I turned around and yelled out, "Let's see, you've been standing around for at least an hour, well before the first vehicle rolled. You have no idea what's going on and you're at the mercy of others to get where you wanna be. Seems to me that this is an accurate depitction of military life!" I heard several people yell out, "amen" in response, I'm sure all of them had served in real life...
Wait? You were "standing-around" for at least an hour? Where were the people acting as mid-grade NCOs and new-minted officers? Shouldn't they have had everyone doing "something"? You know like painting rocks, (yes in the winter! It's not like anyone is USING them right now right?) or mowing the snow or something like that? Definately a "missed" opportunity to add realism to the scenerio...
"It will allow me to move Space Camp into the next generation," Barnhart said. "We still have shuttle vehicles. And no one we train today is ever going to fly a shuttle. So it's incumbent on me to move that entire training scenario forward into the future. That scenario is NASA and commercial and international. It's not just us anymore. It's as much a global world and an international space-travel world as it is an American space-travel world."I'm going to be upgrading the Space Camp training and simulation areas substantially to match what is in the runway of my Space Camp students. We've already got the Orion capsule and the return to the moon mission. We'll be adding the Mars mission, we'll be adding capturing an asteroid activities. We will add (SpaceX) Dragon. We will add (SNC) Dream Chaser. We will be adding all the commercial and next generation NASA vehicles and mission scenarios to the Space Camp training curriculum. It's not going to be the same ol' fly-the-shuttle anymore."