
Computer program finds missing 'a' in Armstrong’s greeting from moon
Date: Monday, October 02nd, 2006 (CST ) Topic: Cosmology & Astronomy
That’s one small word for astronaut Neil Armstrong, one giant revision for grammar sticklers everywhere.
An Australian computer programmer says he found the missing “a” from Armstrong’s famous first words from the moon in 1969, when the world heard the phrase, “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.” The story was reported in Saturday’s editions of the Houston Chronicle.
Some historians and critics have dogged Armstrong for not saying the more dramatic and grammatically correct, “One small step for a man ...” in the version he transmitted to NASA’s Mission Control. Without the missing “a,” Armstrong essentially said, “One small step for mankind, one giant leap for mankind.”
The famous
astronaut has maintained he intended to say it properly and believes he
did. Thanks to some high-tech sound-editing software, computer
programmer Peter Shann Ford might have proved Armstrong right.
Ford said he downloaded the
audio recording of Armstrong’s words from a NASA Web site and analyzed
the statement with software that allows disabled people to communicate
through computers using their nerve impulses.
In a graphical
representation of the famous phrase, Ford said he found evidence that
the missing “a” was spoken and transmitted to NASA.
“I have reviewed the data
and Peter Ford’s analysis of it, and I find the technology interesting
and useful,” Armstrong said in a statement. “I also find his conclusion
persuasive. Persuasive is the appropriate word.”
Copyright: MSNBC
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