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🇺🇸 CARGO FROM SPACE: UNDER AN HOUR, ANYWHERE ON EARTH Next-day delivery just got vaporized. Los Angeles-based aerospace startup Inversion has unveiled Arc, a reusable space vehicle designed to drop cargo from orbit to any point on the planet in under 60 minutes. Thousands of Arc craft would sit...

302,860 views • 9 months ago •via X (Twitter)

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🚨 HUGE ANNOUNCEMENT 🚨 Copernic Space is tokenizing and commercializing data centers & AI in orbit soon! Read about real commercial cases on board such as Syntilay in Bloomberg (Bloomberg), SPACE.com, and more incoming! 🌍👀 🚀 We’re turning data centers and computation in space into a programmable, commercial platform for use by entities in space and on earth. Together with OrbitsEdge, Copernic Space is launching the first commercial mission for space-based AI and blockchain applications set for Q1 2026. It’s another foundation and standard we're building for a space asset segment and the new off-planet economy. 🛰 Space = the Next Data Center Real commercial access to AI-powered orbital computing Blockchain nodes and tokenized file services from space All tokenized and monetized via the Copernic Space marketplace "Within a decade, mining Bitcoin and computing AI models can be cheaper and greener in space than on Earth." — Rick Ward, CEO, OrbitsEdge 🌌 The First Commercial Framework for In-Space Computation Radiation-shielded Qualcomm AI chips running onboard Tokenized digital payloads, your apps, data, and AI agents in orbit DeFi-powered mission financing already executed on Copernic Space “We’re creating financial and commercial standards for computation in space as Real-World Space Assets (RWSAs).” — Grant Blaisdell, CEO, Copernic Space 🛠 REAL use cases on board: 👟 Syntilay, created by Reebok Co-Founder Joe Foster and Ben Weiss , will create the first-ever AI-designed shoes in microgravity, tokenized by Copernic Space, and produced on Earth via Zellerfeld . 📡 511 Innovations will run real-time AI to optimize satellite communications using orbital telemetry. And that’s just the beginning…

👨‍🚀Copernic Space🚀

10,185 views • 1 year ago

🚨 Why is China urging against the US having a Missile Defense System? I 100% believe there was a plan to detonate a major EMP Nuke over America… Let me explain… Whether or not you paid any attention to the Q drops, the drops literally talked about a 16 year plan to destroy America by installing Obama and Hillary Clinton 8 years each, which involved a EMP strike on America. “KILL NASA (prevent space domination/allow bad actors to take down MIL SATs/WW secure comms/install WMDs) - RISK OF EMP SPACE ORIG (HELPLESS)” Obama deliberately weakened U.S. space defenses by canceling NASA’s Constellation program in 2010 and retiring the Space Shuttle in 2011. So between 2011–2020, he intentionally created vulnerabilities by limiting U.S. ability to maintain defense satellites critical for detecting EMP threats—high-altitude bursts that could disrupt military and civilian systems. What this equates to is, an EMP payload would have detonated in space somewhere over the continental United States, disabling ALL satellites, including US Military satellites, leaving our military vulnerable (helpless). That is what Q alluded to. Whether or not you like Q, Q was 100% on point with the 16 Year Plan, and what Obama did in his 8 years as president — he began destabilizing the country and destroyed our military readiness. An EMP attack would be just as deadly, or even deadlier than a nuclear attack… without the fallout. If Q isn’t your cup of coffee, there is tons of evidence to prove Donald Trump has been preparing for this for a very long time. What did Donald Trump do just after he got settled into office in 2017? He Created Space Force… Donald Trump did not mention Space Force ONE SINGLE TIME, during his entire run for office in 2016. Trump was briefed… and as Trump says, one day, he’s going to tell you how great and important they are. • June 18, 2018: Trump - announced his intention to create the U.S. Space Force and directed the DoD to begin the process of establishing it as a new military branch. - January 2019: Trump signed the Space Policy Directive-4, formally directing the DoD to establish the Space Force as a branch under the Air Force. • March 2019, Trump: signed EO 13865 - “Coordinating National Resilience to Electromagnetic Pulses” • December 20, 2019: Trump signed the (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2020 into law, creating the Space Force as the sixth branch of the U.S. military - February 2020: The Space Force assumed control of the Space and Missile Systems Center, enhancing its role in satellite and missile defense systems critical for EMP threat detection. • May 2020: Trump signed an EO 13920 - on Securing the United States Bulk-Power System - August 2020: The Space Force released its first doctrine, prioritizing space domain awareness and control, which includes protecting satellites from EMP-related threats. • September, 2020: The Department of Homeland Security released this statement in connection with EO 13865 DHS Combats Potential Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Attack • July 2020: Space Force activated the Space Delta 9, focused on orbital warfare, including protecting satellites from threats like EMP-capable anti-satellite weapons. It assumed control of the X-37B program October 2020. —— this is the same X-37B Secret Military Spaceplane Launched by the US on a Classified High-Orbit Mission Dec 2023. • April 2021: The Space Force established the Space Warfighting Analysis Center (SWAC) to develop force designs for missile warning and satellite protection, enhancing EMP defense capabilities. • June 2021: Space Force established the Space Systems Command (SSC), consolidating space acquisition and development, including EMP-hardened satellite programs like the Next-Generation Overhead Persistent Infrared (Next-Gen OPIR) for missile warning. • August 2022: SPACE FORCE took over the Army’s Missile Warning Ground Stations As you can see, President Trump has been preparing…

MJTruthUltra

239,273 views • 1 year ago

I’m seeing a lot of questions on the launch of China’s Chang’e 6 mission yesterday to get samples - for the first time - from the far side of the moon. We don’t know (afaik) why specifically they’re doing that, but we have a pretty good idea what grand vision China is working towards with their space program. How? From this 2022 video by Chas Freeman (former Assistant Secretary of Defense and Nixon's interpreter during his era-defining 1972 China visit), who imho is undoubtedly one of the most knowledgeable former US officials on China. He says that according to his own discussions with people running China’s space program, they’re following the vision described in the book "The high frontier" by Gerard K. O'Neill, which Freeman says has "become the bible of the Chinese space program". I read the book. So what vision does it describe? The book was written in 1976 by O'Neill who was a professor of physics at Princeton University. He also founded the Space Studies Institute, an organization devoted to funding research into space manufacturing and colonization. In other words, he knew his stuff. The book makes the very fair point that we have massive resource constraints on earth, especially given the growing population. He estimated in 1976 that we should be "about six and a half billion people in the year 2000", and we were 6.114 billion back then so he was pretty prescient. He estimates that these constraints will progressively give rise to more and more social tensions as the growing earth population competes for our limited resources as well as faces global problems like climate change. In his view, dealing with this will either require "an authoritarian regime capable of mounting the immense task of social reorganization needed to escape catastrophe" or, alternatively, “mankind would [need to adopt] a static society [that would be] forced in self-defense to suppress new ideas". The 3rd alternative is of course the colonization of space. The most interesting aspect of the book is that he claims everything he writes is feasible with knowledge and technology that already existed in the late 70s. In short he calls for the establishment of large human habitats in the Earth-Moon system, located at stable Lagrange points ("parking spots" in space where gravity from different spatial bodies cancel each other out). In particular he developed the concept of what's known today as the "O'Neill cylinder" which he says "could support quite easily a population of ten million people, growing its food in agricultural cylinders near but outside the main habitat". Energy-wise, it'd simply make use of solar energy via a system of mirrors. As he describes it: "the concentration of the unvarying, intense sunlight of space by very lightweight, inexpensive mirrors can provide all the energy that industry will ever need [...] at a fraction of a cent per kilowatt-hour". He envisages building these habitats with material from the moon, shot into space via "mass drivers", a form of electromagnetic catapult. Also "the habitats would have artificial gravity similar as that of earth by rotating about twenty-eight times an hour”, but he also envisages low-gravity areas, especially for recreational activities such as swimming pools or dancing representations. To trade with earth, he develops the idea of beaming solar power back to earth via "microwave from solar power stations in orbit". As he describes it "the microwave beam would arrive at Earth with a beam width of about seven kilometers. Its intensity would be modest, less than half that of sunlight. In contrast to sunlight, though, it would be there all the time, even at night or in clouds or rain, and it would be in a form ready for conversion to DC current with a loss of only 10 percent. The areas receiving these beams’ output on Earth would be fenced, and outside the fence the intensity of microwave radiation would be no higher than outside a microwave oven with the door closed. He estimates that if "Satellite Solar Power Stations (SSPS) were to become the sole source of electric energy in the United States in the year 2000, the land area necessary for the SSPS antennas would still be only 0.2 percent of that of the continental United States". In short, the establishment of space colonies could lead to the fulfillment of a good share of Earth's energy needs. Last but not least he describes life in space habitats as better than that of earth, largely thanks to the level of control we'd have over the environment (total climate control which would enable an abundance of food and no natural disaster) as well as unlimited cheap energy. To conclude, Chas Freeman typically really knows his stuff when it comes to China and he’s very intellectually honest (a rare trait among US officials) so I have no doubt he tells the truth when he says the Chinese told him that was the vision. And China famously thinks very big and very long term so it would be quite like them to go for something like this. There are also quite a few tangible signs that China is working towards that vision. See for instance this November 2022 news where “China’s space station will join a project to collect solar power from space and send it to Earth in a high-energy microwave beam”: That’s exactly O’Neill’s vision! Or check this October 2022 news that says China is developing new "electromagnetic sledges" that can propel a carriage weighing a few tonnes to a record speed, with a key application for this being “aerospace”: Remember: O’Neill’s vision is to build his habitats with material from the moon, shot into space via "mass drivers", a form of electromagnetic catapult. So there you go… Or also the fact that the Chinese will build, together with the Russians, a moon base - planned for 2028 - powered by a “space nuclear reactor” that’s already been developed (on Earth) and has passed review by China’s Ministry of Science: The space nuclear reactor can generate 1MW of electricity, enough to power 10 International Space Stations. Enough power, maybe, to undertake mining activity and power an electromagnetic catapult… After visions change, the world changes, so it’s also possible that China’s view on what they want to do has evolved. In any case, Chas Freeman is right that China’s motivation for all its initiatives in space can’t just be to “boldly explore where no-one has been before”, they have to be working towards something. And Freeman is also absolutely right to lament that the U.S. decided to ban any cooperation in space with the Chinese. Those endeavors are something that could have been jointly developed as a multilateral effort to unite us all as a species… Instead China is now forced to go at it alone with Russia and we face a future where our petty divisions on Earth will be carried with us to space…

Arnaud Bertrand

265,143 views • 2 years ago

I met the absolutely brilliant Robert Truax, at Princeton’s Space Studies Institute first symposium on space colonization and he tolerated a stalling long hair geek with questions that would not stop. Robert was a rocket engineer and inventor best known for his pioneering work in both military rocketry and the early private spaceflight movement. He played a significant role in U.S. Navy missile programs and after retiring from the Navy, he founded his own company, Truax Engineering. He remained a vocal advocate for commercial spaceflight throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Sometimes he was the lone voice of private rocketry. By doing things differently and avoiding what he called 'government waste,' he believed space travel had become too expensive and bureaucratic under government control, and that simpler, reusable rockets could be built more efficiently by individuals or private companies. In the 1980s, he launched Project Private Enterprise, an ambitious attempt to send a human into space using a privately developed rocket. The centerpiece of this effort was the X-3 Volksrocket, a low-cost, reusable vehicle designed to democratize space access. Although his private rockets never reached orbit, Robert Truax is remembered as a visionary and a determined 'garage engineer' who challenged the status quo of space exploration. His efforts helped lay the philosophical foundation for today's commercial space industry, paving the way for innovators like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos, whose companies have turned private spaceflight into a reality. Truax remains an important-if often overlooked-figure in the history of rocketry. Let’s remember him. I want to visit the Traux space colony some day. I’ll make some food and we will hang out.

Brian Roemmele

26,745 views • 1 year ago

Why are developers pouring billions into warehouses on one stretch of Kempton Park? I went to see for myself. I took a tour of the 25-hectare JT Ross Park: Plumbago 5 site in Riverfields that is currently under construction. What you see in the video are 4 of the 8 warehouses going up (sizes range from 4500m2 to 24 000m2), these will be complete during Q3 and Q4 2026. The corner of Gauteng where Kempton Park, Boksburg and Germiston meet is the busiest economic engine in the whole Ekurhuleni metro. This triangle alone accounts for around 43% of the metro's economy, more than any other part of the city. The metro's own planners call it the core, the logistics hub for the continent and the country's warehousing base. The Riverfields logistics precinct sits right inside the most productive corner of a metro that, on its own, drives close to a quarter of Gauteng's output. Tenants taking up warehouse space in the precinct are setting up in the part of the country that already moves the most goods. Gauteng handles the bulk of South Africa's freight and holds the biggest cluster of warehousing and distribution space anywhere in the country, and this warehouse development plugs straight into it, minutes from OR Tambo and onto the R21, R23 and the wider freight network. From here, you can reach the airport, the rest of Gauteng, and neighbouring countries without battling the congestion of the older hubs. Demand for logistics warehousing space has been running so far ahead of supply that warehouse vacancy rates across the country sat below 5% through most of 2025, with the online shopping boom and a shortage of new stock keeping good, well-placed space hard to come by. Modern warehouses in the right spot are not sitting empty. For a logistics operator located at JT Ross Park, Plumbago 5, you are close to your market, close to your transport links and parked in the part of the country doing the most business.

Ash Müller

19,506 views • 28 days ago

Eric Schmidt just told Congress the number that kills the AI race on Earth: 92 gigawatts of new power, and we can’t deliver it. Former Google CEO laid out math everyone’s ignoring. Average nuclear plant: 1.5 gigawatts. AI demand: 92 gigawatts. That’s 60+ new nuclear facilities needed now, not decades from now. Schmidt: “We need 92 gigawatts more power.” Not happening. Infrastructure doesn’t exist. Approval takes years. Grid physically can’t absorb it. We’re out of electricity. Schmidt investing in Relativity Space isn’t billionaire space hobby. He spotted the bottleneck killing everything and he’s building the only exit that works. Can’t build power plants on Earth fast enough? Move compute off Earth. Schmidt: “You see the problem.” AI doesn’t hit an algorithm wall or chip shortage. It hits power ceiling. The grid can’t deliver 92 gigawatts at the speed AI development demands. Physically impossible to build that capacity terrestrially in relevant timeframes. Not a grid problem. A location problem. Next phase of compute can’t happen on the surface. Period. Heat, power draw, infrastructure limits, all of it forces migration to orbit. Only place with unlimited energy and zero conflicts is space. Schmidt: “We’re running out of electricity.” Direct assessment from someone watching what’s actually being deployed. The gap separating what AI needs and what Earth can provide is unbridgeable at required speeds. Not technical constraints. Physical reality. His aerospace play isn’t exploration. It’s escape route from a grid approaching collapse under computational demand it was never designed to handle. Scaling AI to the levels every major company is planning requires abandoning the planet. Not eventually. Now. Because the alternative is power walls that stop everything regardless of algorithmic genius or hardware breakthroughs. Doesn’t matter how perfect your models are or how many chips you fabricate if you can’t turn them on. And Earth can’t generate power fast enough for what the next five years require. Space isn’t the ambitious choice anymore. It’s the only choice avoiding hard physics limits on how fast you can deploy power generation on a regulated planetary surface. The AI race doesn’t end when someone builds superior intelligence. It ends when they can’t power it while competitors in orbit operate without energy ceilings. And that’s not distant future. That’s the constraint arriving right now that nobody building exclusively on Earth has an answer for.

Dustin

160,358 views • 5 months ago