Then I was trying to give that number some kind of scale.
Malcolm Gladwell had just brought his book out, the one where had said that you need 10,000 hours practice to become expert in something. So a concert pianist would put in 3 hours practice every day, every day, for 10 years. That sounds about right.
So the Moon landing is the equivalent of 10,000 experts. That's hard.
But it scales down I think. After 100 hours, you're pretty good at something. Imagine putting in 8 hours a week - one working day a week - every week for the next three months. 100 hours is nothing, but you'd be really pretty good. You could learn to dance, or to draw, or to program. Driving only takes 30 hours to learn. It's rare you put a consistent 100 hours practice into something, but it'd be worth it I think.
You know, in total, over three years and six missions, twelve men have spent, cumulatively, only one hundred and sixty man-hours on the actual surface of the Moon. It's not much.
Anyway. What's our Moon landing equivalent, for our generation?
Matt Webb, Web Directions South 2014 (Sydney, Australia), October 2014