G'day everyone! I'm newly onboard, though I've been lurking for a while. I've just made my very first orbit by hand, a supremely ugly elongated ellipse, with about 2 feet between the capsule and the upper atmosphere, but it was an orbit! I've been watching, learning, and reading everything I could about the space programs here since I was 6 (the year Neil Armstrong did what he did), so I've absorbed the Right Stuff, Lost Moon, Rocket Boys, and so on and so forth. Sadly, I found that I didn't understand most of the maths (I was crook in school when they were teaching integrals and differential calculus, so I kinda had to restart from a very late start. So I bought everything I could lay my hands on : Robert Goddard's book, which made some sense at last! Unfortunately, I'm still a maths cripple, so things that come naturally to many space buffs takes a looooong time to get "under my belt". But I'm trying! I've even bought some manuals on celestial mechanics and space dynamics and mission planning and so on, but they're in a different orbit althogether! So I bought Newton's Principia to help me understand the basics, and when I got lost in there, Euclid's Elements helped. (Told you I was a maths dunce!). I'm 50 years old, semi-retired from computer design and support, which I still do as a hobby when I can. As an ex-biker, I had a couple of personal experiences with inertia and uncontrolled landings, thanks to a careless driver. As a result, I have quite a lot of titanium prosthetic elements holding my spine together. Oh, and a pump administering opioid painkillers directly into the spine, and even a neural stimulator to take care of any extras. That's the reason I'm semi retired, naturally! It means I have a lot of time on my hands, but not a heck of a lot of it vertical. So laptops (Macbook Pro and Compaq Presario) are my best friends. However, I've just installed KSP on my core i5 2.8G system running W7 x64 on a very nice studio setup. So it's there if I want it! I can't begin to describe how cool it was to finally understand in my bones manoevers like rotating, rolling, and escape velocity when I fired up KSP for the first time this afternoon. It took me 19 attempts, but in the Kerbal X it all finally fell into place (I've flown planes (real ones) before, but not quite as high). I'm still grinning from ear to shining ear! I hope to have many accidents, impacts, burnouts, crashes, and just plain fun, and I'll do my best to add to the "You're not going into space today" thread. THanks for reading all this crap. I have verbal diarrhoea, probably from being cooped up on my own (my wife notwithstanding) for the past 8 or 9 years! My apologies for the eyestrain. To infinity-1 and beyond!