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01:01No damage to any tiles, no major tape removals or anything, so it looked really good.
01:06We did side-by-side comparisons to Artemis I.
01:08It actually looks quite a bit better than even Artemis I did at this point in the mission.
01:13A beautiful view of the inside.
01:14Most of the daytime pictures we see are really lit up, so it was nice to see the crew performing
01:18some of the other operations in the capsule.
01:20As we just heard earlier, the moon is now closer to the crew than the Earth is, so we're
01:25really gearing up to support the fly-by.
01:27When they start the fly-by, they'll be able to see big chunks of the near side.
01:31That's the side that we can look up at night when they're observing the moon and be able
01:35to see that near side as well.
01:37As they get closer, they'll start to focus on that near side, far side transition.
01:41Again, the far side is the side of the moon that always faces away from our own planet.
01:44So as they get closer, they'll be able to see features that human eyes have never before
01:49seen.
01:50And then a really interesting opportunity we have for Monday's fly-by is we will actually,
01:56from the vantage point of integrity, the sun will pass behind the moon from their perspective,
02:02creating a solar eclipse from a perspective that is very, very unique to this mission.
02:06It will be a roughly 53-minute eclipse, and then they'll see sunrise where the sun pops out
02:11the other side of the moon.
02:12And I'm also curious to hear, you know, what everyone thinks about the Internet's fixation
02:16on the toilet issue.
02:18We're flying it for the first time.
02:19Apollo didn't have that kind of technology in the vehicle.
02:22So it's always a challenge.
02:25They still have challenges on the space station with toilets.
02:27It's just a very complicated thing to accomplish.
02:29First flight with some of the previous Dragon, Starliner, maybe.
02:34I mean, everybody knows how important that is to us here on Earth.
02:37And it's harder to manage in space.
02:40So it's—I'm interested in—you know, I'm in—I know we're in a good state right now,
02:47but I would really like for it to be in the best state that it can be for the crew's
02:52sake.
02:53Fifty years from now, what do you hope people will say this mission made possible?
02:58I would hope that people would say that this made possible a continued presence on the moon,
03:04that we are now living and working on a regular basis on the moon in 50 years.
03:10Lauren Grush with Bloomberg.
03:13I'm sure people across NASA would say that the Apollo missions got them here to this agency,
03:18working on this mission today.
03:19And I am just so optimistic for what this is going to do for the next generation
03:23and for the kids watching at home and the kids 50 years from now
03:27who are looking up at that sustained presence.
03:29This mission is just the first step.
03:31Thank you all for joining us for today's briefing.
03:34We have set up a frequently asked—
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