Difference between revisions of "BIOCOM"

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(BIPCOM v.2.0)
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'''BIOCOM''' is a program [[currently]] being rewritten that will monitor the physical and mental health of each astronaut.  
 
'''BIOCOM''' is a program [[currently]] being rewritten that will monitor the physical and mental health of each astronaut.  
==BIPCOM v.2.0==
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==BIOCOM v.2.0==
 
The Mission Control and Astronaut versions of BIOCOM v.2.0 were written in C++ on January 9, 2010 by [[Bryce Storey]] and [[Peter Macdonald]] with logistics determined by [[Samuel Baltz]] after a brief conference with [[Maclean Rouble]] and [[Dr Magwood]]. BIOCOM v.2.0 monitors the astronauts' State of Consciousness, State of Sleep, Hours Slept (total, over the course of the mission), Burn Levels, Radiation, Wounds, and Blood Pressure. BIOCOM v.2.0 can keep track of these stats for up to 8 astronauts, and is planned to include a picture of each astronaut.
 
The Mission Control and Astronaut versions of BIOCOM v.2.0 were written in C++ on January 9, 2010 by [[Bryce Storey]] and [[Peter Macdonald]] with logistics determined by [[Samuel Baltz]] after a brief conference with [[Maclean Rouble]] and [[Dr Magwood]]. BIOCOM v.2.0 monitors the astronauts' State of Consciousness, State of Sleep, Hours Slept (total, over the course of the mission), Burn Levels, Radiation, Wounds, and Blood Pressure. BIOCOM v.2.0 can keep track of these stats for up to 8 astronauts, and is planned to include a picture of each astronaut.
  

Revision as of 21:52, 11 January 2010

BIOCOM is a program currently being rewritten that will monitor the physical and mental health of each astronaut.

BIOCOM v.2.0

The Mission Control and Astronaut versions of BIOCOM v.2.0 were written in C++ on January 9, 2010 by Bryce Storey and Peter Macdonald with logistics determined by Samuel Baltz after a brief conference with Maclean Rouble and Dr Magwood. BIOCOM v.2.0 monitors the astronauts' State of Consciousness, State of Sleep, Hours Slept (total, over the course of the mission), Burn Levels, Radiation, Wounds, and Blood Pressure. BIOCOM v.2.0 can keep track of these stats for up to 8 astronauts, and is planned to include a picture of each astronaut.

An alterable version of BIOCOM is being planned for use by the simulators.

BIOCOM v.1.0

The first version of BIOCOM included injuries, sicknesses, radiation, and heart rate, among other things. The idea was first proposed in 2007-08. It was implemented during Mission Genesis where it joined the suit of other monitoring software, such as ORBIT, EECOM and Engineering. The basic layout consisted of a Pivot-like stick figure for each astronaut with information regarding the state of their various joints and a number of statistics surrounding the image.