arjie an hour ago
But there is the rest of the world, and if I'm told that the Africans should not have access to high-speed satellite Internet[0] so that the Europeans can use one specific method of looking at the stars, I don't find that convincing. In time, as we expand, space-based observation will become fairly feasible for everyone. And the satellites we have will decay to the Earth should we fail to keep them up there.
We will build Earth orbital structures and swarms, and we will build Sun orbital structures and swarms, and we will go to the stars, and it will be better for humanity as a whole.
0: https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2026/07/02/...
nablaxcroissant an hour ago
More regulations would just have the result of cementing a monopoly for Spacex.
xadhominemx an hour ago
Legend2440 an hour ago
Do we put up long-distance power lines and wind farms even though they ruin the views? Do you tear down a forest to put up farmlands and suburbs? Do you build a dam to provide water for irrigation, even though it kills the fish and floods a valley?
Satellites are actually easier than most of those tradeoffs, because nothing lives in space and there's no nature to destroy. It only affects us.
michelb 2 hours ago
upofadown 39 minutes ago
I think we should wait to see how the first satellite data centre works out. It seems fairly unlikely that it could be practical. It seems kind of nuts...
>Reflect Orbital, a US start-up, aims to launch a constellation of very large mirror-like satellites to provide sunlight at night, with reflected beams that span at least five kilometres on Earth's surface.
Straight up nuts with no practical value, even if it did work out.
0-_-0 an hour ago
manoDev an hour ago
tapland 2 hours ago
protortyp an hour ago
mrwaffle 40 minutes ago
rho138 an hour ago
chhxdjsj 42 minutes ago
99.9% of species that have existed on earth are already extinct. Climate change happens constantly over long periods. Our CO2 emissions will be background noise on a million year timescale.
Time to ignore the whingers and the NIMBYs and colonize the universe.
CodesInChaos 44 minutes ago
next_xibalba 8 minutes ago
zoilism an hour ago
tiahura an hour ago
zer0energy 25 minutes ago
The great observatories are marvels of engineering - a focused effort on technical mitigations to the satellite problem would likely push the problem out for decades into the future.
Two possible paths forward: 1. inserting a shutter into the beam path while a satellite is transiting the field of view of the telescope, or 2. (somewhat worse from an SNR perspective) terminating an exposure right before it's corrupted by a transiting satellite and starting a new exposure once the satellite has passed.
I for one would much rather see effort put into advancing telescope design than blocking advances of our use of space!
rcpt an hour ago
riazrizvi 34 minutes ago
SilverElfin an hour ago
ChrisArchitect an hour ago
ck2 an hour ago
there are already several starlink competitors and even other countries planning to launch their own 1000-10,000 node networks
holoduke an hour ago
Rekindle8090 an hour ago
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