<p>Ever imagined creating your own space shuttle? If you are clueless how to start, here comes NASA to your aid.<br /><br /></p>.<p>If you have studied rocket science, NASA would enable you to make your own space craft!<br />From April 10, the US space agency is set to reveal its enormous database highlighting where to find software for more than 1,000 of its projects.<br /><br />"NASA would offer a searchable database of projects," Daniel Lockney, technology transfer program executive at NASA, was quoted as saying in a Daily Mail report.<br /><br />We have collected a large amount of software projects, everything from design tools to robotic control systems, Lockney added.<br /><br />NASA would develop a 'GitHub for astronauts' by hosting the actual software code in its own online repository, which will be found at technology.nasa.gov.<br /><br />The data can be accessed free of copyright, but special clearance would be needed for anyone who wants to access projects like rocket guidance systems.<br /><br />With this data, people could put together their own rocket.<br /><br />One of the main goals of the database is to help develop technology that can be transferred to other sectors, the report added.<br /><br />These data may even help hackers and entrepreneurs push their existing ideas in new directions - as well as help trigger new concepts.</p>
<p>Ever imagined creating your own space shuttle? If you are clueless how to start, here comes NASA to your aid.<br /><br /></p>.<p>If you have studied rocket science, NASA would enable you to make your own space craft!<br />From April 10, the US space agency is set to reveal its enormous database highlighting where to find software for more than 1,000 of its projects.<br /><br />"NASA would offer a searchable database of projects," Daniel Lockney, technology transfer program executive at NASA, was quoted as saying in a Daily Mail report.<br /><br />We have collected a large amount of software projects, everything from design tools to robotic control systems, Lockney added.<br /><br />NASA would develop a 'GitHub for astronauts' by hosting the actual software code in its own online repository, which will be found at technology.nasa.gov.<br /><br />The data can be accessed free of copyright, but special clearance would be needed for anyone who wants to access projects like rocket guidance systems.<br /><br />With this data, people could put together their own rocket.<br /><br />One of the main goals of the database is to help develop technology that can be transferred to other sectors, the report added.<br /><br />These data may even help hackers and entrepreneurs push their existing ideas in new directions - as well as help trigger new concepts.</p>