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"I do think there is a link in that in both cases, writing fiction or writing a computer program, at any given moment you're focusing on a very specific and particular thing—one word, one line of code, whatever."
- Neal Stephenson

Spacedog  
  Experienced hands on space ships.  

As far as I know, this is the first appearance in a science fiction story.

When he recovered sufficiently to face the browbeating spacedogs that made up the Court, they had already made up their minds.
From A Question of Salvage, by Malcolm Jameson.
Published by Astounding Science Fiction in 1939
Additional resources -

Compare to astronaut from The Death's Head Meteor (1930) by Neil R. Jones, space pirate from Evans of the Earth-Guard (1930) by Edmond Hamilton, astrogator from The Conquest of Space (1931) by David Lasser, space men from Revolt of the Star Men (1932) by Raymond Z. Gallun, space marines from Misfit (1939) by Robert Heinlein, rocketeer from Sunward Flight (1943) by Leo Zagat and space cadet from Sunward Flight (1943) by Leo Zagat.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from A Question of Salvage
  More Ideas and Technology by Malcolm Jameson
  Tech news articles related to A Question of Salvage
  Tech news articles related to works by Malcolm Jameson

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