Thread regarding AT&T layoffs

Welcome home, Artemis II.

Welcome home, Artemis II.

Watching these astronauts travel more than 252,000 miles and return safely to Earth is a powerful reminder of what humans can achieve when we push beyond what’s known.

I’m proud of the role AT&T and FirstNet, Built with AT&T played—supporting NASA and helping keep teams and crew connected from launch through splashdown. When the connection matters, it has to be AT&T.

Congratulations to NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and welcome home to the crew. Your courage to go farther than any human has gone before inspires discovery, possibility, and the belief that when we aim higher, we can go farther—together.

Simply put: thank you.

(Originally posted by Jeff McElfresh on 4/10. Not kidding. Look it up)


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| 1 view | | 7 replies (last April 16) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kp53d8r6

7 replies (most recent on top)

Overall route was 700,000 miles in 217 hours so > 3,200 miles/hour on average. Does anybody still think this was real?

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Post ID: @js+1kp53d8r6

We make communications slow

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Post ID: @dm+1kp53d8r6

"Wasn't there an issue after splash down where communication was lost for like 10 minutes?"

Yes, and AT&T paid $0.37 as part of the AT&T Guarantee, which will be applied sometime over the next 5 billing cycles.

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Post ID: @d4+1kp53d8r6

Wasn't there an issue after splash down where communication was lost for like 10 minutes?

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Post ID: @bq+1kp53d8r6

Wow. There would be no moon trip without AT&T. I guess they're dangling cellphones out there or something.

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Post ID: @bk+1kp53d8r6

I got a little excited reading it.

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Post ID: @ba+1kp53d8r6

Can’t wait for stinky mission to Uranus.

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Post ID: @b8+1kp53d8r6

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