So, because we aint going to be in the EU, the UK is now looking to make it's own satellite system, rather than relying on being in the Galileo club as a locally-controlled backup to GPS (and GLONASS, and now BeiDou), and all at at a cost of £2.5Billion (20% from the UK government, who have no better things to splash the cash on, obviously, given the guaranteed Brexit dividend and absolutely no health emergencies at the moment).
It's going to be called OneWeb, apparently, but that either sounds rather pathetic
or Evil Overlord speak for a Planetary Subjugation Project launched under the guise of something far more innocent and philanthropic. And Elon/Jeff have already bagged stakes in the latter, in the general field of orbital domination, with local lad Branson who is part of OneWeb with his LauncherOne project still currently far behind.
So, I was wondering what it
should be called. British 'counterpart' to Galileo, so something like Newton?
Maybe not.. Actual less-diverse astronomers would be better, so Herschel? (German-born, both of them). Halley? (Lost your signal, just wait 76 years to reacquire...). Lovell? (Already honoured with a radio-telescope.) Recent names like Couper or Moore? Branching out again, Hawking, Pillinger, May (living) or Cox (ditto)?
Actually, from that selection I'd go for May. Because it May happen. It could be over in a Flash if we find ourselves Under Pressure, but it would be Heaven For Everyone if The Miracle happens and we Break Free with our One Vision to be Princes Of The Universe No, no, Don't Stop Me Now, though I know I'm Going Slightly Mad...Of course, it's as likely to end up as Satellitey McSatelliteface, if left up to the British public to name it, but (mostly, but not exclusively, aimed at non-Brit forumites) what do
you think fits our doubtless not-going-to-overrun-and/or-get-cancelled attempt to paint a Union Jack in the heavens with yet more satellite tracks? Who[1] should we name the system after?
Asking for a Boris...
[1] Or what... BeiDou is named for the Big Dipper, an actual inspired choice given the asterism is used as a guide to find the Pole Star in actual feats of navigation by the stars. (n.b., "Polaris" is already in use, and it would be unfortunate to talk of "Britain's Polaris Satellites". Especially if that's their true secret...)
edit, while I'm correcting some trivial but bad phraseology: vvv Oh yes, I like that one... Good start!! vvv