14

      I interviewed and was offered a job at JPL. Turned them down because I didn't have a PhD (just an MSEE) and they wanted me to manage the subcontractors (for Galileo). But what was cool as I arrived for the interview right after the active volcano was observed on one of the moons of Jupiter, I could see the flyby video on the monitors at their facility.

    • @HunterKiotori
      @HunterKiotori 4 місяці тому

      ​@@alecepting1371if they offered you the job already you should have taken it

    • @alecepting1371
      @alecepting1371 4 місяці тому +8

      @@HunterKiotori That was 1980. I took a job with IBM working on artificial neural networks, so I'm not complaining.

  • @ASMM1981EGY
    @ASMM1981EGY 5 місяців тому +83

    As an Egyptian Astronomer who is interested in the twin Voyagers since decades, this is one of the best videos on the internet EVER about the twin probes. Great respects to the channel.

    • @BestFilmproducer
      @BestFilmproducer 5 місяців тому +4

      Except for the NordVPN ad inside it, of course. That is the only thing wrong with the video, though.

    • @krolmuch
      @krolmuch 4 місяці тому +1

      it sounds like one of these random scenarios to follow up a chain of comment

  • @karlnielsen5759
    @karlnielsen5759 5 місяців тому +2260

    I'll be honest, I normally can't stand sponsorship plugs. However, the sponsorship transition in this video: "Voyager runs the latest version of NordVPN...not really", this genuinely made me smile and chuckle. Well done.

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +177

      Haha thanks so much. I really appreciate that, and your support for the channel as well. It means a lot 🙏

    • @daveys
      @daveys 5 місяців тому +30

      Agreed. Still fwd’ the NordVPN advert though.

    • @Coolguy_2491
      @Coolguy_2491 5 місяців тому +3

      lol made the like count to 124 instead of 123

    • @Adrian-vd6ji
      @Adrian-vd6ji 5 місяців тому +6

      all u have to do is tap the screen 3 times on its right side to fastforward the commercial. not the end of the world

    • @FriedMonkey362
      @FriedMonkey362 5 місяців тому +23

      I hated it and it made me consider takng my own life

  • @Mesazane
    @Mesazane 5 місяців тому +1060

    It's insane how things from 50 years ago still work like this. Applause to the engineers and programmers who made and maintained the voyager until now.

    • @SiriProject
      @SiriProject 5 місяців тому +22

      Lightbulbs and frying pans made in that period also work perfectly fine today, but newer ones get destroyed in a couple uses. Don't know if that also applies to spacecraft, but damn those were good.

    • @theepicbruhman2254
      @theepicbruhman2254 5 місяців тому +9

      @@SiriProject new ones dont break that fast

    • @capriumnoir6426
      @capriumnoir6426 5 місяців тому +42

      @@SiriProject Its a marketing tactic, make appliances that purposely fail at a certain date so that consumers will buy another. I don't think engineers making a spacecraft would wanna apply this same tactic tho

    • @adnanmahmudshohan4951
      @adnanmahmudshohan4951 5 місяців тому

      ​@@capriumnoir6426Im not a conspiracy theorist but this is 100 percent true.

    • @asterixdx
      @asterixdx 5 місяців тому +14

      because planned obsolescence wasn’t a design philosophy at nasa.

  • @stevencooper2464
    @stevencooper2464 5 місяців тому +124

    The very first programming language I learned, almost 50 years ago, was Fortran, followed later by CDC Cyber 6000 assembly, and, much later, 6502 and 8086 assembly. There's no way I would be qualified to write programs for the Voyagers, but it's nice to dream...even at my age.

    • @Proxz
      @Proxz 5 місяців тому +1

      Is there any way to learn fortran now?

    • @stevencooper2464
      @stevencooper2464 5 місяців тому +4

      @@ProxzI'm sure there is. Fortran's not a dead language. I may still have the textbook I had for class.

    • @sarcasticguy4311
      @sarcasticguy4311 5 місяців тому +6

      @@Proxz They were still teaching basic instruction in Fortran, Unix, Assembly and Cobol when I was in computer classes in the early 90s. Why? Because all that old equipment still ran on it. Most of it is gone now and those languages are considered relics by today's standards.

    • @Proxz
      @Proxz 5 місяців тому

      @@sarcasticguy4311 its a cool idea to learn these "old" languages, maybe i could widen my coding vocabulary, and a fortran/cobol coder isnt really common, im not sure about its uses today though

    • @alecepting1371
      @alecepting1371 5 місяців тому

      That's exactly the path I took. Were you at Georgia Tech in the late 1970's? They had a Cyber mainframe back then.

  • @freeman10000
    @freeman10000 5 місяців тому +30

    It just blows my mind that both Voyagers are still operational.
    Superb engineering 👏

    • @travelsouthafrica5048
      @travelsouthafrica5048 2 місяці тому

      what blows my mind is that some hacker hasn't tried hijacking the probe by now

  • @utkarsharora5329
    @utkarsharora5329 5 місяців тому +526

    I am totally amazed how the transistors made 50 years ago still function as intended. It would be nice if a voyager 3 could observe the Oort Cloud and be capable enough to send some photos back to Earth.

    • @francescozani9488
      @francescozani9488 5 місяців тому +72

      It's not possible, unfortunately.
      Optical devices has been de-activatex long ago.
      And in the deep abyss travelling now, only far stars could be seen.

    • @jbruck6874
      @jbruck6874 5 місяців тому +48

      Unfirtunately, its not that fast. Voyager is still close to 100ish AU, while the Oort cloud starts at 2000. Acc. to Wikipedia it will take another 300 years - at least we may be retired by then and watch the amazing pictures it sends back ;-)
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oort_cloud

    • @CalebRoenigk
      @CalebRoenigk 5 місяців тому +43

      As others have mentioned the power source on board has required NASA to permanently deactivate unused equipment to keep the main machine running. The cameras have long been off as space at that distance is much too dark to see anything.
      Edit: I realized I didn't explain why the power source requires this. The power source for those that don't know is nuclear and of course decays over time. As decay happens, the power output is less and certain gadgets that require a constant power flow need to be turned off in order to still provide enough power to run the main computer.

    • @marcse7en
      @marcse7en 5 місяців тому +25

      I have a Commodore LED Calculator, with 47 year old integrated circuit which still works. Mind you, it's NOT been exposed to the cold vacuum of space!

    • @nickolaswilcox425
      @nickolaswilcox425 5 місяців тому +13

      @@CalebRoenigk arent certain sensors no longer possible to turn on even if the code and power were restored? something about certain parts requiring heaters and those were turned off when the component was, presumably resulting in unrecoverable damage

  • @hawkeyegaming3340
    @hawkeyegaming3340 5 місяців тому +283

    Hats off to all the engineers and scientists who worked on voyager mission. I'm sure there will be many more incredible missions in space exploration but Voyager is the best thing done by mankind for space exploration

  • @jean-emmanuelrotzetter6030
    @jean-emmanuelrotzetter6030 5 місяців тому +77

    Fortran has been released only in the late fifties, Assembler is kind of "machine language", can be called a "human readable form of the machine language" of a specific computer type with first systems in the very late forties.
    Voyager simply is incredible - a system that works for so long, and that still can undergo software updates despite almost impossible data communication by the distance and available power.

    • @alecepting1371
      @alecepting1371 5 місяців тому +1

      They use Reed-Solomon error-correcting code. Without that the signal would be way too noisy to get legitimate data.

    • @bachi2784
      @bachi2784 4 місяці тому

      @@alecepting1371 it would be interesting to know how that error-correction works since there's so much unpredictable interference at this great distance.

    • @alecepting1371
      @alecepting1371 4 місяці тому

      @@bachi2784 Error correcting codes can be designed to correct any number of errors. The codes just become longer. I'm sure they keep uploading new firmware with greater error correction as the spacecraft gets further and further away and the signal-to-noise ratios drop off.

    • @kales901
      @kales901 3 місяці тому

      is assembler like assembly?

    • @alecepting1371
      @alecepting1371 3 місяці тому

      @@kales901 Technically, the assembler is what creates assembly code from the machine code which is just a sequence of binary numbers which fills the program memory. The assembly code is more readable than machine code but there is a one-to-one correspondence between it and the actual machine code. It is very low level, like loading a register with a number, decrementing the register by 1, branch on zero to a specific address, etc

  • @astro2k19
    @astro2k19 5 місяців тому +18

    That NordVPN segue got me rolling 😂

  • @superamario6464
    @superamario6464 5 місяців тому +128

    Voyager 1 and 2 have this aura about them for me. Its like a reverence with absolute wonder over the era in which they were built, deployed and still out there today. I do get misty eyed, especially around August 20th and always wish Voyager 2 a happy birthday

    • @ivan_d_feets4495
      @ivan_d_feets4495 5 місяців тому +3

      Nah I totally feel the same way. The fact it was made with such old but innovative tech just boggles my mind. Old but reliable as they say

  • @Bax365
    @Bax365 5 місяців тому +408

    Incredible how we have managed to extend the life of the voyager missions decades beyond their planned lifespans. Thanks for the incredibly insightful video. 👍

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +31

      Incredible indeed! Thank you for watching and so glad you enjoyed the video.

    • @Just_a_Piano_
      @Just_a_Piano_ 5 місяців тому +3

      I honestly think they should try to create a new one with modern technolagy which could last a LOT longer and still have the ability to take pictures from so far away, it'd obviously take a REALLY long time for it to get anywhere worth taking a picture of but I'd imagine a voyager with modern tech would last a lot longer than with the stuff we made back in the 40s, it's still insanely impressive stuff made all the way back 80 or so years ago still works all the way out there

    • @tomikun8057
      @tomikun8057 5 місяців тому +8

      ​@@Just_a_Piano_They'll probably do that when the planets align again. Apparently it'll be in 2151-2154.
      It's required to wait cause there's not enough fuel to brute force an escape so gravity assists are needed

    • @hueanao
      @hueanao 5 місяців тому

      ​@@tomikun8057it is possible to brute force, but that would be financial insanity.

    • @tomikun8057
      @tomikun8057 5 місяців тому

      @@hueanao Am pretty sure it is literally impossible for a rocket with current tech to get enough velocity out of the solar system by brute force

  • @rolandschweiger8678
    @rolandschweiger8678 5 місяців тому +6

    born 1970 i grew up with Commodore64 and as a youth did lots of programming in Assembly on the 6510 processor and i learnt the most profound things about computer architecture at that time. No direct connection to Voyager but i do still today have the look and feel of how detailled you have to work when writing assembly language programs, carefully using the interrupts with polling, making no mistakes with jump and compare instructions etc. my deepest respect for the engineers of Voyager!

  • @tahititoutou3802
    @tahititoutou3802 5 місяців тому +6

    I really do admire the team who designed Voyager 1 and 2. With the hardware and software resources they had in the 70, it is a genuine tour de force. Hats off! Kudos!

  • @williambrasky3891
    @williambrasky3891 5 місяців тому +275

    Fortran and assembly aren’t “from the 40s and 50s.” Fortran was developed at IBM in the 50s, yes, but assembly is still used in every computer even today. Computers in the 40s used punch cards and some were even physically rewired for “programming.”
    Also what you described later in the video as “pseudocode” isn’t. It’s called a function or a subroutine. Pseudocode describes shorthand to outline the flow of a program before it is written in actual code.

    • @jrkorman
      @jrkorman 5 місяців тому +33

      Epic fail in my opinion - a quick check with Wiki would've "fixed" that. I was writing new FORTRAN code in the late 1990s.

    • @einsteinx2
      @einsteinx2 5 місяців тому +43

      Yeah after hearing so many obvious errors in information that I have experience with it makes me question how many other obvious errors are in this video about the stuff I don’t have the experience with…

    • @qaziquza
      @qaziquza 5 місяців тому +7

      On top of that, the displayed assembly is *clearly* written for a hosted environment (an 8080-based DOS variant, if I'm reading things right).

    • @niallrussell7184
      @niallrussell7184 5 місяців тому +9

      makes me wonder what else is incorrect in this video, when they fumble something so easy.

    • @p.asenov8117
      @p.asenov8117 5 місяців тому +8

      I just stopped the video after hearing this.

  • @jayski9410
    @jayski9410 5 місяців тому +73

    I'm 70 years old and although I never worked as a programmer, but I remember learning Assembler for the early Intel processors. And as some have mentioned below, I can remember working on key punch machines that created stacks of "IBM" cards. Each card held one line of code. You submitted the whole stack to a computer center and came back the next day to see if your program ran. One tiny little syntax error, on one card, and that's where the whole thing would stop. Needless to say we've come a long way. But on the bright side, there was no such thing as malware or viruses in those days.

    • @waltertanner7982
      @waltertanner7982 5 місяців тому +7

      Greetings from Germany! I am a few years older, and my first programs in 1970 on a CD3300 were written on a teletype and punched on a roll of paper tape, using a 5Bit-ASCII code.

    • @joshnoshhosh
      @joshnoshhosh 5 місяців тому +9

      Greetings from Finland, I'm just hitting 83 this year. My first program was a lo-li hentai in the late 90s

    • @xxriellixx978yt3
      @xxriellixx978yt3 5 місяців тому +6

      @@joshnoshhoshI hope you feel accomplished

    • @josepherhardt164
      @josepherhardt164 5 місяців тому +2

      Yeah, back in those days, the wildest thing to do was to get the chain printer to sing "Dixie," or maybe the "Colonel Bogey March." I'm sure someone collected a whole album of such songs. Of course, this meant allocating the printer directly to the program (a "dedicated" printer); you couldn't do this well by sending the print output through the printing queue.

    • @josephkanowitz6875
      @josephkanowitz6875 5 місяців тому

      ב''ה, except the actual breathing on each other. Can anyone explain why the brightest minds at UA-cam are now really into that?

  • @maxrabiega592
    @maxrabiega592 5 місяців тому +7

    i cannot comprehend the pure scale, distance and technical ability in this video. this is so insanely impressive.

  • @sulaimankhan2839
    @sulaimankhan2839 5 місяців тому +5

    Just love how we’re living this era of human exploration at its peak!
    And how amazing it is to see such smart and intelligent individuals who not only helped voyager steer back and face earth when it went out of angle but to continually work with something so old. Love it!!

  • @stefanbuscaylet
    @stefanbuscaylet 5 місяців тому +93

    I’ve been involved in design of flash memory and associated SSDs and its pretty much the same basic concept as in voyager just our industry today makes a single flash die with a terabit of memory cells vs 17Kb. I’m super impressed they seemed to have gone away without any error detection/correction on their non-volatile memory and they certainly got lucky when they did have a bit flip that they found a way to recover it. I’d love for NASA to open source their software for Voyager if only to just let the world these old machines were made so reliable. Some either long retired and/or passed along engineers that built this non-volatile memory really need to receive the recognition for a job well done!

    • @TheBcoolGuy
      @TheBcoolGuy 5 місяців тому +17

      There is a real decline in competence and high-level skill in the western world in the modern day. People have gotten so complacent and into the mindset of "someone else can do it" that no-one can do it anymore. It wouldn't solve the problem on its own, but preserving and openly sharing this knowledge that was so hard to achieve in the first place would give a lot more to the few who are actually working to be that good to work with.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 5 місяців тому +1

      Well I guess in this case the error detection and correction is just NASA itself, and you probably couldn't ask for anything better.

    • @lophilip
      @lophilip 5 місяців тому +3

      This type of memory is called magnetic "core" memory. Although not as compact as "RAM" or flash memory, it is much more resistant to radiation - something that is important for space applications.

    • @kloakovalimonada
      @kloakovalimonada 5 місяців тому +2

      Thank you for your service (really!)

    • @kloakovalimonada
      @kloakovalimonada 5 місяців тому +1

      @@TheBcoolGuytbf today's engineers and computers are asked to do insane amounts of insanely difficult things, all at once, connected to each other

  • @Adam-ge7wx
    @Adam-ge7wx 5 місяців тому +200

    For Voyager 3 I would do a grand tour of the solar system, with the end goal of doing the exact same thing as the original voyagers, with modern hardware. I think that those missions were absolutely awesome!

    • @tvre0
      @tvre0 5 місяців тому +50

      too bad the next voyager window is 2151-2154. hopefully we do something cool for that

    • @Adam-ge7wx
      @Adam-ge7wx 5 місяців тому +16

      @@soulsphere9242 yeah i know, im just saying that would be cool af

    • @volbla
      @volbla 5 місяців тому +6

      Do we need the same alignment to as far though? Surely rocket technology and materials science has advanced by a lot since the original probes.

    • @proatplanes
      @proatplanes 5 місяців тому +13

      @@volbla Yes but the voyagers relied on the gravity assists of the planets to give it enough momentum to get to escape velocity of the sun.

    • @JohnSmith-zw8vp
      @JohnSmith-zw8vp 5 місяців тому +8

      The fact that Voyager 2 could do a grand tour (not to be confused with the George Jones song) was an astronomical miracle as the four gas giants had to be positioned just right.

  • @leolee7378
    @leolee7378 5 місяців тому +30

    Every time I see a video of Voyager, I can't help but exclaim, this is really a great engineering miracle, and the more time goes by, the more I admire the scientists and engineers who designed and built this detector.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 4 місяці тому +3

      Never forget that Pioneer 10 and 11 are also still out there. Contact is lost, but they managed to extend their mission from 2 years to 30 years

  • @lawrencelink4394
    @lawrencelink4394 5 місяців тому +5

    So stunning. It's amazed how after all those miles the signal can still be decoded and run..

  • @t1g504
    @t1g504 5 місяців тому +86

    45 years with no physical interaction, and giving how old the technology is, it is very impressive.

  • @AlanTheBeast100
    @AlanTheBeast100 5 місяців тому +196

    FORTAN was heavily in use all through the 70's, 80' and 90's as a go to for engineering and other math/science purposes.
    Assembly never dies - it is everywhere - though most program in higher level languages. Assembly in "production" s/w went well into the 80's and 90's though C replaced much of that. Some compilers output to assembly code on their way to object code.

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 5 місяців тому +7

      I remember studying Fortran in high school. In the eighties.
      Man, time flies.

    • @prague5419
      @prague5419 5 місяців тому +14

      I was going to go off on that guy about "assembler being from the 50s". You beat me to it and said it just as I might of, I would have put more stink on it. I wrote my first program in 1982 on a Commodore 64 in 6502 machine language (assembler by today's definition). As a MODERN 64-bit assembler programmer, I was offended at the misrepresentation. But then again, the sheer list of things he got wrong in this video became too long to respond to. Ha ha.

    • @bschwand
      @bschwand 5 місяців тому +13

      some compiler output to assembly ?
      what are you talking about. You can request a compiler to show the assembly in textual form, yes, but assembly is the output of the compiler, by definition. compilers generate assembly that is passed straight on to the... assembler to produce object i.e. binary code. Compiler also produce intermediary code depending on which pass it is working and on the front-end, etc. Assembly is quite alive and well whenever you want to bring up a machine or particularly in device specific embedded systems (microcontrollers)

    • @johnk9895
      @johnk9895 5 місяців тому +3

      At one time in the '80s, when I was using PCs for some industrial control systems, I had to add some code to the BIOS - all in machine hex of course. But then, because my additions changed the checksum code, I had to find the checksum routine and zero it out. It wasn't too difficult until I had to upgrade to the XP, where the BIOS used two EPROMS, with the even bytes in one chip and the odd bytes in the other. That was fun!

    • @takanara7
      @takanara7 5 місяців тому +2

      @@bschwand Old compilers would sometimes output assembler and that would then get converted to object code. Probably not very common anymore

  • @Iykykykb
    @Iykykykb 5 місяців тому +1

    This was such a well put together video. You explained all the things I had always wondered about but didn’t know where to look or who to ask. And you brought all of the people who worked with assembly and fortran! So awesome to see this interaction. I feel better about my pulsar map tattoo that was on the golden record on V1 :)

  • @SpaceKid100
    @SpaceKid100 5 місяців тому +4

    Just by thinking at how they managed to create Voyager 50 years ago and still works to this day is just amazing and very inspiring for other people in my opinion. Very big applauses to the engineers and programmers who did the machine.

    • @alecepting1371
      @alecepting1371 5 місяців тому

      It was never intended to be operational for this long. But you have to remember that engineering back in those days was overdesigned because there were so many unknowns they were dealing with. Plus the "integrated" circuits they were using were low density, so less susceptible to cosmic rays. And finally, they used core memory (with the wire bit addressing matrix described in the video) which could not be altered by a cosmic ray since these were tiny iron cores. I do remember one situation where one of the bits was stuck at 0 and the engineers couldn't get it to change state. So they picked an instruction to store there that had a zero in that exact location. Problem solved without having to render that memory location unusable!

  • @xXRedTheDragonXx
    @xXRedTheDragonXx 5 місяців тому +359

    I'm a software engineer and I have a hard time making programs that run continuously for 2 years in controlled environments here on Earth. For a computer to run continuously for decades millions of miles away from Earth, that's just downright insane. I hope we can keep talking to Voyager for as long as possible! That little probe is the furthest thing away from us humans, and I hope we can use it to learn so much stuff before it finally goes dark and drifts amongst the stars forever.

    • @furinick
      @furinick 5 місяців тому +21

      Nasa has some coding standards to handle space, stuff like not using pointers and adding hard limits to loops (like a for loop having some counter that will end it)

    • @emergency.jergens
      @emergency.jergens 5 місяців тому +33

      Technically the software for has to be very simple. The crazy part about it is how survivable the components are and how they can be updated

    • @LanceMcGrew
      @LanceMcGrew 5 місяців тому +5

      and when we can no longer control, hopefully some extraterrestrial will.

    • @vallorahn
      @vallorahn 5 місяців тому +1

      Ackchyuallly.... Its more like billions of miles away. 1000x off there :)

    • @greggoog7559
      @greggoog7559 5 місяців тому

      Honesliiiiieeeeee... that made me chuckle 😉

  • @kaiserwhence2468
    @kaiserwhence2468 5 місяців тому +9

    That sponsor transition made me spit my drink ,you owe me one! 2:57

  • @AFoulOdor
    @AFoulOdor 5 місяців тому +7

    Excellent work by the Voyager engineers! It is amazing that Voyager is still operating.

  • @raviolimavioli
    @raviolimavioli 5 місяців тому +4

    I love that you don't oversimplify the technical details, well it still has simplification but for better presentation. Rather than saying "nasa updated the voyager 1 code, by beaming software update to their machine" and not expanding how it's done, you include how it is updated, which language does it use, how was the error, even explained bits of information like pseudocode/instruction (just like x86 instruction) and much more with appealing animation. Very well done

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +1

      Thank you so much! It is always my intention to simplify without over-simplifying haha, so I'm glad you've been enjoying that balance.

    • @darknebulae7470
      @darknebulae7470 3 місяці тому

      @@primalspace I'd like to ask how did you get/make the the animations? It's amazing.

  • @calavera42
    @calavera42 5 місяців тому +74

    It's incredible how the robustness of the Voyager has allowed it to survive all these years and continue to discover new things

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 4 місяці тому

      Robust often means old but proven. For example the James Webb space telescope runs on a RAD750 processor, a radiation hardened version of a PowerPC 750, the same chip used in the Gamecube and the G3 Mac. Except that the Macs from 1998-1999 ran at 233 to 450 MHz, the Gamecube is from 2001 and it's 750CXe runs at 486 MHz and the RAD750 on the telescope from 2021 runs at 118 MHz. Yes, a Nintendo Gamecube is about 4 times as powerful as a modern deep space telescope.
      And the system on the Space Shuttle orbiters ran on System/4 Pi, an adaptation of the System/360 mainframe architecture from the mid 1960s. In the mid 90s it was upgraded from magnetic core memory to semiconductor memory. It had 5 of these computers per orbiter, 4 running actively and one as backup, each capable of processing 0.48 MIPS.
      The Intel 486 DX2/66, the chip famously recommended to run Doom, had 25.6 MIPS, which means it would take about 14 Space Shuttles to run the original release of Doom.
      When the Space Shuttle was retired in 2011, a typical, upper midrange computer at home was about 43000 times as powerful and the following year the Galaxy S3 was about 5700 times as powerful as a Space Shuttle.
      In fact, the RAD750 in the James Webb space telescope is close to 140 times as powerful as a Space Shuttle.
      Part of the radiation hardening is obviously shielding, but another big part are large fabrication processes and low clock speeds.

  • @Umski
    @Umski 5 місяців тому +47

    I’m astounded that they were able to build over-the-air updates into the hardware considering the time when it was designed - decades ahead of its time and still going strong 💪

    • @mattcook4401
      @mattcook4401 5 місяців тому +1

      Keep on believing.

    • @dcfuksurmom
      @dcfuksurmom 5 місяців тому

      Is it still over the air if its going through space? Not a lot of air there lol. Jokes aside, it is pretty amazing.

    • @Umski
      @Umski 5 місяців тому +8

      @@dcfuksurmom "over-the-ether" 😁

    • @dcfuksurmom
      @dcfuksurmom 5 місяців тому

      @@Umski lol

    • @dcfuksurmom
      @dcfuksurmom 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Umski I was thinking over the universe but over the ether is better

  • @raj_prithzz
    @raj_prithzz 5 місяців тому +9

    A incredible journey through space. Hats off to the engineers for this achievement of marking a presence outside of solar system..

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +2

      An incredible journey indeed!

  • @williammoore3279
    @williammoore3279 3 місяці тому

    Fascinating content. Old programmers, like myself, who took our first class in Assembly language back in the 1970s and then wrote applications this content is inspiring. We manually wrote our code on special pads (of paper) then used a keypunch machine to place lines of code onto 80 character per column cards, taking batches of cards over to a card reader, had to be fluent in binary, octal, and hex, and had to be able to read through reams of printed core dumps to diagnose errors. Some programmers were able to mentally translate microcode. Our knowledge evolved over the decades to remain relevant with all the new languages and technology but we never forgot what it was like to drop a container of program code cards on the way to the card reader and spend an hour putting them back in order.

  • @Prof.Paradox-re9rd
    @Prof.Paradox-re9rd 5 місяців тому +13

    2:50 omg that sponsor really scared 💀

  • @mauricioegel
    @mauricioegel 5 місяців тому +26

    We should send a new Voyager... using all the lessons learned and modern tech. So the future generations can have an amazing device to enjoy as we have today.

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +1

      I would love that!

    • @SEB1991SEB
      @SEB1991SEB 5 місяців тому +7

      And the very first thing written on it for the aliens could be "Please disregard previous message".

    • @whannabi
      @whannabi 5 місяців тому

      ​@@SEB1991SEBthen the next one will say the same

    • @stringercorrales6627
      @stringercorrales6627 5 місяців тому +1

      The new Voyager should use a 48x48 film camera with loads of color sheet film that blasts off to earth when used up.

    • @Zreknarf
      @Zreknarf 5 місяців тому +1

      we did, it's called 'new horizons' and was launched in 2006. voyager 1 and 2 abused a really neat gravity assist from jupiter and saturn, the planets aren't aligned for that very often. we can't actually launch anything faster or further than voyager today without waiting several decades for that launch window again

  • @Graymanjft
    @Graymanjft 5 місяців тому +1

    I retired in March after a career as a programmer/application developer/software engineer/etc. for about 40 years. The first computer I ever programmed on was an AIM-65 using 6502 assembler. I've watched over the years as programs became more and more bloated and code less and less efficient. "Don't worry about it. Memory is cheap and the processors are fast."
    I remember when I was a kid groing up and Viking landed on Mars. I got up at 5 in the morning to watch as the first pictures of the Mars surface were sent back. Fascinating.
    I have always been more intested in the planets than deep space exploration so I would send Voyager on more trips around the outer planets.

  • @Jezee213
    @Jezee213 3 місяці тому

    The fact that it has worked this long and reliably is amazing to me and the people that worked on this, the entire team should be incredibly proud!

  • @MaximumBan
    @MaximumBan 5 місяців тому +5

    My KSP gobbled 16Gb on RAM and it's only for the lift off. Voyager flew millions of miles with 7Kb.

  • @abinjoseph5028
    @abinjoseph5028 5 місяців тому +26

    As a child, gazing up at the stars while learning about the Voyager spacecraft's incredible journey through the cosmos filled me with a sense of wonder and infinite possibilities. Thank you for bringing back those memories.

  • @joszandstra2044
    @joszandstra2044 4 місяці тому +1

    It is truly amazing that it still is possible to update computers on that distance sending the data at 16 bits per second. Can hardly imagine that, nowadays used to gigabit speeds.
    Also using only 70 kB of memory for keeping the Voyager operative. I used to have a Sinclair ZX 80 with 1 kB many years ago where nowaday GB or TB are standard. Just amazing

  • @TGSankar
    @TGSankar 5 місяців тому +2

    I don't have any official degree in science or computer language but I am a enthusiastic about science, love to know new things and gather knowledge. This video really makes me amazed about how old technologies still working today even form billions of miles❤️

  • @AWS.
    @AWS. 5 місяців тому +19

    An amazing peice of human ingenuity and engineering I have huge respect for the people who made it and keeping it running.

  • @includemeout
    @includemeout 5 місяців тому +6

    I'd send the hypothetical Voyager 3 spacecraft to Uranus again, - both for in the name of science and due to sheer nostalgia, since at a personal level, by the time Voyager 2 reached it in 1986, I was already old enough to appreciate the importance of such event - and that made me hooked on following news about its journey through space since - so much so that I could barely await for its rendezvous with equally gelid Neptune three years later.

  • @mwp1088
    @mwp1088 5 місяців тому +1

    Amazing! Thanks for sharing this! 16 bits per second, we’ve come a long way. Just sending another voyager on the same mission with new hardware would be amazing.

  • @DongJovi
    @DongJovi 5 місяців тому +8

    bro 15 billion miles away? i dont even get good wifi from my router upstairs....

  • @farshaikh1
    @farshaikh1 5 місяців тому +9

    Voyager Runs on "Nord VPN" you had me with that 😂

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +3

      Haha glad you enjoyed that one.

  • @nerdobject5351
    @nerdobject5351 5 місяців тому +52

    Even by todays standards the engineering that went into Voyager is remarkable. It’s not sexy but the constraints they had to work in to produce this much functionality is an amazing feat.

  • @psivewri
    @psivewri 5 місяців тому +5

    I’d love to hear about how the thrusters can still be fuelled after so many years. Do the thrusters simply use very little each time they’re activated?

    • @Dlog_M125
      @Dlog_M125 5 місяців тому

      I am also curious. Also hi, good to see you here! Waiting for another car video!

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +2

      Exactly, it still has hydrazine fuel left in its tank. It helped that Voyager followed it's trajectory so accurately, therefore being super efficient with it's fuel.

  • @ruminmusic
    @ruminmusic 5 місяців тому +1

    Its incredible what the early pioneers have accomplished, building hardware and software that has stood for half a century in the harshest environment and still going strong.

  • @user-um2qy7zu1v
    @user-um2qy7zu1v 5 місяців тому +18

    I believe we need a mission to the dwarf planets in the Kuiper belt, we know so little about Haumeia, Makemake and Eris but they still are as interesting as anything else.

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому

      A great idea. Thanks for sharing and good luck in the giveaway!

  • @Sometimes_Always
    @Sometimes_Always 5 місяців тому +20

    I loved this.. The NordVPN was really well done.. You had me for a couple of milliseconds 🙂

  • @SammyCola
    @SammyCola 5 місяців тому +4

    I actually asked them about how large of a patch it is, this is what they said:
    “The patch is quite small; only about 16 instructions. All signals take ~18 hours to get to V2 and over 20 to get to V1 but that's due to their distance not the size of the patch.” ~Calla Cofield

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 4 місяці тому

      Reminds me of situations where IPoAC is the fastest transmission.
      Like in 2009 when a pidgeon transmitted 4 GB of data at 2.27 mbps, while a simultaneous transfer over ADSL was only at 4% completion.

  • @rajkr7j
    @rajkr7j 4 місяці тому +2

    voyager always stuns me with the fact that it is still sending signal, I have great respect to its team.
    If there will be an voyager 3 and would love to send it solar system exploration as the old voyagers with more advanced hardwares, and be designed to travell faster and even further, and even have a dedicated interstellar mission to perform science to learn more about it.

  • @anix2457
    @anix2457 5 місяців тому +10

    The voyager programme’s longevity is testament to the wonderful skilled professionals who designed, built and programmed them. Humankind’s finest. 👍

    • @paramaniacwolverine843
      @paramaniacwolverine843 3 місяці тому

      absolutely! It's so sad how their work and skill is being insulted by the space deniers today. There isn't one social media platform that doesn't have these trolls trashing the space program. Being a South African, I marvel at their lack of knowledge, and most of them stay within a 5 hour drive of all the installations used to launch. I'd give a left kidney to see the NASA installation.

  • @o0Donuts0o
    @o0Donuts0o 5 місяців тому +14

    I was launched 45 years ago as well and I’m still operational. Great engineering! Thanks, dad!

  • @johnfranchina84
    @johnfranchina84 4 місяці тому

    I did my electrical/electronics engineering 4 year degree graduating in 1980. Learnt Fortran and programmed Motorola 6802 microprocessors using machine code without assemblers. I have been privileged to live and observe the huge advances in space exploration and all things in digital technology. Of all spacecraft, love the Voyagers the most.

  • @laniakea1541
    @laniakea1541 5 місяців тому

    First time I come across your channel.
    This video was AMAZING!!
    You gained a subscriber!
    Good job!

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +1

      Thank you so much! I'm so glad you enjoyed the video enough to subscribe. Welcome to the community!

  • @-SpaceNewsNow-
    @-SpaceNewsNow- 5 місяців тому +12

    I would send voyager III with a trajectory with lots of gravity assists, then I would point it towards Alpha Centauri so that generations in a few thousand years would be able to see what it looks like.

    • @Dean_stoonts
      @Dean_stoonts 5 місяців тому

      Shit idea not gonna lie. Generations in a few thousand years will easily have the ability to see/travel to alpha Centauri. If you don’t already know this you’re ignorant or stupid.

    • @heroaax7589
      @heroaax7589 5 місяців тому +1

      I hope I will still live in 2073, when the next Voyager will be able to Start 😢

  • @imRo45_264
    @imRo45_264 5 місяців тому +19

    This is one of the most interesting videos I have seen in a while. I always wanted to know about the updates that are sent to the Voyagers. I would like to send the Voyager to Proxima Centauri and its planets. It will be great to know about the chances of Human survival , if possible on one of the planets.
    Thanks again for these amazing and informative videos.♥

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому

      Sounds like a great plan for Voyager 3. Thank you for watching and I'm so glad you enjoyed the video. Good luck in the giveaway!

  • @girikvarma8066
    @girikvarma8066 5 місяців тому +3

    I know it’s just a fun question but i really thought about where i would send voyager 3 if launched today, obviously some interesting places to check out would be the stellar nurseries, the quantum quasar zone or the hyperspace junction, but respecting voyager 1&2 as they were sent to study planets as their primary objective we could also send the voyager 3 to check out specific exoplanets such as the Proxima Centauri b (i did some math and with some advanced propulsion systems if voyager 3 can reach the speeds of 160000+ kmph then it would take around 25-35 years to get to the planet, just like we are reaping the benefits of voyager 1&2’s findings today, our future generations will advance with our efforts of voyager 3 today). Obviously all hypothetical and would require some major tech breakthroughs, still interesting.

    • @girikvarma8066
      @girikvarma8066 5 місяців тому

      Just to mention, proxima centauri b is possibly the closest exoplanet that lies in the habitable zone of proxima centauri and might support or already have life

  • @qpwodkgh2010
    @qpwodkgh2010 5 місяців тому +1

    As usual, your segway into a commercial is fantastic. Respect.

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +1

      Haha thank you so much.

  • @elry6030
    @elry6030 5 місяців тому +5

    The Voyager is a living monument, almost all people know about but have not seen, it is a symbol of what we can achieve if we pursue it. Voyager will outlive most of us but I hope that people remember what technological challenges Voyager has overcome to reach its destination. If we could launch another, I would say send it in the opposite direction, with the technology we have today, imagine what more we can equip the modern Voyager.

  • @nkronert
    @nkronert 5 місяців тому +8

    I'm assuming the Fortran part of the software was part of the build proces, not running on the craft itself.

  • @3366larryandrews
    @3366larryandrews 2 місяці тому +1

    Funny, to us old timers, 70K was a massive amount of memory to use on this spacecraft. A PDP-8 minicomputer could support 4-users running Basic programming support using Terminet terminals and 32K of core memory. Each user having about 4K of memory. I would load 10 words from the PDP-8 front-panel, which would setup the bootstrap papertape reel to load the OS and program into the 32K of core memory. The 32K of core memory with its hand-made magnetwire-wound Toroidal cores, was a beautiful sight of workmanship for many.

  • @Papsmeartopreventcancer
    @Papsmeartopreventcancer 5 місяців тому

    I remember as a boy I’ve always wanted to be an astronaut. But it’s a pipe dream since I’m from Singapore. Fat hopes even to be an engineer at NASA. I would find out about Pioneer, Voyager but those days there is no internet, much of the info i got was from science channels on TV.
    That’s about 50 years ago.
    Now with a touch of a button or 2, i get fantastic videos from Primal Space and many other YT channels. This has been great to rekindle my deep interest about deep space, still awed by the mysteries of the universe after all these years!
    If I were to send Voyager 3, I’d send it trailing the Voyager 1, and Voyager 4 trailing Voyager 2.
    Why? the continuation of exploration is of utmost importance to better understand what is outside our solar system.

  • @smakfu1375
    @smakfu1375 5 місяців тому +9

    Fortran is becoming rarer but is still not uncommon, though I imagine the Fortran 77 used in the Voyager spacecraft is pretty esoteric and has some fairly big differences when compared to modern Fortran. However, to say assembler is from the 40's and 50's is silly, as it's still a core staple skill for low-level software engineering. Understanding and writing assembly routines is still a common requirement for sections of highly optimized code, low-level debugging on general purpose platforms, and sometimes a basic requirement for aspects of embedded development.
    However, the key element in this conversation is that there is no one assembler as it's symbolic machine code. Every architecture has its own very unique dialect of assembler, meaning that AMD64 (x86-64), AARCH64 (ARM64), MC68k, etc., are all very different, as dictated by the instruction set architecture (and there are significant differences within generations of common families of ISA's - for example, the copy-pasta'd example of code deletions at 2:26 are 16bit x86 assembler, easily identifiable as such due to the register names not being prefixed with E (32bit i386) or R (AMD64) extensions). I imagine that the mentioned job posting was looking for someone who had enough experience to learn the (what I imagine to be) pretty unique instruction sets of the Voyager's archaic computers, with a knack for careful optimizations.
    One final note: the CCS and AACS (both derived from the same system architecture) used core memory, while the FDS was the very first (IIRC) computer in spaceflight to use CMOS IC based memory and is of an entirely different architecture from the other two.

  • @mohamedalsharweni1974
    @mohamedalsharweni1974 5 місяців тому +8

    Hats off to the 3D designer you have in the team. Brilliant! 👏

  • @PatrickHoodDaniel
    @PatrickHoodDaniel 3 місяці тому

    My science fair project in the late '70s was about Voyager 1. I got honorable mention!! This video brings back a lot of memories of that time.

  • @VaradNarvekar
    @VaradNarvekar 5 місяців тому

    I love your videos!! Also was wondering. In one of the eariler videos, it was mentioned that the data rate to send an image back to earth, is around 160 bits/second. In this video you said that the datarate to send a command is 16 bits/second. Is the data rate of producer and consumer varies in a full duplex system?

  • @gameinsane8984
    @gameinsane8984 5 місяців тому +25

    It’s baffling how they got so far with such a small computer it can’t even store a photo 😮

    • @kensmith5694
      @kensmith5694 5 місяців тому +6

      It is what engineers do when doing science is the goal.

    • @sofachrome
      @sofachrome 5 місяців тому

      ​@@kensmith5694😂😂😂

    • @g-r-a-e-m-e-
      @g-r-a-e-m-e- 5 місяців тому

      they did save the photos - they have onboard tape recorders which save the data and then transit back to earth

  • @MiG-25IsGOAT
    @MiG-25IsGOAT 5 місяців тому +3

    It's amazing how we can still get updates for voyager. Amazing

    • @KadenPlaysRBLX
      @KadenPlaysRBLX 5 місяців тому

      Stop we don’t care your first

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +1

      Amazing indeed. So glad you enjoyed the topic for this video.

    • @SpaceBlockRR
      @SpaceBlockRR 5 місяців тому

      Your not first

  • @barbierthomas8322
    @barbierthomas8322 5 місяців тому +3

    We've mentionned the voyager II antenna system in my physic class last week. The power of reception is in megawatt which is absolutely fantastic but is expected when looking at the weakness of the signal power received from voyager II.

    • @Heracles_FE
      @Heracles_FE 4 місяці тому

      I think what you meant to say was , we ran the numbers in our physics class and died laughing , because it is impossible to receive the signal that a 20 watt transmitter would send from ten miles up .
      Stop believing authority because they are authority.

    • @ernieschatz3783
      @ernieschatz3783 3 місяці тому

      Okay 😂​@@Heracles_FE

    • @barbierthomas8322
      @barbierthomas8322 3 місяці тому

      @@Heracles_FE you're a genius

  • @4X4ish
    @4X4ish 5 місяців тому

    It’s amazing the tech they had implemented back then and that it is still running today. So much forethought

  • @josephconsuegra6420
    @josephconsuegra6420 5 місяців тому +8

    I remember programming in Fortran and assembly (IBM BAL). Those were the days that programming was an art and required massive management of resources.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios 4 місяці тому

      Time to fresh up for Fortran 2018 and COBOL 2023 and maybe your code will be used in the next SPEC CPU benchmark, just like the SPEC CPU2017 uses Fortran, C and C++

  • @DanielRojas-kt2tw
    @DanielRojas-kt2tw 5 місяців тому +12

    I think sending a Voyager 3 to the inner most planets would be neat. Gathering more data on Mercury and Venus would allow us to learn more about them.

    • @tomikun8057
      @tomikun8057 5 місяців тому

      We already did that
      Don't you remember the Venus drone landing that melted?

  • @technologysclub.4075
    @technologysclub.4075 5 місяців тому

    Thanks for the amazing content and lets all hope that voyager 3 or something like that will
    be announced soon!!!

  • @challacustica9049
    @challacustica9049 5 місяців тому +4

    Amazing, simply incredible. I never realized voyager would be updated like this.

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +1

      So glad you found it as interesting as I did! Thanks for watching 🙏

  • @Betelgeusewaitforit
    @Betelgeusewaitforit 5 місяців тому +3

    Man.. really well explained.. and we need more missions like the voyagers

  • @kisspeteristvan
    @kisspeteristvan 5 місяців тому +1

    and we were amazed when we started to get updates over the net , this thing was many years ahead

  • @MrCaesartheman
    @MrCaesartheman 5 місяців тому

    I completed my computing science degree and my software and web developement degree, and I have to say, I have so much respect for the ram, that stuff is real cool

  • @MarcelSchr
    @MarcelSchr 5 місяців тому +3

    I would suggest a similar course for Voyager 3 as back then, only with the most modern sensor technology. Voyager 1 and 2 have done such a fantastic job for humanity that I wouldn't change much about the course, just the sensitivity and resolution of the measuring devices. Thank you for the chance to win such a great piece of art!

    • @MemezuiiSangkanskje
      @MemezuiiSangkanskje 5 місяців тому +1

      Also it'd be great having more up-to-date images of the outer planets.

    • @TheZaomei
      @TheZaomei 5 місяців тому

      Then ask the team of the JWT to rotate the cam and shoot some pics.

    • @ankles632
      @ankles632 5 місяців тому

      The problem with sending another on the same voyage is that the planets have to be in specific positions to achieve the gravity assist to move from 1 to the next. This only occurs every 175 years. They may well decide to do it in 2152 but we wont be alive to see the results.

  • @researchandbuild1751
    @researchandbuild1751 5 місяців тому +33

    I would be waaaaay more interested in how they properly direct a beam of RF to go to Voyager's position and have enough strength at that distance, in the first place.

    • @Zreknarf
      @Zreknarf 5 місяців тому +9

      they just blast massive amounts of RF in their general direction from california, spain, and australia at the same time, then use the same dishes to listen

    • @MitkoNikov
      @MitkoNikov 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Zreknarf I wonder do they sync the RF signals from multiple antenna arrays across the entire hemisphere, so they overlap with each other - giving a much stronger signal, and how is that done in practice? It seems you have to take in account the curvature of the earth as well. Because, I doubt one local antenna array is capable of delivering such a powerful RF.

    • @jokerace8227
      @jokerace8227 5 місяців тому +7

      For me it's more that we can receive Voyagers' light bulb wattage worth of radio transmissions from across 15 billion miles, as opposed to our high wattage transmissions sent back out to them.

    • @StormGod29
      @StormGod29 5 місяців тому

      @@MitkoNikov nah, it is easier than that b/c the earth is flat!

    • @Zreknarf
      @Zreknarf 5 місяців тому

      @MitkoNikov not sure on the specifics, I'd imagine it involves several atomic clocks and a rather low bit rate

  • @HoeSnatcherrrr
    @HoeSnatcherrrr 5 місяців тому

    I've been watching your videos for how long and it still makes me attached to the universe, there is just so much to comprehend where we are.
    I'd take the Voyager to Jupiter to orbit it and take a time lapse of it's big red dot so we can gather more information about it.

  • @steventaylor8918
    @steventaylor8918 5 місяців тому +2

    This is truly epic. By the way... I love the way you worked in the NordVPN commercial.

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +1

      Haha thanks so much. Really glad you enjoyed the video!

  • @yasmineasadiasl767
    @yasmineasadiasl767 5 місяців тому +14

    Amazing video and I can’t believe I won the giveaway thank you for the amazing work you put into the videos!! And I would send the voyager 3 to outer layers of Milky Way galaxy

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +1

      Congratulations and thank you so much for watching! I'm so glad that you enjoy my content. It really means a lot.

    • @Mrcaton..
      @Mrcaton.. 5 місяців тому

      Congrats yasmineasadiasl767

  • @The-python-guy
    @The-python-guy 5 місяців тому +4

    I love this video. I do software development and am an avid rocket engineer (from my bedroom) so All of this is so cool. I always loved voyager because of the mission lifetime, and that it's in deep space and is the first thing the aliens are going to see (if there real.)

  • @TheVaibhavPuri
    @TheVaibhavPuri 5 місяців тому +1

    What surprises me the most is how codes & updates are transferred billions of kilometres away from Earth WIRELESSLY 😮.
    This is truly fascinating.

  • @MadScienTEST
    @MadScienTEST 5 місяців тому

    All the awesome info in this video and the best thing in it was the segue to the sponsor. Bravo 🍻

    • @primalspace
      @primalspace  5 місяців тому +1

      Haha glad you enjoyed it!

  • @vamsi3
    @vamsi3 5 місяців тому +6

    It still amazes me that Voyager missions are one of the farthest human endeavors yet in space! Looking at all the amazing pictures of planets I have seen from Voyager missions, I would send the Voyager 3 to Proxima Centauri b. We can only wonder what other solar systems look like. And, thanks for your videos and reminding us the wonders of space!

  • @TheRealNikos
    @TheRealNikos 5 місяців тому +4

    It is truly phenomenal how it still operates after so many years. I hope it continues functioning even longer

  • @ibiskiils
    @ibiskiils 5 місяців тому +1

    Im still a child/teen and i remember so good when my dad first told me about the voyager program and how far it travelled. For me if i could send a new voyager i would probobly want it to be around Jupiter or Uranus taking pics of them and the moons as they are my favourite planets and so interesting!

  • @adg_himself
    @adg_himself 5 місяців тому +4

    I would send a third Voyager mission to further explore some of Saturn's moons like Iapetus and Encleadus. Ultimately sending it out into the universe with newer more powerful instruments would be awesome, perhaps allowing it to function longer than the first 2.