Recent
Satellite Services for Greenhouse Gas Emissions Monitoring
Japan’s GOSAT began observing atmospheric carbon dioxide and methane on January 23, 2009. NASA’s OCO-2followed on July 2, 2014, and OCO-3 started work from the International Space Station in 2019. That long buildup explains why satellite services for greenhouse gas emissions monitoring in April 2026 sit between science program and operational market. The tools are real, the buyers are real, and the uses are no longer confined to academic papers.
Virgin Galactic Narrows Losses and Advances Delta-Class Program as Commercial Spaceflight Nears
Virgin Galactic Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: SPCE) reported its first-quarter 2026 financial results after market close today, revealing a continued pre-revenue phase marked by sharply reduced operating expenses, a narrowed net loss, and steady progress toward resuming commercial human spaceflights with its next-generation Delta-class SpaceShips. The company reiterated that flight testing remains on track for the third quarter of 2026, with the first commercial spaceflight scheduled for the fourth quarter - milestones that could mark a pivotal shift after years of development delays.
FCC Regulation of Satellite Laser Communications
The Federal Communications Commission regulates satellite communications through a framework built mainly for radiofrequency links, not optical beams. FCC regulation of satellite laser communications starts with that boundary: the agency’s ordinary spectrum-allocation system governs radio waves, and U.S. rules define radio waves as electromagnetic waves with frequencies below 3,000 GHz. Optical communications, including most laser links used for space communications, operate far above that range.
NSF Launches $1.5 Billion X-Labs Initiative to Accelerate Breakthrough Science Beyond Traditional Institutions
The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) today announced a major new program: the NSF X-Labs initiative, backed by a $1.5 billion investment over the next decade. Designed to foster “generational breakthrough science efforts,” the program will fund independent teams of researchers, engineers, and entrepreneurs who operate outside conventional academic or industry labs.
BryceTech Forecasting Retrospective Analysis and What It Says About Predicting Technology
The BryceTech forecasting retrospective analysis traces back to an August 13, 2012 final article prepared by Carie Mullins of The Tauri Group for the Office of the Secretary of Defense. The article, titled Retrospective Analysis of Technology Forecasting: In-Scope Extension, examined whether past technology forecasts could be evaluated in a systematic way and whether measurable patterns could explain why some forecasts succeeded and others failed. The document’s cover identifies the producer as The Tauri Group and notes that the team later became part of Bryce, formerly Tauri Group Space and Technology.
The Origin and Refinement Over Time of the Kardashev Scale
In October 1964, Soviet Astronomy published Nikolai Kardashev’s Transmission of Information by Extraterrestrial Civilizations, the five-page paper that introduced the classification now known as the Kardashev scale. The paper did not begin as a general ranking system for civilizations. It began as a radio astronomy problem: how far could a signal travel, how much information could it carry, and what power level would make an artificial source detectable from interstellar or intergalactic distances?
Forecasting Disruptive Technologies and Anticipating Disruptive Innovation
In 2010, the National Academies Press published Persistent Forecasting of Disruptive Technologies, the first of two studies prepared through the National Research Council for defense and intelligence sponsors concerned with technological surprise. Persistent forecasting of disruptive technologies, as described in those studies, treats prediction as a continuous learning system rather than a single forecast frozen at one point in time. The work grew from a defense problem, yet its logic applies to corporate strategy, public policy, research management, investment planning, and civil preparedness.
FAA Problem of Overestimated Launch Demand Forecasts 1995 – 2017
May 8, 2017, marks the date of Past and Future: An Analysis of the FAA Commercial Space Transportation Forecasts, a George Washington University International Science and Technology Policy capstone study by Nathan Boll, Michael Sloan, and Erika Solem. The study examined Federal Aviation Administration commercial space transportation forecasting from 1995 through 2017 and asked a direct policy question: how well did the forecasts anticipate actual commercially addressable launch activity?
Hughesnet Satellite Subscriber Losses and the New Shape of Rural Broadband
Hughesnet satellite subscriber losses became a defining rural broadband story in May 2026 after PCMag reported that the service had fallen to 681,000 broadband subscribers by March 31, 2026. The figure came from EchoStar’s first-quarter 2026 results, which also reported a decrease of about 58,000 broadband subscribers during the quarter. That was sharper than the 30,000-subscriber decrease reported in the same quarter of 2025.
International Crew Manifest 2020-2028: The Human Spaceflight Traffic Map of a Crowded Decade
The International Crew Manifest covers the period from late 2019 through 2028, with the International Space Station (ISS), China’s Tiangong space station, commercial orbital missions, Artemis lunar flights, and suborbital passenger flights compressed into one dense visual schedule. The infographic’s value is not limited to the names and mission patches. It shows how human spaceflight changed from a small sequence of government expeditions into a crowded traffic pattern involving national agencies, private spacecraft operators, commercial astronauts, tourist flights, cargo vehicles, and future lunar missions.
NASA’s Next-Gen Space Processor for More Autonomous Spacecraft
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced on May 12, 2026, that its NASA next-gen space processor has entered a testing phase at the agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Southern California. The processor belongs to NASA’s High Performance Spaceflight Computing project, usually shortened to HPSC, and NASA describes it as a radiation-hardened, high-performance system intended to deliver a large increase in spacecraft computing capacity.
How Satellite Services Support Autonomous Weapons
On 1 April 2026, the chair of the United Nations expert group on lethal autonomous weapons systems circulated a summary of its March session in Geneva. That timing matters because the question of how satellite services support autonomous weapons now sits inside live debates about procurement, military doctrine, and war law. In practice, satellites do not supply autonomy by themselves. They supply the services that make autonomy travel farther, sense earlier, and act with less dependence on a nearby human operator. The most important of those services are positioning, navigation, and timing, or PNT, long-distance communications, remote sensing, missile warning, and environmental data. A system may carry its own onboard software and sensors, yet its military value changes sharply once it can draw on orbital infrastructure for updates, targeting data, and global timing. The International Committee of the Red Cross defines autonomous weapon systems as systems that select and apply force after activation based on information from the environment. The current DoD Directive 3000.09 uses related language for autonomous and semi-autonomous weapon systems and places policy controls on their development and use.
The Role of Social Media Influencers in the Space Industry
NASA invited social media creators to speak with the Artemis II astronauts near the Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft at Kennedy Space Center on January 17, 2026, a scene that showed how the role of social media influencers in the space industry has moved from informal fan commentary into organized public outreach. NASA’s own Social program gives selected digital creators access to missions, people, and programs so they can share spaceflight stories with their audiences, and that approach now sits beside press briefings, livestreams, agency websites, and traditional news coverage.
Allied Orbital Warfare Planning and the New Phase of Military Space Operations
The United States and six close military space partners are developing a joint plan for future “orbital warfare,” according to a May 12, 2026, Breaking Defense report based on comments by U.S. Space Command Commander Gen. Stephen Whiting. The plan is being developed through Multinational Force Operation Olympic Defender, a military space coalition involving the United States, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. Whiting said the participating nations expect to complete a collective concept of operations for defending orbital assets by the end of 2026.
Satellite Services for Carbon Markets
In 2025, emissions trading systems generated about $80 billion in revenue, according to ICAP 2026. At the same time, Sylvera 2026 says 2025 retirements were 168 million credits and total spending reached $1.04 billion. Satellite services for carbon markets sit between those financial flows and a hard practical problem: a market can only price what it can observe, measure, and defend under audit.















