SpaceX Faces A Crucial Launch Test Ahead Of Its IPO

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Why SpaceX needs Starship. A new kind of origami. Sam Altman’s longevity startup raises more money. All that and more in this week’s edition of The Prototype. To get it in your inbox, sign up here.

SpaceX filed its long awaited IPO on Wednesday, and there’s a lot to talk about. So expect some commentary from me in the coming weeks about the feasibility of lunar mass drivers, putting hundreds of GW worth of data centers in orbit, colonizing Mars and more.

But while the sci-fi aspects of the company’s IPO are garnering headlines, sitting on a launch pad in Texas is the cornerstone of the company’s entire future: Starship. I had planned to focus this newsletter on its latest test flight, which was slated for earlier this week. But there were delays and now it will be going up a few hours after this goes out (in theory.)

Starship is SpaceX’s next-generation, heavy-lift rocket, designed to be bigger than the Saturn V rocket that took Apollo astronauts to the Moon while being fully reusable. According to SpaceX’s public filing, the company has poured more than $15 billion into its development.

But beyond just the money, Starship is a lynchpin for all of the plans that SpaceX is using to sell investors on the proposition that it’s worth trillions of dollars–far more than its current revenue of $18 billion (with nearly $5 billion in losses) would suggest. The next generation of Starlink satellites are so big that it needs Starship to launch them. Its proposed orbital data centers require Starship. It needs Starship to fulfill its obligations to NASA to carry astronauts back to the Moon

And with all of this, the company is years behind schedule. Several of its Starship tests have ended in “rapid unscheduled disassembly” (the company’s term for “exploded”), though more recent tests have gotten things back on track.

With SpaceX listing on the stock market in just a few weeks, I’m sure there are going to be a lot more eyes than usual on this upcoming Starship test. In the risk factors section of its prospectus, the company acknowledged (in bold print, no less) that “Any failure or delay in the development of Starship … would delay or limit our ability to execute our growth strategy, including the deployment of next-generation satellites, global satellite-to-mobile connectivity, and orbital AI compute.”

Discovery of the Week: Curved Origami Structures

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