"No, we didn’t get the idea from a poll," the company wrote in a statement after Elon Musk tweeted a poll about an edit button.
Project Kuiper is scheduled for 83 launches in the next five years.
The tech mogul has incurred the wrath of federal agencies for using Twitter. That didn't stop him from buying a big chunk of it.
Artemis astronauts will require sophisticated vehicles to support their lunar expeditions.
A full-scale, fully functional lunar rover prototype recently drove near Death Valley.
Grimes says Musk is her boyfriend again..."probably."
Starlink’s sudden wartime internet infrastructure efforts have already faced challenges.
The “IT Army of Ukraine” was announced by the country’s vice prime minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, and is organizing on Telegram.
An Android app using a similar name to Trump's social media site has gotten well over 100,000 downloads and offers in-app purchases.
NASA replaced an engine controller aboard the gigantic Space Launch System rocket after a glitch late last year.
The country's telecommunications companies were able to repair a major subsea fiber optic cable badly damaged during last month's volcanic eruptions.
The 50-year-old billionaire often shitposts more like an edgy preteen than the wealthiest person on the planet.
The missions, collectively known as the Polaris Program, will attempt the highest Earth orbit ever flown and the first fully commercial spacewalk.
It's a cosmic case of mistaken identity, and we can thank a NASA scientist for noticing that the Moon-bound booster wasn't from a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.
SpaceX lost 40 satellites after a geomagnetic storm prevented them from rising to their operational orbits.
SpaceX says its satellites will disintegrate upon atmospheric reentry and won't pose a risk to other space-based equipment.
Our final view of the doomed booster will be made available tomorrow during a live webcast.
Satellites are increasingly interfering with optical and radio astronomy, prompting the coordinated response.
The premium option is meant for businesses and rich people living in remote areas.
After a lanyard fell off its spool, NASA is mulling whether to try again to deploy the solar panel—or do nothing.