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The AI Vendor Trap That Can Quietly Break a Company’s Strategy (and Business)

Artificial intelligence vendor selection often begins with a short pilot, a handful of impressive demonstrations, and a business case built around speed. The danger appears later, after employees build workflows, automations, data pipelines, retrieval systems, security controls, evaluation tests, and customer-facing processes around one provider’s application programming interface, pricing model, model behavior, documentation, and release schedule.

Eric Schmidt’s Relativity Space Gamble Could Turn a Rocket Company Into an Orbital Infrastructure...

Eric Schmidt became chief executive of Relativity Space in March 2025, replacing co-founder Tim Ellis after making a major investment and taking a controlling stake in the Long Beach rocket company. Relativity’s leadership page listed Schmidt as executive chairman and chief executive officer as of May 31, 2026, with Maria Seferian as executive vice chair and Kevin Wu as chief technology officer. Public reporting described the transaction as a control shift backed by Schmidt’s capital, rather than a documented purchase of 100% of the company. That distinction matters because control can redirect strategy even when earlier investors, employees, suppliers, and customers remain part of the company’s financial and operational structure.

SpaceX’s $26.5 Trillion AI Market: A Leprechaun’s Pot of Gold?

On May 20, 2026, Space Exploration Technologies Corp. filed a Form S-1 registration statement with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the document that precedes an initial public offering (IPO), applying to list its Class A common stock on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the symbol SPCX. Inside that prospectus, the company describes what it calls the largest actionable total addressable market in human history.

Texas’ Telescope Ranches: Remote Astronomy Under Dark Rural Skies

In November 2025, CBS News described rows of plain sheds in Rockwood, Texas, whose roofs open after dark to reveal hundreds of privately owned telescopes. That scene captured the basic appeal of Texas’ telescope ranches: ordinary rural land can become a distributed observing site when dark skies, reliable power, fast internet, protective buildings, and telescope automation come together.

Is China Right to Doubt Elon Musk’s Starship?

On May 26, 2026, the South China Morning Post published an article describing doubts within China’s space sector about whether SpaceX’s Starship can overcome its engineering and financial problems. The piece made China Starship concerns a broader space economy issue because Starship is not just another launch vehicle under test. It is SpaceX’s proposed foundation for lower-cost orbital transport, larger Starlink satellites, lunar missions, Mars logistics, and possible orbital data center concepts.

How Media Coverage Characterizes the Artemis Program

The media coverage of the Artemis program changed after Artemis II became a completed crewed lunar flight rather than a future milestone. NASA reported that Artemis II launched on April 1, 2026, on a nearly 10-day voyage around the Moon with Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen aboard Orion. That single event gave reporters new material: crew experience, launch operations, lunar flyby imagery, Orion performance, splashdown, and comparisons with Apollo rather than another cycle of schedule speculation.

The Role of Media in the Space Industry

The global space economy reached $613 billion in 2024, according to the Space Foundation, and commercial activity accounted for most of that total. That figure gives the role of media in the space industry a direct economic dimension, because space companies, government agencies, investors, insurers, regulators, suppliers, and end users all depend on information flows that convert complex activity into understandable public facts. Space media no longer means mission photographs, astronaut interviews, and launch-day television coverage alone. It now includes financial reporting, trade journalism, regulatory notices, livestreams, company updates, technical explainers, military-space briefings, scientific outreach, and public-warning communication tied to reentries, debris, satellite failures, or launch mishaps.

Orbital Data Center Companies Building Space-Based Compute Infrastructure

On January 30, 2026, Space Exploration Holdings filed an application with the Federal Communications Commission for a non-geostationary satellite system of up to one million satellites to operate as the “SpaceX Orbital Data Center System.” That filing pushed orbital data center companies from speculative infrastructure concepts into a regulatory debate about scale, spectrum, space safety, and commercial compute beyond Earth. As of May 15, 2026, the market includes dedicated startups, launch companies, cloud providers, satellite network operators, storage specialists, and hardware suppliers.

What Orbital Data Center Failure Modes Could Break Space-Based AI?

On January 30, 2026, Space Exploration Holdings, LLC filed an application with the Federal Communications Commission for a proposed non-geostationary orbit system of up to one million satellites operating as the SpaceX Orbital Data Center system. Orbital data center failure modes start with that scale, because the proposal moves artificial intelligence infrastructure from managed terrestrial facilities into a moving, radiation-exposed, thermally constrained orbital system that must also share low Earth orbit with existing spacecraft and debris. The FCC public notice states that the proposed system would operate from 500 km to 2,000 km, use high-bandwidth optical inter-satellite links, and conduct telemetry, tracking, and command operations.

How Does Open Source AI Software Compare With Leading Commercial AI Software?

On October 28, 2024, the Open Source Initiative released version 1.0 of the Open Source AI Definition, giving open source AI software a clearer test than model marketing language alone. Under that definition, an AI system should grant practical freedoms to use, study, modify, and share the system, including access to the preferred form for making modifications. That point matters because many systems marketed as open source AI software publish model weights without releasing the complete training data, training code, filtering methods, or documentation needed to reproduce or modify the system in the same way traditional open-source software can be modified.

What Type of Space Telescope Would be Capable of Imaging Exoplanet Surface Features?

Astronomers target Proxima Centauri b as the most accessible terrestrial exoplanet for direct observation. The planet orbits Proxima Centauri, a red dwarf star located about 4.24 light-years from Earth. NASA’s exoplanet catalog listed Proxima Centauri b at 1.055 Earth masses and an estimated 1.02 Earth radii as of its July 29, 2025 page update, making it a nearby benchmark target for discussions about future exoplanet surface imaging. Resolving surface features on an object of this size at interstellar distances requires optical specifications far beyond any observatory built by May 30, 2026.

The History of Soviet Human Spaceflight

On January 11, 1960, the Soviet Air Force formally established a cosmonaut training unit outside Moscow. The man who made that unit necessary had been working in near-total anonymity for years. Sergei Korolev, known to his colleagues only as the "Chief Designer," directed the design of every major Soviet launch vehicle and spacecraft of the era. His name wasn't publicly disclosed until after his death. Even the cosmonauts who flew the machines he built often didn't know his surname.

How Have Space Accidents Shaped Spacecraft Design and Operations?

Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee died inside their sealed Apollo 1 command module on January 27, 1967, during a routine ground test that no one had classified as hazardous. Pad workers spent roughly five minutes trying to open the hatch while fire consumed the cabin. That failure to exit, more than the fire itself, framed every crewed spacecraft hatch designed since.

The Long Tug of War Between Computing Power and Energy

ENIAC, switched on at the University of Pennsylvania in 1945, drew about 150 kilowatts of electricity to manage roughly 5,000 additions per second. A phone in a pocket today performs billions of operations each second on a battery the size of a credit card. That distance between what machines calculate and what they consume sits at the center of the relationship between computing power and energy, a relationship that has shaped chip design, supercomputing, and the build-out of data centers for artificial intelligence.

The AI Binge Is Over: Companies Rethink the Soaring Cost of Intelligence

Just months after Silicon Valley urged everyone to “use AI for everything,” the bill is arriving - and it’s bigger than expected. What started as a subsidized gold rush of cheap chatbots has morphed into an expensive reality check as businesses confront runaway costs driven by a new generation of AI tools.

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