...the who's who,
and the what's what 
of the space industry

Space Careers

news Space News

Search News Archive

Title

Article text

Keyword

How a 'Critical Infrastructure' Loophole Could Gut Colorado's Right-to-Repair Law

Imagine your small business’s network router fails on a Monday morning. Under Colorado’s current right-to-repair law, you could take it to an independent shop or fix it yourself using manufacturer-provided parts and documentation. But under a bill now moving through the Colorado legislature, that same router could be reclassified as “critical infrastructure” IT equipment — […]

The post How a ‘Critical Infrastructure’ Loophole Could Gut Colorado’s Right-to-Repair Law appeared first on Space Daily.

The people who always arrive early are not punctual. They're quietly managing a fear of being perceived as someone who doesn't care enough.

Chronic early arrival often looks like professionalism, but psychologists say it can mask a deeper fear of being perceived as someone who doesn't care enough, turning punctuality into a social-acceptance management system.

The post The people who always arrive early are not punctual. They’re quietly managing a fear of being perceived as someone who doesn’t care enough. appeared first on Space Daily.

Between the Archive and the Abyss: What UFO Disclosure Really Asks of Us

The question of whether we are alone in the universe has haunted human civilization for millennia, but it has rarely pressed so close to the surface of official government business as it does right now. Congressional hearings, declassified Navy footage, bipartisan legislation, and a growing body of witness testimony have dragged the UFO question out […]

The post Between the Archive and the Abyss: What UFO Disclosure Really Asks of Us appeared first on Space Daily.

The people who plan everything aren't controlling. They're managing a nervous system that learned early that surprise means danger.

Compulsive planning often isn't about control — it's a nervous system strategy learned early in life when unpredictability was paired with danger. Research on childhood trauma and nervous system dysregulation reveals why telling planners to 'just be flexible' fundamentally misunderstands what's happening in their bodies.

The post The people who plan everything aren’t controlling. They’re managing a nervous system that learned early that surprise means danger. appeared first on Space Daily.

Amazon's Kuiper Math Problem: 1,375 Satellites to Go and No Clear Ride to Orbit

An Atlas 5 rocket reportedly carried 29 Amazon broadband satellites into low Earth orbit early Saturday morning, what may have been the heaviest payload the venerable rocket has ever flown and a sign of how hard Amazon is pushing to catch up on a constellation deployment timeline that looks increasingly difficult to meet. The Atlas […]

The post Amazon’s Kuiper Math Problem: 1,375 Satellites to Go and No Clear Ride to Orbit appeared first on Space Daily.

Children who grow up watching rocket launches develop a different relationship with failure than children who are taught to avoid it

Research shows that what shapes children's mindsets about failure isn't what parents believe about intelligence, but how they respond when things go wrong. Space culture offers a rare public model where failure is treated as process, not verdict.

The post Children who grow up watching rocket launches develop a different relationship with failure than children who are taught to avoid it appeared first on Space Daily.

The $71 Billion Bet: What Doubling Space Force Funding Actually Means for the Industry

The Trump administration’s fiscal 2027 budget proposal would more than double Space Force funding to over $71 billion, a $40 billion increase that would represent the largest single-year jump since the service branch was created in 2019. The surge, buried inside a sprawling $1.5 trillion defense spending request, signals that the Pentagon is treating space […]

The post The $71 Billion Bet: What Doubling Space Force Funding Actually Means for the Industry appeared first on Space Daily.

The difference between solitude and loneliness is whether you chose the room or the room chose you

Solitude and loneliness occupy the same physical space — the same silence, the same empty room — but they are as different as floating and drowning. Research shows the critical variable is choice: whether you walked into the quiet on purpose or found yourself trapped there.

The post The difference between solitude and loneliness is whether you chose the room or the room chose you appeared first on Space Daily.

Atlas 5 launches Amazon Leo satellites

Saturday, 04 April 2026 19:27
Atlas 5 Amazon Leo 5 launch

An Atlas 5 launched the latest set of satellites for Amazon’s broadband constellation April 4 as the company seeks to accelerate deployment of its spacecraft.

From Accidental Leak to Attack Vector: How Claude Code's Source Exposure Became a Malware Distribution Pipeline

When a Seattle-based backend developer — who asked to be identified only by his GitHub handle, dstroud — searched for “Claude Code installation guide” in late March, the top sponsored result on Google looked perfectly legitimate. He clicked, downloaded what appeared to be an installer package, and ran it. Within 90 seconds, an infostealer had […]

The post From Accidental Leak to Attack Vector: How Claude Code’s Source Exposure Became a Malware Distribution Pipeline appeared first on Space Daily.

Trump's 48-Hour Ultimatum to Iran Puts Energy Infrastructure in the Crosshairs

President Donald Trump issued a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran on Saturday, threatening to unleash destruction on the country’s energy infrastructure if Tehran does not agree to open the Strait of Hormuz and begin negotiations. The deadline lands as American military personnel race to locate a missing crew member from an F-15E Strike Eagle shot down […]

The post Trump’s 48-Hour Ultimatum to Iran Puts Energy Infrastructure in the Crosshairs appeared first on Space Daily.

$71 billion request for the U.S. Space Force for fiscal year 2027 includes more than $60 billion for procurement, research and development

Strikes Near Bushehr: What the IAEA's Urgent Warnings Actually Mean for Nuclear Safety

A projectile reportedly struck near Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant on Saturday, with reports indicating one security worker killed and at least five others injured. The strike, allegedly part of a broader wave of military operations against Iranian targets, has prompted international calls for military restraint around nuclear facilities. The IAEA confirmed that no increase […]

The post Strikes Near Bushehr: What the IAEA’s Urgent Warnings Actually Mean for Nuclear Safety appeared first on Space Daily.

How China's Chang'e program went from lunar orbiter to sample return in fifteen years and why its institutional model is reshaping the global space race

China's Chang'e program went from lunar orbiter to sample return in fifteen years and has now placed a base module at the south pole — a pace of execution that reveals as much about institutional design as it does about engineering capability.

The post How China’s Chang’e program went from lunar orbiter to sample return in fifteen years and why its institutional model is reshaping the global space race appeared first on Space Daily.

Page 1 of 2403