Project Mercury Project Mercury is the first manned space program in the United States and became the official NASA plan on October 7, 1958. The Mercury program has two big but broad goals. To survey and to survive in the space environment, to investigate the human ability to perform, and to develop space technology and hardware for the basic manned space flight program. NASA also had to find an astronaut to fly the spacecraft. In 1959, NASA asked the US military about a list of members who met certain qualifications.
Project Mercury and Project Oceanus take different approaches for the same timeline. Even though they are completely different, they are all Moonshot concepts we developed for the framework of 18 months. Project Mercury focuses on IoT hardware, machine learning and AI algorithms, cloud computing and big data. Project Oceanus is focused on payment processing, multi-platform application development, cross-border financing, and building high-value partner networks. Although there are differences, each stage of our framework has sufficient flexibility to deal with the two projects.
When we enter the New Year, we step back one step and evaluate the current state and direction of the Mercury Protocol. Through complex and multifaceted projects like Mercury, we completed several tasks earlier than expected and encountered other tasks. So I would like to add some updates to the roadmap (see below) and share the great progress I made during the vacation season. We are currently in the first stage and will eventually provide more detailed information on our technical solution, product design and business motivation. Timeline indices are approximate and the actual completion time of the line item depends on the speed with which the team is extended with excellent people.
But Mercury plan is far from failing. Scientifically speaking, this is a success and a big achievement. First of all, the three main objectives of the Mercury program are that humans invade the universe, study the human ability in the universe, and successfully and safely retrieve the goals of intact human and space capsules. Another reason why it seems to be successful is that all goals of the project have been achieved. This means that American scientists do something unbelievable for a long time and break through the boundaries of harsh and cruel space. Until someone recently did this, this is something Americans have never done before. From this point of view, the Mercury program has had some success, allowing American scientists to enter the next phase of space technology Gemini project.