For those of you, like myself, who are into the whole NASA thing, Cassini is scheduled to make its flyby of Saturn on July 1st, 2004. After that it will (should) start a 4-year tour of Saturn and its moons. Cassini left Earth 8 long years ago. Due to budgetary concerns, it had to do multiple slingshot maneuvers by other planets (Venus, Earth, Jupiter) to get it to Saturn instead of using a more powerful booster that would've drastically cut its transit time.
Here's a link to the
Cassini Homepage.
The Huygens probe will be released (from Cassini) on Christmas Day 2004 and will travel 22 days and plummet into the atmosphere of Titan - Saturn's largest moon. Titan is thought to have oceans of methane gas. Quite a wild place.
Also, I've attached one of the most recent pictures of Saturn that Cassini took on its inbound flight. It's suitable for wallpaper if you're so inclined.
That little white blip to the left and upwards is not a defect in the picture. It's one of Saturn's moons - Enceladus.
Just so you get an idea of scale - 764 Earths could fit inside Saturn. It's large, Marge.