The post just kinda of was interesting since you don't often see "buying/selling water rights" here. But, it's obviously much more involved and probably more relevant now with data centers, chip factories, etc etc
normaleagle05 said:
What gave it away? The subject matter, or the student disdain for it?
Booster 20 has arrived at the Massey Outpost ahead of initial cryo-proof testing. pic.twitter.com/AxpwvkniW0
— Avid Space (@LabPadre) June 5, 2026
JUST IN: NASA orders International Space Station astronauts to prepare for evacuation as Russia attempts to fix a worsening air leak.
— Polymarket (@Polymarket) June 5, 2026
nortex97 said:JUST IN: NASA orders International Space Station astronauts to prepare for evacuation as Russia attempts to fix a worsening air leak.
— Polymarket (@Polymarket) June 5, 2026
Not good.
SpaceX just quietly amended its S-1 announcing another mega deal
— Shaun Maguire (@shaunmmaguire) June 5, 2026
$920M/month from Google from October 2026 through June 2029
With both parties being able to terminate the agreement with 90 days notice
Things are getting exciting 🚀 pic.twitter.com/vnEFaWrlXm
nortex97 said:JUST IN: NASA orders International Space Station astronauts to prepare for evacuation as Russia attempts to fix a worsening air leak.
— Polymarket (@Polymarket) June 5, 2026
Not good.
UPDATE ON THE SPACEX $SPCX IPO:
— IPO Newsroom (@IPONewsroom_) June 5, 2026
Investor demand is now roughly $150 billion, about double the $75 billion offering, per Reuters sources.
That's 2x oversubscribed.
For context, bankers told Reuters that 2x is "modest" by typical IPO standards. What makes it impressive is the… pic.twitter.com/tzgBkh6lUK
Quote:
NASA chief urges new ride for Blue Moon. Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket was supposed to launch the company's first lunar lander, Blue Moon Mark 1, sometime this fall. The Blue Moon test mission is an important precursor for Blue Origin's future human-rated Moon lander for the Artemis program, and NASA is eager to see it fly. The rocket's explosion on the launch pad last week makes a launch on New Glenn this year unachievable. NASA now wants to find an alternative launcher for the first of Blue Origin's Blue Moon demo missions, Spaceflight Now reports. In an interview with Fox Business on Thursday, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman described a "whole of government response" to the May 28 incident with the New Glenn. "We are also decoupling the lander from the launch vehicle and the pad itself," he said.
Only one option... "NASA is laser focused on the lander because we're laser focused on our mission to return astronauts to the surface of the Moon before 2028, and we're going be able to keep that lander in development, progressing, so it's available for our test mission in 2027, which is Artemis III, and potentially available to meet our landing objectives in 2028," Isaacman said.
A NASA spokesperson confirmed to Spaceflight Now that NASA would like to see the launches of the Blue Moon Mark 1 cargo lander and potentially the Blue Moon Mark 2 crewed lander move to a rocket that's not New Glenn. For Mark 1, at least, the only realistic option is SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket, but there are several technical hurdles to making that happen.
Anthropic and Google are now paying @SpaceX a combined $2.17 billon per month for compute capacity. That's a revenue run rate of $26 billion per year. BIG MONEY. https://t.co/SeKwWKMIQi
— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) June 5, 2026
✈️ JUST IN: The X-59 has gone supersonic!
— NASA Aeronautics (@NASAaero) June 5, 2026
The X-59 achieved supersonic speeds for the first time ever today — a major milestone for NASA’s Quesst mission and an important step toward upcoming flights that will demonstrate its quiet supersonic technology ahead of future… pic.twitter.com/mwblICs4vN
will25u said:✈️ JUST IN: The X-59 has gone supersonic!
— NASA Aeronautics (@NASAaero) June 5, 2026
The X-59 achieved supersonic speeds for the first time ever today — a major milestone for NASA’s Quesst mission and an important step toward upcoming flights that will demonstrate its quiet supersonic technology ahead of future… pic.twitter.com/mwblICs4vN
Is your company running low on money? Sneaker company? Jet manufacturer? If all else fails and you need revenue, turn to AI or data centers.Kenneth_2003 said:will25u said:✈️ JUST IN: The X-59 has gone supersonic!
— NASA Aeronautics (@NASAaero) June 5, 2026
The X-59 achieved supersonic speeds for the first time ever today — a major milestone for NASA’s Quesst mission and an important step toward upcoming flights that will demonstrate its quiet supersonic technology ahead of future… pic.twitter.com/mwblICs4vN
Not Space NASA, or SpaceX... But check out Mike Rowes recent podcast, The Way I Heard It, where he interviews the founder of Boom supersonic.
You'll recall these guys are developing a 60 seat super sonic passenger plane and the goal is no audible boom at ground level.
The sonic boom can be started do dissipate by a variety of factors... Shape of the pressure waves on the front and back of the plane, wave velocity variations with atmospheric temperature, and ultimately cruise altitude.
Their engines are developed and generating revenue as data center power. 46MW per engine
Boom team has finished assembly of the entire high pressure rotor system for Symphony. We’ve got 85% of engine parts in inventory now and are sprinting to get the rest of this motor built pic.twitter.com/6XBStWV04i
— Blake Scholl 🛫 (@bscholl) June 5, 2026
TexAgs91 said:
"NASA is laser focused on the lander because we're laser focused on our mission to return astronauts to the surface of the Moon before 2028"
I don't understand why Mk1 is required for Artemis III. There's other CLPS providers and there's another HLS provider.
TexAgs91 said:
"NASA is laser focused on the lander because we're laser focused on our mission to return astronauts to the surface of the Moon before 2028"
I don't understand why Mk1 is required for Artemis III. There's other CLPS providers and there's another HLS provider.
TexAgs91 said:
If you're going to build a lunar base, which HLS do you want to go with?