I don't know if that would help though, given that you seem to already have it. (I even see you registered just to post here.) I've attached an old copy of USA_PORT.DAT that you could save in the data directory. Lewis, sorry for the delay getting back to you! I don't check in here at the old SourceForge site too often. Got sad enough to search "config" on my entire C drive. Windows 10.and I found it: C:\Users(myusername).raceintospace I tried getting the github version but it won't compile in Windows. Windows 10.and I found it: C:\Users(myusername).raceintospace The only reason I was doing it was to enable female nauts from the start, and it looks like that isn't an option in this version. Hopefully we'll be able to put out the next release soon - we just cleared a major hurdle with the licensing. Yes, the code on GitHub won't compile in Windows for some reason. You might be able to get it to compile now, or soon. In Windows I would have expected to find it under C:\Documents and Settings\%username%\Raceintospace or something like that, but I don't see it on my Windows box. raceintospace off the root of your home directory. The file name, though, is config (no extension), and in Linux it seems to install in a folder called. When I've installed it on Windows I haven't been able to find it either-and haven't been able to get any good answers about it. And while Russia may have bested the United States and China in shooting a movie in space, it remains to be seen if it can stage a comeback and make its presence felt in the fast developing space industry.That's a good question. With new rivals like SpaceX and Blue Origin on the horizon, the global space race is set to intensify yet again. It is also slated to send two Japanese tourists to the ISS in December this year. Russia has announced its plans to revive space tourism and ferry civilians to the ISS. Experts see this as Russia’s attempt to catch-up with the US and others in the space exploration as the latter takes shape of a new battleground for geopolitical rivalry between the United States and its rival China. Interestingly, the latest Russian mission comes within days of Spacex’s success in putting an all civilian crew into space with the Inspiration4 Mission. Hitherto, NASA relied on Russian Soyuz aircrafts to send astronauts to the ISS. Last year, American private space company SpaceX broke Roscosmos’ monopoly on ferrying astronauts to the ISS. Besides, corruption scandals and a shift towards greater military spending has meant a less than enthusiastic focus on space exploration. The Russian space agency is still reliant on age-old soviet technology even as competing space agencies like NASA and China’s CNSA make rapid strides in new adopting newer technology. In recent years, the Russian space industry has struggled both in innovation and in raising funds. Since then, the US has largely dominated space missions while Roscosmos, the Russian space agency, has taken a backseat. But the United States had managed to edge out the Soviet Union in setting foot on the moon with its Apollo 11 mission. Russia, then Soviet Union, had succeeded in launching the first satellite (Sputnik), first animal (a dog named Laika), the first man (Yuri Gagarin), and the first woman (Valentina Tareshkova), into space. Russia’s success is reminiscent of the space race witnessed between the erstwhile Soviet Union and the United States during the Cold War. The latter had earlier announced a similar Hollywood project by actor Tom Cruise in collaboration with NASA and SpaceX. With this launch, Russia has edged out the United States in the race to shoot a film in space.
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