181 pointsby fprog5 hours ago25 comments
  • spankalee3 hours ago
    Oops, I read too far and come across these bangers in the next post:

    > In the long term, space-based AI is obviously the only way to scale.

    > My estimate is that within 2 to 3 years, the lowest cost way to generate AI compute will be in space

    Yes, Elon is very sane.

    • pveierland2 hours ago
      Beyond aggressively optimistic timelines, I find it difficult to disagree with the premise. The aggressively optimistic timelines is also what makes it feasible to even attempt these things, where e.g. the amount of iteration required for Starship would have broken most other companies.

      > In the long term, space-based AI is obviously the only way to scale.

      In the long term - all mass and energy available is outside of Earth - what is here is not even a rounding error. If you wish to continue scaling compute it then becomes a question of time before you'd want to go off planet. Personally I'm quite keen to see near term space based compute explored, as it could end up becoming a much better trade-off than allocating ever more ground to power and operate terrestrial compute which directly conflict with the biosphere.

      SpaceX started the Starlink design phase in 2015 - started launching Starlink satellites in 2019 - and they now have the most dominant satellite constellation ever deployed by a large factor. They have their own launch systems, launch sites, satellite bus, communication stack - both in-house designed and built.

      What is really going to be that difficult with space-based compute? Radiation hardening and cooling? These are clear engineering challenges that can be simulated, tested with earth analogs, and then rapidly iterated across design generations. There's napkin math all over the internet on this, but it really seems like small challenges compared to the other engineering SpaceX have already sorted.

      Beyond radiation / cooling / servicing - it seems like the biggest hurdle is to crack the scaling of designing / scaling the necessary amount of compute they will need to scale space based compute according to the laid out plans.

      • pibaker2 minutes ago
        > In the long term

        In case anyone is wondering how Tesla’s stock price remain wildly detached from its business reality, keep these four words in mind. If you can convince people that anything about you and your business has to be evaluated on a literally astronomical timescale, you can justify any valuation you desire, because your believers will give you infinite time to realize their investment returns. It has nothing to do with business. They are selling you a vision — which can also come in a pill form, labeled "salvia" and sold at gas stations.

        I still see people say the cybertruck is built for mars environments, conveniently ignoring the vast technological and economical barriers stopping us from driving commercially produced vehicles on mars. This space data center thing is the same deal. It doesn't matter how long it will take to solve the technical issues with cooling, radiation, maintenance. It doesn't matter if it will make economical sense or not. It doesn't matter if spacex will be the one to actually do it. You just have to believe, and give them some time — a lot of time, so much time that a monkey can type out Hamlet and type it out again backwards.

        See also the buffoonery coming out of Bay Area "effective altruist" and "longtermism" communities.

      • dnautics2 hours ago
        Yes, beyond the three things that are the hard parts it's easy.
      • illiac786an hour ago
        It’s like saying within 2-3 years the sun will go out.

        Almost correct, yes.

      • jatora2 hours ago
        biosphere interference from ground infrastructure? any idea the ground infrastructure it requires to support space based compute operations? i have a feeling that is comparable if not more impactful

        you also shrug off cooling. this is not a solved problem in any way. its not even approachable as of yet. the vast size of the radiators will be hilarious regardless.

        you ignore power generation. solar is not an option. so we also need nuclear reactors for these orbital data centers. thats cool spacex can just branch out into nuclear too! love the idea of unmanned nuclear orbiting behemoths.

        speaking of orbital.. what is their orbit? do they go out to Lagrange points? hilariously far? or do they stay close? hilariously fuel intensive to stay out of the atmosphere for such massive structures?

        but hey, maybe we distribute spaceX-AI gpu's across starlinks. a couple solar panels and a tesla battery per gpu. all launched there by spacex

        'all mass and energy available is outside of earth' Yeah, and out of range for compute data connections too.

        I don't agree with the feasibility or ANY sort of practicality to this whatsoever. Im all for going for it, but I wish everyone could just admit that we're doing it because it's cool, not because it's useful. I get why Elon wont say that, but not us.

        • joha4270an hour ago
          Your feelings are obviously your own, but a Starlink terminal isn't that big and can transfer quite a lot of tokens.

          Every single satellite has sufficient cooling for its power production, otherwise they would be frying. Waste heat from a GPU is not materially different from waste heat from an amplifier. That's not cooling entire racks, but I don't think anybody talks about putting entire racks in space anymore.

          I'm very much pro nuclear, but a solar cell in a sun synchronous orbit is pretty great too and eliminates most battery requirements

          I very much doubt the economics of this makes sense, but I don't think a lot of your criticism is valid.

      • skybrian2 hours ago
        > all mass and energy available is outside of Earth

        Manufacturing capabilities are quite lacking, though, in the short and medium terms, so this doesn't seem all that relevant.

        Maybe a self-contained, modular solar panel / radiator / compute unit could be built, but it will be manufactured on Earth. (Where the fabs are.)

        And it still seems easier to put solar panels and batteries near the data centers that SpaceX is already building on Earth.

      • ulfw2 hours ago
        > Beyond aggressively optimistic timelines, I find it difficult to disagree with the premise. The aggressively optimistic timelines is also what makes it feasible to even attempt these things, where e.g. the amount of iteration required for Starship would have broken most other companies.

        Instead of wasting huge amounts of land to farming, restaurants and transportation of food it would be so much better if everyone just had a Star-Trek style food replicator in their house.

        None of the tech exists but fuck it. Why bother with realities of life?

        I am raising 200 Trillion Dollars for AI Space FoodX. Who is in?

      • Teever2 hours ago
        All of this may be true but the scale that Musk is talking about would require an immense amount of solar panels -- and if he has the means to produce so many solar panels why not use them to solve our climate and energy crisis on Earth?

        Seems more like a grift to me, after the car grift and the Mars grift didn't pan out.

        • cameldrv2 hours ago
          I’m not saying the math checks out, but the argument is that you get full sun with no atmospheric losses 24/7, so you produce way more energy per panel, and you don’t need batteries, because the power production is consistent and predictable.
          • robertjpaynean hour ago
            Problem wont be energy input it'll be heat dumping. You can't transfer heat in a vacuum effectively -- just go google how large the International Space Station's radiators are just to ensure its electrical systems are cooled adequately.

            Unless someone figures out how to break the laws of thermodynamics there's never going to be a cost effective DC in space.

            • Dylan16807an hour ago
              To keep everything under 100C (or 50C), your radiator surface area is in the same ballpark as your solar panel surface area. No laws of thermodynamics need to be broken. But you do need very low launch costs.

              Edit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_equilibrium_temperat... A blackbody sphere near Earth's orbit balances out to almost exactly 0C. A sphere has about 4x as much radiating surface as capturing surface. A flat surface facing the sun that would have 2x, front and back.

      • ActorNightly2 hours ago
        >These are clear engineering challenges that can be simulated, tested with earth analogs, and then rapidly iterated across design generations.

        They can. But in Elons case, its going to be his style of sending failure after failure up in the space, getting something working part time, lying about it and exaggerating how good it is, and then making fun of others for not using his inferior product.

        Pretty much like everything else he has done.

      • slimebot802 hours ago
        "aggressively optimistic timelines is also what makes it feasible to even attempt these things"

        yawn, people keep making this excuse on behalf of the South African investor with poor technical expertise.

    • ryzvonusefan hour ago
      > Yes, Elon is very sane.

      tbf, a 'sane' person wouldn't have started a rocket company and an ev company, at the same time, in a recession.

      He has never been sane. and that has made all the difference.

      • grey-area26 minutes ago
        He didn’t found Tesla, he bought it then called himself founder.
      • fulafelan hour ago
        Tesla and SpaceX were both founded outside of recessions about 1 year apart, between the early 2000's recession and the great recession.
      • illiac786an hour ago
        You are saying he got lucky? That doesn’t necessarily mean he will continue to be lucky.
        • onehairan hour ago
          They mean, to attempt things that seem very difficult to normies like you and me, and be successful at it, one needs to be insane.
    • neuronexmachina3 hours ago
      I'm basically assuming that "space-based data centers" are some Glomar Explorer-style cover for something else.
      • Enginerrrd3 hours ago
        Yeah, I agree. A massive radar network, passive or active is the most likely possibility I have come across. You'd need a LOT of compute at each node to get the most out of the network. I found this video[1] to be a pretty convincing analysis of the absolute max capability you could expect, and it would indeed be impressive.

        [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbp3kdJZ1_A

      • Fordec2 hours ago
        I assume because the Mars goal is as good as dead with what they're finding out about the complexities of building Starship that they can barely get it back down to this planet, never mind back from a second one.

        This "space datacenters is more important than colonizing the universe" thing is just to deflect from what would be an inevitable failure because if they do this pivot, they can push out the timeline for that further than the original 2026 on Mars goal that they are about to wildly overshoot.

        • weregiraffe44 minutes ago
          SpaceX perfected Falcon 9 reuse, they perfected Dragon, they perfected Starlink. Are you seriously going to bet they can't improve on the Space Shuttle? Which is what Starship/Super Heavy is, Space Shuttle idea implemented correctly.
      • gpm2 hours ago
        The more straightforward explanation is that it's a story that Elon (probably correctly) thinks will sound good to wall-street and enable him to take a ton of the publics money when SpaceX IPOs and gets added to the S&P for himself.

        In other words good old fashioned plausibly deniable securities fraud.

      • trothamel3 hours ago
        It's putting AI processing out of the reach of hostile local, state, and international governments. Does it need to be a cover?
        • gpm2 hours ago
          > It's putting AI processing out of the reach of hostile local, state, and international governments

          It isn't... the hostile local government can seize the ssh keys you use to control it and take it over just fine.

          The hostile international non-local super power just gained a new ability to jam communications or destroy it with a bit of deniability too.

          • trothamelan hour ago
            So, that's generally not something local governments do in the US. They do things like increasing taxes on data centers, denying water rights, electric interconnection rights, etc. (At least, all of this has been threatened against data centers.)
            • gpman hour ago
              The US government, and sub-governments routinely exercise control over data centres, typically by the simple act of issuing a subpoena or warrant or weird national security document. They will entirely retain this power. And the power to force compliance with force if they need to (though they typically don't).

              Local governments in the US practically never exercise control over data centers by doing any of the things you just discussed. There's a reason why you're saying "this has been threatened". It's a strange new thing resulting from bizarre current behavior - behavior and a resulting trend that started after Elon started talking about space based data centers, and thus cannot be the cause of it.

            • runako42 minutes ago
              PRISM[1] has been publicly-documented for over a decade. China, Iran, Russia, among others obviously also intervene in electronic communications at a low level.

              I'm not caught up entirely, but I would imagine that NSA's capabilities have advanced beyond what has been published from slides created nearly 20 years ago.

              1 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PRISM

        • rasz2 hours ago
          >hostile ... international governments

          you mean other than China, russia, NK and Iran?

          • trothamelan hour ago
            SpaceX's launch capacity is an order of magnitude larger that all four of those put together.
            • gpman hour ago
              Which is irrelevant because offensive launches can destroy many orders of magnitude more launches worth of payloads. Even with simple kinetic means. Though these days I think I'd expect to see directed energy weapons adding even more zeros to that.
        • wahnfrieden2 hours ago
          A cover is going to have a plausible enough sounding justification that you’ll believe and defend
      • dnautics2 hours ago
        The math works out if you project certain macro trends out a sufficient amount of time.

        I think if fusion is real, it might not be so advantageous until space mining is a thing.

      • gct3 hours ago
        They'll put up thousands more starlinks and track every mobile device on the planet simultaneously, might as well have a homing beacon in your pocket.
        • yellowbkpk3 hours ago
          Check out this video that goes into a very deep technical explanation about how the satellites can be used as a Synthetic Aperature Radar to build a realtime representation of the entire globe at meters of resolution: https://youtube.com/watch?v=jbp3kdJZ1_A
          • piloto_ciego2 hours ago
            Oooh, yeah, this is going to be a key to it too, Gorgon Stare on steroids.
      • 2 hours ago
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    • legitster2 hours ago
      One of the underrated topics about space right now is the potential supply of rockets outstrips demand by a lot.

      We're simply out things we can profitably send to space so SpaceX and others are trying to come up with ideas to induce demand.

      My understanding is that Starlink mostly grew out of the same need to justify scaling up rocket production.

      • dopa423652 hours ago
        Before LEO internet constellations, even the leading nations had just ~20-25 launches per year each, and a good chunk of those were for ISS services.

        Other than the occasional GNSS, weather, scientific, broadcast and surveillance satellite, there's not all that much worth sending into space.

        • fragmede2 hours ago
          I, and I'm not alone, would pay a giant pile of money to go into space for a holiday.
          • illiac786an hour ago
            That ought to be the most CO2 heavy holiday I can think of. I wish it could be made illegal, but I am certain there will always be one country allowing it.
          • verzali36 minutes ago
            And yet space tourism ventures consistently struggle to be viable. Even SpaceX barely bothers with that market.
      • jjmarran hour ago
        I don't know why space marines aren't a thing yet. The USA could put a rapid reaction force of Tier 1 Special Forces onto a space station and deploy them through atmospheric re-entry anywhere on Earth within 30 minutes.

        I can only assume "too easy to track" is part of the logic.

        Ditto for kinetic strikes. That was super hyped up.

        • illiac786an hour ago
          The cost would be insane. And it wouldn’t be near 30min, you’d need lots of teams to reach this, driving the cost further up. Need to rotate them on a regular basis. And soldier without gravity for months at a time are definitely not fit for combat.
          • jjmarr23 minutes ago
            > The cost would be insane.

            Yeah, that's why it'd be a good way for SpaceX to make money.

      • elbastian hour ago
        This is correct. The only problem that "data centers in space" solves is the problem of trying to scale a rocket company where the potential demand for rocket launches is simply not that big.
      • dzhiurgis2 hours ago
        > potential supply of rockets outstrips demand by a lot.

        IDK I think plenty of people will want to go to space or even cut 24 hour flights across the world to 90 minutes.

        As for experience - it's going to be pricy, but look how many multi-million dollar yachts are out there, parked, doing nothing. People do have money for such experiences.

        • scared_togetheran hour ago
          I think for travel around Earth, supersonic passenger aircraft are more feasible than rockets. Even if we consider sonic booms, a lot of routes where rockets would be desirable are across uninhabited oceans.
          • dzhiurgisan hour ago
            Somewhat agree. Boom has demonstrated something, but Starship looks more ready than them. Plus it's going to be vastly more faster and more impressive.

            Sonic boom can't be the limiting factor forever.

    • iamgopal2 hours ago
      He is talking about distributed AI, with their own AI chip, ( may be they can work at higher temperatures allow it to slowly cool to space ? ) not space station size server farm. By that, energy requirements will also be reduce, my biggest concern is, if every one starts doing it, in no time, millions of satellites will be in the space
    • piloto_ciego2 hours ago
      Honestly, I think he's spot on, and I normally am not fond of Elon's public behavior. I mentioned in another thread that they're getting around having to ask permission to build datacenters by doing it in space. The entire thing is to avoid NIMBY stuff I'd bet.
      • kelnosan hour ago
        It would be orders of magnitude cheaper to buy up islands and space in countries that don't care, and then find ways to connect them to the required infrastructure, than it would be to build them in space.

        Hell, it would be cheaper to figure out how to build them on the ocean.

      • MattDamonSpace2 hours ago
        It really depends on scale. There will be enough terrestrial vetoes that if what we build is 10-1000x what people are already halting through legal challenges
        • piloto_ciego2 hours ago
          I doubt it. Like, I hate to have to be the bearer of bad news, and maybe it’s my weird arctic anarchist soul, but, the old world order, the need for these companies to follow rules at least in spirit? That’s dead now. There are no laws but the laws of physics and the the laws others force your organization to follow.

          I recognize that that is distressing to people, hell, it’s been obvious to me since I was at OWS in my 20s. But we are in a new world now and the old rules don’t apply. A company that has the backing of the government to launch their spacecraft will simply do it. You think Texas is going to stop them? Or Florida? Or even California? Of course not.

          A lot changes in a world where you can plan things out with AI. A lot changes in a world with abundance. If we play our cards right we could have the culture, but that means letting go of the conservative yearning to put things back to how they were. The old world is 10 light years away now, it wasn’t as great as we remember it and it ain’t coming back.

          And if I had to choose, I’d much rather have datacenters in orbit than one burning hydrocarbons loudly 2 blocks from my kids’ school.

          • Dylan16807an hour ago
            > And if I had to choose, I’d much rather have datacenters in orbit than one burning hydrocarbons loudly 2 blocks from my kids’ school.

            Yeah, but that choice is nonsense. Mandate that datacenters on the ground are on 100% green power and quiet, and they'll still be way way more cost effective than the orbital option.

            • piloto_ciego18 minutes ago
              You don’t get it. Sorry, this is an “is-ought” thing. Sure we could mandate this. But are we going to? Do the systems exist that would actually mandate this?

              Looking at things right now? I would say no. We will see, maybe in up my own ass on this, but I see a pretty big set of changes coming down the pike. Adapt or die (as unpalatable as that may seem).

              • Dylan1680714 minutes ago
                If you don't mandate anything, then they're going to build the dirty one.

                So what kind of laws would lead to the orbital option being preferred over the ground-based clean option?

                • piloto_ciegoa few seconds ago
                  Well, arguably from the get go an orbital datacenter would be better. If launch costs were low enough I would say that as much industry as possible should be moved off planet, and we should make earth into a garden?
          • runako39 minutes ago
            > the old world order, the need for these companies to follow rules at least in spirit? That’s dead now

            Pendulums swing. Anyone advocating for the development of more advanced technologies should be in favor of a system of fair laws enforced robustly. One need only look to countries that lack this foundation to understand why.

            • piloto_ciego15 minutes ago
              Not arguing that this is “good” rather that this is the way things are now.
      • Dylan16807an hour ago
        You can build a completely self-powered (and water-free) datacenter in the middle of nowhere for far cheaper than the satellite version. The NIMBY factor isn't so powerful as to keep datacenters off entire continents. Going to space for that is very stupid.
        • piloto_ciego17 minutes ago
          You still have to ask someone permission on the ground. It’s not about the money.
          • Dylan1680712 minutes ago
            Yes, someone. Just a couple have to say yes out of so so many municipalities.

            So I'll just say the same sentence again. The NIMBY factor isn't so powerful as to keep datacenters off entire continents.

      • lucisferre2 hours ago
        • piloto_ciego2 hours ago
          Admittedly it is not my field, but back of the envelope calculations in a sun synchronous orbit with the radiators pointed towards deep space seem pretty plausible with about 1.3 to 1.7 ratio of solar area to radiator area.

          Like, it's not "great" but if you're not flying around the sun every 72 minutes or whatever and you can keep your panels sun on and radiate into deep space, the numbers aren't bananas.

          • Tostino2 hours ago
            But you need a lot of fluid or gas to move the heat in that radiator system, whereas solar has the benefit of extremely efficiently moving power around at great distances through wiring or integrated bus bars.

            And you need to get the heat away from the central point to the extremities of the radiator as much as possible. So you can maximize how much energy can be radiated away.

            Seems like the weight of the system would be an issue with whatever gas or liquid you used to fill those radiators, but maybe I'm wrong...

            • piloto_ciego16 minutes ago
              Scott Marley’s got a video on it. The numbers work out.
        • YZF2 hours ago
          https://youtu.be/FlQYU3m1e80

          "Is It Really Impossible To Cool A Datacenter In Space?" - Scott Manley

          tl;dr -> not impossible.

      • idiotsecant2 hours ago
        Building datacenters in a medium where the main waste product (heat) is incredibly difficult to get rid of, there is zero opportunity for maintainance, and the fuel to get to site costs more than the site does. Makes perfect sense, spot on!
        • ericd2 hours ago
          Does the fuel cost that much? Just doing some back of the napkin doesn't seem to bear that out. Looks like the fuel load is about $2M, and gets you 100 tons to orbit. I think an inference-optimized NVL72 GB300 rack costs around 3x that, >$6M. That thing eats about 150kw, call it 10 pallets of 30 500W solar panels. Each pallet's about a ton, and costs about $10k. Let's be conservative and say the radiator's about the same weight. In reality, they're not going to be using commercial panels with heavy glass facing designed to resist hail, so should be better than this.

          But anyway, conservatively, about 20 tons each, it seems like you could fit at least 5 of these per starship, assuming it's weight and not volume limited. Doesn't seem like fuel's a prohibitive portion of the cost here. But if they can't get it to their no-refurb-between-launches target, then that might be a significant part of the cost.

      • ActorNightly2 hours ago
        The model 3 was Elons last great idea (if it was even his). Since then, he has been wrong pretty much about everything.

        Its to the point where anything he says is guaranteed to be wrong just on the merit that its coming out of his mouth.

    • novok3 hours ago
      He is talking about energy costs.
      • Enginerrrd3 hours ago
        Right but it's famously difficult to cool things in space since you have basically zero convective or conductive heat transfer, so I don't think that makes a lot of sense.
    • senectus12 hours ago
      long term is doing a lot of heavy lifting here...

      in the very broad shoulders of long term, he's probably right.. its why the concept of a dysonsphere is around. you can get uninterrupted 24/7 free energy.

      but yeah, the tech is a long way away.

      *Edit: lol My estimate is that within 2 to 3 years, the lowest cost way to generate AI compute will be in space.

      i think 2-3 years is a very unlikely outcome.

      • tsimionescu2 hours ago
        Dyson spheres (or the more plausible sounding Dyson swarms) are not an actual physically possible thing, they're just a nice sounding sci-fi trope, like teleporters or replicators.

        Freeman Dyson invented the concept as a joke against SETI, especially designing it to sound quasi-plausible.

        In reality, there is no way to create a stable structure of this size, it would be like trying to balance a building on the top of a pinhead - except the pinhead is a chaotic, unpredictable star. And the amount of energy required to displace multiple planets worth of mass, manufacture some amount of it into complex satellites, and then displace this amount again to a "stable" Solar orbit simply doesn't exist in the Solar system, on any plausible time scale (it would take many thousands if not millions of years worth of solar power to do so).

      • Melatonic2 hours ago
        I agree - long term I can see highly distributed compute ( like tons of small satellites ) becoming a cool space thing. And eventually a ringworld like thing or dysonsphere

        But 2 to 3 years?! Seems crazy

    • drivingmenutsan hour ago
      Pretty normal for Elon: big promises, generate interest and funding, then fail to deliver. But by that time, he’s got his trillion-dollar paycheck and is working on his next scheme.

      We used to eliminate Nazis, not invest in them.

      • inglor_cza minute ago
        "We used to eliminate Nazis, not invest in them."

        US history is more complicated than that, and aside from those four years of hot war, more ambiguous.

        Henry Ford was a big Nazi sympathizer, and the Apollo program was led by an actual card-carrying Nazi engineer with a history of overseeing slave labor in a concentration camp.

        Which is not meant to defend Nazis, just correct the myth that the US was once somehow morally pure in this regard.

    • ulfw2 hours ago
      I am sick of living in this world where the richest scam artist can get richer and richer and richer with lies and lies and lies and empty promises and there is no SEC, no anything to stop him.
      • parasubvertan hour ago
        What makes Elon complicated is that he is not just a scam artist. He has an eye for talented people that do good engineering while working for him, in spite of his personal flaws.

        For all the lies, bad behavior, and broken promises, SpaceX's achievements and reliability record is still incredible, X/Twitter hasn't crashed and burned after all the layoffs and drama, and Tesla (until recently due to his meddling) had a lock on the leading the car industry's direction & doing a lot to drive practical electrification globally.

    • jiggawatts3 hours ago
      He isn't entirely stupid though.

      Every journalist keeps talking about "data centers" in space, like they're giant buildings with square miles of solar arrays.

      "Hurr, durr, the tech bros are clearly crazy!" say the arts majors that didn't listen to, or understand the talks by the people proposing to put AI compute in space.

      What Elon and co are talking about is simply a matter of putting a somewhat bigger solar panel on a Starlink satellite along with a handful of inference-optimised neural processor chips onto its motherboard, side-by-side with the existing electronics.

      They're just talking about launching a slightly bigger and slighty more power hungry version of Starlink. That's it.

      "We'll need thousands of them!

      Yes, they know.

      Starlink is already planned for a scale of tens of thousands of satellites. With Starship V3 scaling it to hundreds of thousands is (almost) no big deal.

      • AlotOfReading2 hours ago
        Even assuming "that's it", why not just install it in e.g. Morocco instead? It's not like space is any easier to access than the Sahara, and saving a few dozen ms of network latency isn't particularly valuable when your TTFT is measured in tenths of a second. Sure, sun synchronous orbits are a thing, but you also need more expensive panels and the comparative efficiency will decline over time vs land-based hardware as your chips fail (wasting that part of the resource budget) and the land hardware gets upgraded.
        • derektank2 hours ago
          >why not just install it in e.g. Morocco instead

          The number of political actors that can stop you from building in Morocco (or confiscate/damage your invested capital once you deploy it) are numerous. The number that can do so in space? Maybe a half dozen. We’re already seeing states and municipalities in the US moving to ban data centers and the energy infrastructure needed to power them. Building in space faces no such procedural roadblocks.

          The economics still seem like an open question, but if the demand for compute is high enough, space based data centers might be the only option

          • AlotOfReadingan hour ago
            Let's not forget that physics confiscates satellites pretty quickly too. I realize I didn't say it explicitly, but I was assuming that this hypothetical land-based hardware would have access to only the same resources available to the satellites, namely sunlight and a network connection. That makes it somewhat less politically charged than a DC tied into local infrastructure.
        • notfried2 hours ago
          If AGI were to happen, or if AI became a trillions-of-dollars-generating industry, you wouldn't want to have your data-centers which might be the most valuable thing on Earth be located in a foreign country. All this investment in infrastructure is not purely based on where the industry is now, but predicated by where those who are bullish about it think it will be in 5-10 years.
        • MattDamonSpace2 hours ago
          You need permission to do that in Morocco
        • Melatonic2 hours ago
          I think Elons version is totally crazy but the idea of edge computer (maybe for latency or something) on each satellite above your head could make sense. It could even integrate well with larger terrestrial datacenters (like your example of Morocco) depending on use case
      • magicalhippo44 minutes ago
        So it'll be more like Hertzner[1] in space. Each node just doing its own thing.

        Not sure about the cost perspective but, at least that makes more sense than a giant brick floating around.

        [1]: https://lafibre.info/hetzner/over-200-000-servers-in-one-pla...

      • magicalistan hour ago
        > "We'll need thousands of them!

        > Yes, they know.

        > Starlink is already planned for a scale of tens of thousands of satellites.

        Meanwhile Google installed that many TPUs yesterday afternoon. The idea is still stupid.

      • winfredJa3 hours ago
        issue is land based will still be cheaper. there are lot of cool things we can do in space, i’m not convinced putting data center is one of them.
        • jiggawatts3 hours ago
          Elon explained the logic at length in an interview: Cheaper != Available.

          The availability of power is the constraint almost everywhere, no matter how much money you throw at it.

          Gas turbine production has a many-year backlog. Everybody that can make the single-crystal superalloy turbine blades is fully booked for most of a decade and can't expand capacity for years (at least).

          Meanwhile, putting a slightly larger solar panel onto a satellite is a trivial engineering excercise and has no blockers in 2026.

          Disclaimer: Personally, I suspect all this AI-in-space "talk" from Elon is just cheap marketing to boost the IPO of xAI.

          • dullcrisp2 hours ago
            Okay but why not take that slightly larger solar panel and leave it on Earth?

            Is the sunlight millions of times brighter beyond the atmosphere? I don’t get it.

            • ericd2 hours ago
              In space, that solar panel is always in the sunlight. No clouds, no night time. Weirdly enough, earth is a more challenging environment in some ways for solar. You need to lay out >3x the number of panels on earth to get the same power production, and you need batteries or a grid interconnection as a buffer.

              Also, there's a populist backlash on building datacenters, power transmission infra, and power generation in many areas on earth. Locally, we have a number of people complaining about solar arrays going up on farmland, even though it's the farmers choosing to do it. "It's an eyesore".

              • dullcrisp2 hours ago
                How big is it? I have some space I’m not using, no pun intended.
                • ericd2 hours ago
                  How big are panels? If you get 60 cell panels, about 68x45 inches/1.7m x 1.1m. Our home array is 60 of those, 24kw.

                  Example of a spec sheet: https://signaturesolar.imagerelay.com/share/ffc69ee2265b4613...

                  If you mean the farmers' arrays, those are meant for commercial generation, so a good bit bigger, but one nice thing about solar is it's extremely modular, and you can fit it to the land. I believe bigger panels are more common for commercial, but I think it's a lot nicer to handle 40-50 pound panels than 70 pound panels.

            • piloto_ciego2 hours ago
              You have to ask permission to build it somewhere. Nobody is going to stop you in space.
            • dzhiurgis2 hours ago
              > Okay but why not take that slightly larger solar panel and leave it on Earth?

              Because panel cap factor is about 10-20% to begin because day and night exists on earth. Say you wanted to power it on solar + batteries and picked Australia. You pick place that has decent port and most exposure, i.e. Port Hedland. In winter, daily average drops by 20%. Also because atmosphere - 30% less insolation when compared to space. Finally add 10-45% cooling losses.

              Which effectively means you need something at least 10-20x more panels + batteries to match space.

          • troyvit2 hours ago
            What are the benefits of a solar panel in space vs a solar panel here on Earth? I get that there's less "night" up there, and there's less interference from the atmosphere so the solar is more efficient, but is it that much more efficient that it actually makes more sense than solar panels on earth?
            • shaewest2 hours ago
              Admittedly asked Claude, but improvements are estimated to be x6-8 improvements on energy collection
    • 3 hours ago
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    • 3 hours ago
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    • aaron6952 hours ago
      [dead]
    • nailer3 hours ago
      This person made self driving cars work years after they’d been written off, made reusable rockets and has people with locked-in syndrome speaking to their families. Why do you think he wouldn’t be sane?
      • gamblor9562 hours ago
        We had all those things without Elon Musk and the alternatives do it better.
    • 011000113 hours ago
      You've got to give him credit though. His caustic managerial style seems to have borne fruit despite his lack of engineering or technical skills. He has been supremely effective at defining a vision(however delusional) and attracting funding.

      Will we get to Mars soon? Hell no. But we may end up with a world-leading launch provider based in the US and that's a clear win for the country.

      • avmich3 hours ago
        > despite his lack of engineering or technical skills

        At least he has B.Sc. in physics and got admitted into Stanford.

        I think what Elon says is better explained not as a promise what would happen, but rather as a goal which they're going to aspire to. It kinda supports the idea "we're in business of converting impossible into late". If Elon will start offering more "realistic" schedules, the pace of SpaceX will slow down, perhaps considerably. So, yes, it's "Elon time", which historically isn't particularly precise, but still useful.

        • verzali32 minutes ago
          I have a physics degree. It is not at all the same thing as an engineering degree.
        • wahnfrieden2 hours ago
          The physics degree is a deception and perhaps fabricated: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35594076 (and it was a BA not BSc though that matters less)

          And the Stanford admittance was for materials science, not physics as he lies about

          • tzsan hour ago
            > and it was a BA not BSc though that matters less

            I've got no opinion on the existence and legitimacy of any degrees Musk may or may not have, but whichever he does have you really can't infer much at all from whether a STEM degree in the US is a BA or a BS without looking at the specific requirements for the degrees at the particular school.

            Some schools might give a BA for a program and other schools might give a BS for a nearly identical program. All of these happen in the US:

            • BS is the only choice. (Caltech, for example. In fact, Caltech only offers BS for everything. Even English majors--and yes, there is an occasional English major at Caltech--end up with a BS).

            • BA is the only choice. UC Berkeley is an example in this category for math and physics.

            • Both are offered, with identical coursework and requirements. You can have whichever you want. Some will even for a small fee give you two diplomas, so you can use whichever seems appropriate for the situation.

            • Both are offered, from the same department, with different in-major coursework and aims. One may be aimed toward students aiming to go into research, and one toward those aiming to go into teaching, for instance.

            • Both are offered, from different departments. For example, UC Berkeley's College of Letters and Sciences offers a BA in chemistry, and the College of Chemistry offers a BS in chemistry. Computer science can be taken at Berkeley in the College of Letters and Science for a BA, or in the College of Engineering for a BS.

            • Both are offered, with the same in-major coursework, but differ in out-of-major requirements. So, the BA and BS would require the exact same science and math courses, but the BA has specific breadth requirements to produce a well rounded education, whereas the BS lets you take pretty much what you want as long as you satisfy the math and science requirements and any general requirements of your school.

            • wahnfrieden39 minutes ago
              Yes that's why I said it matters less. Musk represents it as a BSc because it sounds more impressive even if it doesn't matter in his case which one it is. It's still something he misrepresents for clout though.
          • avmich2 hours ago
            I agree, but the idea that he doesn't have skills is still incorrect.
      • nomel3 hours ago
        > Will we get to Mars soon? Hell no.

        How much did he bring in that timeline?

      • dodu_2 hours ago
        You absolutely do not, under any circumstances, have to give him credit.

        Chronic over-promise, underdelivery.

        Where was the nearly 3T of fraud he said he'd uncover in the US government, again? Was that a clear win for the country?

        But hey at least he's effective at getting people to give him money, I guess, which is an indistinguishable "skill" from that of someone who is able to convince people to buy an online course on how to make money online.

        He just does it at a bigger scale so people are quick to suck him off. How we are still falling into the "money = smart/competent" trap in <<current year>> is beyond me.

      • Forgeties793 hours ago
        Don’t buy into the 2010’s Tony stark persona. His momentum is clearly slowing because he can’t put his politics and rather fucked social values behind business sense.

        I have immense appreciation for what SpaceX has done for humanity. I’m not being dramatic. Reusable rockets alone is an incredible achievement. But he’s lost the plot. He needs to drop his right wing bullshit and stardom chasing if he wants to be taken seriously again. The dude won’t even acknowledge his own kid because of his politics. I will never trust someone who makes that decision, personally. His judgment is beyond clouded.

        The Elon bros will be mad but whatever. One day he’ll maybe remember why folks liked him. Hitching his wagon to Trump was a dumb move.

        • JackFr2 hours ago
          I think it’s tough to stay grounded when you’re as rich as he is. (To be clear, my intent is to explain and not excuse the path he’s taken.)
        • fragmede2 hours ago
          Not getting invited to the EV summit would have pissed me off if I were in his place. The Trump thing; it sounds like the government was going to go after him for various violations, and hitching his wagon to Trump was his way of getting out of that jam.
        • Petersipoi3 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • Forgeties793 hours ago
            > Before he bought Twitter, you could be banned from essentially all the big social networks for bullshit such as "misgendering"

            If you think musk hasn’t banned people for bullshit you’re not looking at all. The site has suspended literally millions of people since he took over. He banned the jet tracker by creating a curated doxxing policy specifically designed to cover his ass.

            You need to spend 5min with a search engine. The myth that he has made it more open and free speech friendly is just that.

          • whattheheckheck2 hours ago
            [flagged]
  • beambot3 hours ago
    Those Raptor 3 engines are a thing of beautiful simplicity compared to their forebears...
    • eagerpace3 hours ago
      And to think, it wasn’t that long ago competitors we still using old Russian engines for their domestic rockets. Brilliant work to get back to leadership in this domain.
      • kobieps2 hours ago
        The outcome is guaranteed to be entertaining
  • BoxedEmpathy3 hours ago
    I really hope I get to see a permanent settlement on Mars or the moon. I don't care who settles it I just want to see humanity reach for the stars.
    • elevaet3 hours ago
      We don't even have permanent settlements on Antarctica. Don't hold your breath.
      • AlexErrant3 hours ago
        • ActorNightly2 hours ago
          Permanent means self sustaining. I.e biodome completely isolated from outside with its own atmosphere.

          None of those are self sustaining.

          • hvb243 minutes ago
            Why on earth (pun intended), would you want that?

            You don't want to be there? Almost every other place on earth is better. So you send a skeleton crew along with what they need.

            If it is to test an actual community living isolated, sure. But I think it'll always be different because you know that help is at most a few months away and probably a lot less. I don't think you can fake that, unless you're never told you're not alone

          • kelnos43 minutes ago
            > Permanent means self sustaining.

            No it doesn't. "Permanent settlement" just means it's not temporary, only intended for a short-term mission.

          • femtoan hour ago
            There's an argument that Earth, as a biodome completely isolated from outside with its own atmosphere, also isn't self sustaining.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_Overshoot_Day

            I'd keep the Moonraker film in mind as a metric for self sustaining colonies created by billionaires. They can't be trusted unless they are also working to fix what we already have.

  • ivolimmenan hour ago
    Saw some photo's and the first thing that stands out: the American flag. What's up with that? If you see a product launch in Europe there will be no flag in the photo's (non that I ever saw).
    • chrisco255an hour ago
      Almost any average factory floor in the U.S. has an American flag hanging somewhere. Sorry Europe doesn't have any pride in itself!
      • ivolimmen42 minutes ago
        I don't think showing a flag is a sign of pride, and as I watch the news it is currently a very misplaced pride in America.
    • sixothreean hour ago
      The flag has been coopted as a symbol of right wing nationalist politics. It's the easiest way to identify the right - their very strange love of the flag.
      • a34729t31 minutes ago
        One of the dumbest things ever was the left giving up on the flag. The only way this makes sense is if much of the left actively disdain most of the nation (ie Stanford vocabulary guide around American flag being a triggering symbol or something ridiculous). I dont see how the left and patriotism are incompatible...
        • archagon2 minutes ago
          The left (or center) did not "give up" on the flag. It's all over the place in protests.
      • mdeeks44 minutes ago
        What? There are three flags flying in my street alone and I'm in the middle of the liberal bay area.
  • slac3 hours ago
    Gotta pump that Grok IPO /s Seriously though, the whole SpaceXAI makes zero sense to me. SpaceX was a wonderful company and there was zero need to pollute it with Twitter and a service that creates sexual images of people without their consent.
    • mrandish3 hours ago
      I was initially very skeptical about the viability of space-based data centers but after a couple hours reading papers, studies and summary technical assessments I realized there are a range of credible expert viewpoints from, "pretty unlikely" to "it could actually work". There at least appear to be plausible, though unproven, solutions to the most obvious drive-by objections I had off the top of my non-expert head.

      Of course, there are still a lot of unknowns, any of which could prove fatal to the concept but I'm no longer comfortable just dismissing it as "obviously ridiculous."

      • Teever2 hours ago
        Putting a datacentre in space may be feasible but the scale that he's suggesting is really unbelievable.

        And if he's actually capable of producing solar panels in the quantity that he's talking about in the time frame that he's talking about -- why doesn't he just put them on earth to solve our growing climate change problems and fuel shortages?

        • mrandish2 hours ago
          > but the scale that he's suggesting...

          Well, yeah but that's just Elon being Elon. At this point I think even the most pro-Elon folks freely admit "The first rule of Elon is: 'Ignore everything he says about timeframes and scale.'"

      • foxylad2 hours ago
        Did you find a credible solution for heat dissipation in the papers you read? I fear the laws of thermodynamics will kill this project.
    • xbmcuser3 hours ago
      Tesla has been out competed in Batteries, EV's and Robots so this is his new move. He did something similar with his solar panel company put it inside Tesla and then it has almost disappeared from the news. He puts the AI company inside of Spacex makes up a lot of unrealistic numbers to pump up price and captures most of the stock gains from Spacex IPO by diluting others people shares.
    • grey-area24 minutes ago
      Don’t forget solar city. There is precedent for this, it is how Musk operates and it’s far more about protecting his investments and letting him use the company for his own enrichment than what makes sense for the company.
    • etchalon3 hours ago
      You forget that Musk has to make all the idiots who gave him capital for Twitter whole, somehow.
  • a34729t3 hours ago
    The new more powerful engines with built in heat shield are a phenomenal achievement. Hopefully they perform as good as they look!
  • Fordec2 hours ago
    The thing which is seemingly missing from this is their current largest hurdle emerging from the V2 testing. The heat shields keep failing.

    I guess the focus is going to be on getting stuff up, rather than back down. Thus the Starlink and data center plays, not human space exploration.

    • fwipsy2 hours ago
      It's okay, Mars doesn't have much atmosphere. We can figure out how to bring them home later.
  • hparadiz4 hours ago
    Close ups of the tail fins and the hull exterior have little hex tiles covering the entire tail fin assembly. There's also different sizes of tile. Exciting to see if that will be enough structural reinforcement.
    • randallsquared4 hours ago
      Yeah, the tile complexity is worrying. I hope they're able to simplify that or fully streamline the manufacturing and attachment. From the outside, the tiles seem like a Shuttle re-run, and refurbishment of those was one of the long poles in reuse.
      • larusso3 hours ago
        But for the shuttle each title was kinda unique and had a specific spot. If they managed to find a shape where you don’t have to mark each tile but can just pull them from a box for replacement is a huge win. Maybe even have some spares and allow them to be replaced during an EVA. This was all not really feasible with the Spaceshuttle.
  • arjie2 hours ago
    Incredible to get insight into the new things they're trying. Back in the day of the old Space Race this kind of thing was impossible and now an enthusiast can just follow along as incredible feats of engineering are performed. Great stuff!

    I imagine at least some of the reason to chase the AI datacenters in space thing is because Starship is "too capable" if it succeeds. It makes available a technology that does not have a short-term utility that people will pay for. Starlink was something that's been useful as telecoms but perhaps that market is saturating. It makes sense to pursue what is currently high-utility but is not being met because of terrestrial constraints.

    Well, good luck to him. A lot of smart people are chasing this idea and I can't seem how it could work, but I was honestly surprised that Tesla hit its production goals, and I was honest surprised that SpaceX hit success so fast, and I was honestly surprised by the rise of LLMs, so the truth is there are lots of paradigm shifts I just miss: BEVs, cheap space, AI.

    Someone once tweeted something like:

    > Less intelligent people perceive more intelligent people as incredibly lucky. They always make inscrutably stupid decisions, unjustified by visible information, and somehow fate rewards them for this.

    But also, I'm just hoping that a new era of space exploration will open up in my lifetime. That sounds incredibly cool! And I dare say there are many people like me in the US at least judging by the popular baby names of this era, which have seen spikes in Aurora, Nova, and Luna - and in the one my daughter has: Astra.

  • elbastian hour ago
    Your daily reminder that there is no scenario in which putting data centers in space is easier than putting them in Texas, or Morocco, or literally anywhere else.

    The only problem that "data centers in space" solves is the problem of trying to scale a rocket company where the potential demand for rocket launches is simply not that big.

  • kyriakos4 hours ago
    Page banned in my country apparently
  • TheServitoran hour ago
    Pay your taxes, Elon
  • dmix4 hours ago
    One more week

    > Liftoff will occur at 6:30 p.m. ET on Monday (May 19)

    https://www.space.com/space-exploration/launches-spacecraft/...

    • laweijfmvo4 hours ago
      isn’t Monday the 18th?
      • tristanj4 hours ago
        Yes, the linked space.com article has an error. The launch is happening Tuesday the 19th.
        • mcbits4 hours ago
          I prefer to call it an unplanned calendar learning opportunity.
  • Melatonic2 hours ago
    Definitely some cool photos of Starship V3 - how much of this is new info vs just a press release style announcement? I havent been following the latest rocket news much
  • 4 hours ago
    undefined
  • christkv2 hours ago
    I wonder how you solve the cooling issue as you can only shed heat via radiation.
    • choilive2 hours ago
      Stefan-Boltzmann law means radiative heat transfer in space is approx. to the 4th power of the hot side of your radiator. Typical space based radiators operate around 350K. If you can increase the hot side of the refrigeration cycle by 4x (1400K) you increase heat transfer by 256x. Create a radiator design that can operate at this temp (multi-stage Brayton loops, heat pumps, possible liquid metal final stage) with a large enough surface area and now a datacenter in space seems possible.

      It's a difficult engineering challenge but physically possible, and Elon is no stranger to engineering challenges.

      Some numbers: assume an emissivity of 0.85, assume no absorption from the sun, assume heat rejected from both sides of a panel, a 1m^2 panel will reject 1.45kW/m^2 @ 350K.

      At 900K its 62 kW/m^2. Not a trivial amount of heat.

  • seemaze2 hours ago
    Aerospace vessel, not terminal prompt.
    • bashtonian hour ago
      I was also disappointed to discover this.
  • 7ean hour ago
    V3... the third major redesign, and the second unplanned one. How many verisons will it take? Will Starship beat Full Self Driving into production, or will the hyperloop steal the show? Will it take longer than the Tesla Semi (9 years and counting) or will it pull a Tesla Roadster and never launch at all? Either way, it's sorely needed to meet Musk's goal of landing on Mars by 2018. Or at least to get to zero new cases by the end of April.
  • 4 hours ago
    undefined
  • danpalmer3 hours ago
    I used to follow Starship so intently, similarly NASA things, but Musk's antics, politicising of everything he touches, the increasing use of NASA as US propaganda, has all really put me off it. It's hard to get excited about these things anymore, which is sad because they're otherwise legitimately exciting.
    • gpt53 hours ago
      Why is everything today has to be "good" or "bad". Where is the nuance? Where is seeing things as they are - an exciting endeavor built by thousands of people, one of them has flaws you don't like.

      The rise of moralization of everything is really killing online discourse. It's gotten to the point where people will now mostly criticize and support ideas based on who proposed them, and not based on their merits. Tribalism at its worst.

      • nomel3 hours ago
        My theory is that tribalism is hard coded in our brain, strongly selected for by those bad times in the past, where the ability to turn off emotion and critical thoughts meant you, a generally social creature, could murder your fellow man, to keep your family/in group alive/fed.

        I think religion helped reduce tribalism, at a societal level, by making evil/demons/bad acts as the "them" and everyone that went to church on sunday (it was the whole town previously) was the "us". Now, without religion, and the physical/social bringing together it brought, that hardware in our brain still tries to segment a clear "us"/"them", but with much less guidance.

      • ryandrake3 hours ago
        People who themselves eschew nuance should not be surprised when they and everything they touch are polarized into "good" and "bad" buckets. I'm pretty neutral to most companies on earth, because their CEOs wisely don't make wild comments every other day on their personal politics.
      • ianburrell3 hours ago
        This isn't a new thing, ideas and actions have always been judged by who says them. If anything, the difference is that in the past, his behavior would have gotten him thrown out both from his companies and out of polite society.
      • danpalmer2 hours ago
        I hoped to get across that I still find this to be a nuanced issue. I like the content, I just dislike the discourse around it, which makes it hard for me to get excited about the content.

        I too would like it to just be about the content, but nothing exists in a vacuum.

      • philipbjorge3 hours ago
        This seems like less of a today thing and more of an ancient human tendency.

        A lot of Buddhist practice is basically trying to train against immediately collapsing reality into self/other, right/wrong, craving/aversion.

        Practicing this with Elon Musk is effectively ultra hard mode.

        --

        Though I do think there’s a subtle irony here too — the original commenter may simply be describing their own emotional reaction/disillusionment, while your response risks collapsing them into "part of the problem."

        Feels like everybody in the thread is pointing at the same tendency from different angles.

      • stickfigure3 hours ago
        Musk is not just "one of them"; the financial success of SpaceX is extremely unevenly distributed.

        Personally I am looking forward to the post-IPO world where a lot of very smart people with hard-won knowledge will have their golden handcuffs off.

      • bigyabai3 hours ago
        If you replace "online" with "modern", then your comment could be an impassioned 1940s-era defense of Nazi Germany for their "merits" in face of their flaws.

        The sum of these merits adds up to something. SpaceX is a political venture, and just like the uncomfortable questions that Microsoft/Google/Apple all pose, it's worth asking what the consequences will be in the long term. Lawful intercept sounded like a great plan, before it was leveraged by America's adversaries in Salt Typhoon as a prepackaged surveillance network.

      • Mars0083 hours ago
        [dead]
      • qsera3 hours ago
        >people will now mostly criticize and support ideas based on who proposed them, and not based on their merits.

        "People" were always like that and will be so..stupid. Let me quote Agent K from MIB for you.

        > A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky, dangerous animals and you know it...

        The funny thing is that these are the same people who applauded obvious scams because Musk proposed it when they liked him...

    • ghshephard3 hours ago
      Just realize that Gwynne Shotwell is the driver for 99% of the day-day at SpaceX and you can ignore everything else.
      • danpalmer2 hours ago
        This used to be my rationalisation, but my understanding is that Shotwell is the driving force behind the commercial and Falcon sides of the business and that there's a quite strong cultural divide between that and the Starship/Starlink side of the business which is driven by Musk. Apparently there's a lot of culture clash there.
      • mrandish2 hours ago
        It's funny because I when realized it was signed by Elon I immediately wished it had been signed by Gwynne instead (although I'm sure she reviewed it anyway). I just knew being signed by Elon would push responses to being (even) more about Elon and divided along partisan political lines.

        Which, at this point, has already been beaten to death and is just... tiresome. While discussing the broad concept of space-based compute in general (outside of SpaceX, Elon, etc) can still actually be interesting.

    • GroksBarnacles3 hours ago
      I'm with you. Everything government that at least still pretended to serve the public interested and greater good has been openly captured by individuals and movements concerned with some more selfish agenda.
    • nilamo3 hours ago
      Weird AI photos on this article, too. Like, it's cool. Take pictures of the cool thing you actually have.
    • BenFranklin1003 hours ago
      The after effects of DOGE has left the NIH in tatters. Staff has been gutted, grants are months and months behind causing research groups and startups to go under.

      Whatever good Musk has accomplished with SpaceX will be offset by the harm he has done to biomedical research in the final accounting.

    • bigyabai3 hours ago
      > the increasing use of NASA as US propaganda

      NASA has been propaganda since Operation Paperclip, sadly. It's hard to politicize something that's always been political, even if Musk gives Peenemünde optics a run for it's money.

      • danpalmer2 hours ago
        Of course, which is why I said "increasing". NASA is propaganda, but when the focus is on scientific advancement I can get behind that (as a non-American).

        The problem is the recent shift away from science towards a more performative roadmap – getting to the Moon (again) is about showing off US might, not about science this time around, at least that's how it's being messaged. Many pure science endeavours have been canned. And the Artemis missions have a strong vibe of propaganda to them with slick marketing designed to emphasise America.

        I guess to sum it up: doing good stuff and being seen to be good because of it, is fine, but making a show of doing good stuff explicitly for show, while behind the scenes doing as little as you can get away with, is not.

        • orduan hour ago
          > getting to the Moon (again) is about showing off US might, not about science this time around

          The first time around it was also about showing off US might. I don't think that something has changed much. Maybe wild Musk's lies are the only thing that was added.

    • 3 hours ago
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    • narrator3 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • emkoemko3 hours ago
        umm we all helped? its called taxes... how do you think Starship is being funded ?
        • eagerpace3 hours ago
          By an already super profitable SpaceX. The moon stuff is a drop in the bucket and only came well after success.

          What other company would you rather see funding go to?

          • overfeed3 hours ago
            > What other company would you rather see funding go to?

            I'd rather not give any welfare-queen company another taxpayer dime.

            • eagerpace3 hours ago
              Exactly. Complain but no other option.
              • overfeed3 hours ago
                The framing was BS. "I protest being groped without consent by this one guy". "Oh, which other goateed, gold-chain wearing pervert would you rather do it?"

                "None" is a full, and adequate answer.

                • eagerpace2 hours ago
                  We’re talking about rockets, not politics.
        • BoxedEmpathy3 hours ago
          Mostly starlink
  • phren0logy3 hours ago
    I was disappointed when this was not the command line prompt library
    • analog_daddy3 hours ago
      Yeah same here. Isn’t it weird, thet i used to be a lot more excited about space travel however, as I grow older I am excited about things more closer to me. Still curious, but focus has shifted from great for humanity to will make my life easier. Just feels more closer and impactful (to me).
    • icosahedron3 hours ago
      Same!
  • moralestapia4 hours ago
    Yay, go Elon!

    What SpaceX has accomplished is just phenomenal.

    • brcmthrowaway3 hours ago
      Found an investor in the IPO
      • BoxedEmpathy3 hours ago
        I don't like Elon and I'm still going to buy into the SpaceX IPO
        • stickfigure3 hours ago
          Why? Have you run the math and genuinely belive the future profits justify the valuation, or is your thesis that there will be greater fools?

          Do you actually believe this data centers in space nonsense?

  • sergiotapia3 hours ago
    Spacex may be the most important company on the planet. What greater goal is there than expanding humanity to the stars!
    • AlexErrant3 hours ago
      Is this rhetorical? Feeding the hungry. Healing the sick. Educating the masses. Etc, etc.

      I'm a big space fan, don't get me wrong. But your exuberance uh, needs tempering.

    • nilkn3 hours ago
      We have about 600 million years before we'd need to perform serious planetary engineering to remain on Earth and about a billion years before humanity must leave Earth to survive.

      Right now, the greatest threat to our survival and prosperity is humanity itself.

    • imbusy1113 hours ago
      Figuring out a way to coexist peacefully before expanding any further.
    • tfyoung3 hours ago
      Looking after the humanity we already have?
  • gok3 hours ago
    It's a fascinating design but it's been 14 years since the concept was first announced and it's never really completely worked. If it ever was possible, it's not clear the talent for it still works for SpaceX.
  • vzaliva4 hours ago
    Reading reports of people objecting datacenters build in their states I wonder how Florida residents feel about the Spaceport ? It will certainly be more distruptive than datacenters.
    • chrisco255an hour ago
      Florida residents are extremely proud of space coast and have loved hosting rocket launches for 60+ years. Absolutely no problems at all with it. Will be great to see Starships launch from Cape Canaveral soon.
    • vjvjvjvjghv3 hours ago
      Some people close to their facility in Texas aren’t too happy with the noise.
      • r14c3 hours ago
        From what I understand about the Texas facility, SpaceX has also not honored their agreements regarding protected wildlife zones in the area. Damage from explosions is understandable, but they apparently not taken sufficient precautions to protect the surrounding area from their regular operations.
      • chrisco255an hour ago
        Noise never stopped people from moving to Cocoa Beach, Titusville, Cape Canaveral, etc in Florida. They been blasting rockets from there since the 1950s.
    • nik2820004 hours ago
      There's only one Spaceport.
      • gpm3 hours ago
        SpaceX has openly advertised their intent to turn starship into a faster long distance travel alternative to airplanes. Their intent, should all go well, is to have many, many, spaceports.

        For their conventional space launch operations they also want multiple... to target different orbits, and to parallelize the high volume operations they anticipate.

        There's already two Starship launch sites. The one in use in Texas, and one (LC-39A) in development at Kennedy Space Center, Florida. And there's good reason to believe they've begun planning a third in Louisiana. https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=64900.0

    • 4 hours ago
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    • jdw643 hours ago
      [dead]
    • tristanj4 hours ago
      A spaceport will probably use less water /s

      On a more serious note, the Cape Canaveral area / Kennedy Space Center has a large amount of empty land to build space infrastructure. The island has been dedicated to space facilities since the 1960s. Both SpaceX and Blue Origin have facilities there.