Tributes are still pouring in for Armstrong, known as a self-effacing space explorer who capped the most daring of the 20th century's scientific expeditions.
Jonni Ocejo was nine-years old when she watched the lunar landing with her family.
"I was a nine-year-old kid, right. That was a big remembrance for us. We all sat around the TV, and we all watched the whole process. It was a big deal. It still is a big deal."
Nathan Agarwal is a tourist at the NASA Museum in Washington, D.C.

"Someone's got to take that first step. In that perspective, that's Neil Armstrong. He's taken that first step. And so we remember when he passes that we need to just keep walking, keep walking so mankind can c