The Next Frontier: SpaceX, Artemis II & China's Meteoric Space Ambitions
SpaceX accelerates its IPO plans to fund a satellite data empire in orbit, similar to Microsoft's former undersea project. Meanwhile, China's superlative fossils reveal diverse early life, and its space ambitions aim for a 2030 manned lunar landing. In parallel, NASA's Artemis II marks historic advances in human space travel.
SpaceX is expanding its horizon with a confidential IPO filing to fund its ambitious plan of launching up to a million satellite data centers into orbit. This move attempts to avoid Earth-based resource limitations, reminiscent of Microsoft's undersea data center experiment.
Meanwhile, paleontologists in China have uncovered a trove of fossils dating back to the Ediacaran Period. These findings push back the timeline for animal evolution, highlighting diverse animal life millions of years ago, contributing to the lineage leading to modern vertebrates.
In the realm of space exploration, NASA's Artemis II mission successfully launched four astronauts on its first crewed lunar mission in decades. As space competition heats up, China's plans to send humans to the moon by 2030 contrast with its current reliance on robotic missions.
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