But onto the topic, I am hopeful that independent companies will develop space industry. NASA has too much middle and upper management to be effective at anything. We need new companies to launch untested rockets into the skies.
I disagree. If private companies were to develop the space industry, it would all be based around profit. Personally, I'd like to see space exploration as a furthering of science, and pushing humanity's boundaries to the limit. There comes a time when companies stop caring about being new or innovative, and just do the same thing over and over, because it makes a profit (when was the last time we saw a true innovation in the way a stapler works?) Companies won't care about science for science's sake.
That said NASA really doesn't do much on their own; they're really just a funding giant. Universities and companies spend thousands of dollars to make proposals for NASA, in the hopes of getting millions/billion to go through with the project. Sometimes NASA will call for companies to build something specific, in which case you have a bidding war. But still, NASA doesn't really do the research or building. They're a funding and regulation agency. I prefer that to single corperations in control, as it leaves the rest of us (speaking for myself as an upcoming scientist at a university) with some power to see our experiments put to the test.
On another off-topic note, do you know how they plan to land the next Mars rover? First, they have a platform that gets into the lower atmosphere via the usual methods. But it doesn't land. No, instead, it
hovers via
rockets, under its
own guidance (due to 10-minute light-distance between Mars and Earth) and lowers the rover down on a
cable, and then
flies off, leaving the Mars Science Laboratory to do its work. What could possibly go wrong? I laughed when my professor told me about it, until I realized he was serious. The MSL also comes with a laser which can vaporize rocks (or martians), to get a feel for their chemical composition. Oh, and it's powered by a nuclear reactor, and is a couple million dollars over budget and a few months behind schedule.