Waiting for a space taxi? It looks like it might show up a little late. Of course, it's only NASA astronauts currently in line for one of the agency's recently commissioned spacecraft, but both companies involved -- Boeing and SpaceX -- will have to down-tools after the third company in the mix (and the only one to not get commissioned) protests the awarded contracts. While Boeing scooped the lion's share ($4.2 billion), SpaceX also picked up $2.6 billion in funding to develop craft that will shuttle astronauts to the ISS. Currently NASA relies on Russian ships for this expensive service. Sierra Nevada claims it could do the same work as Boeing, but for a full $900 million less. The disgruntled firm also claims NASA's own debrief on the selection contains inconsistencies and raises 'serious questions.' NASA has 30 days to respond to the allegations. With current seats on Russian craft running a cool $70 million a time, that certainly puts the cost of a cab stuck in traffic firmly in perspective.
Featured Stories Blackphone review: putting a price on privacy Moto G review (2014): still the best budget smartphone Bose continues to take on Sonos with new SoundTouch speakers Hands-on with Tesco's Hudl2 Hands-on with Nokia's Here Maps for Android Basis unveils its first fitness tracker since getting acquired by Intel HP's $199 Windows laptop arrives alongside a pair of tablets Entities 0 Name: NASA Count: 4 1 Name: Boeing Count: 3 2 Name: SpaceX Count: 2 3 Name: Russian Count: 2 4 Name: Intel HP Count: 1 5 Name: Sierra Nevada Count: 1 6 Name: Nokia Count: 1 7 Name: Tesco Count: 1 Related 0 Url: http://ift.tt/1sWW3gM Title: HP is reportedly splitting into two companies Description: HP's home-focused and business divisions have frequently seemed at odds with each other, and apparently the company agrees. The Wall Street Journal claims that the tech giant is about to split into two companies, one focused on PCs and the other dedicated solely to corporate hardware and services.
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