NASA, SpaceX
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Founded in 2015, LandSpace is 13 years younger than SpaceX, and apples-to-apples, it's probably more than a decade behind SpaceX in terms of development. Still, I'd argue it's the
SpaceX knocked out Friday the first of a series of afternoon launches in the coming week with another Starlink mission from Cape Canaveral.
SpaceX early Sunday morning launched its first Twilight rideshare flight from California, launching satellites for NASA, an Internet-of-Things services company and an experiment to 3-D print a boom in space.
That all changed earlier this month, however, when, in a single laconic tweet, Musk confirmed rumors voiced by space reporter Eric Berger that SpaceX is indeed planning a 2026 IPO. All of a sudden, it turns out investors might actually get a chance to buy a piece of the first space company to send humans to Mars. Or will they?
For the 2nd time in 2026, SpaceX rocket is due to launch from Southern California. But it may be hard to spot the Falcon 9 in Arizona. When to watch it
Live updates from SpaceX's Friday afternoon Starlink 6-96 mission that launched a Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.
The increasing number of commercial space launches and the upward trend in upmass serve as unmistakable signs of space industry growth. Space is a high-risk, high-reward industry, however. Space launches are expensive, and space companies often operate at a loss for years while developing their businesses.
For the second time in 2026, a SpaceX rocket is due to blast off from Southern California. Here's where (and what time) you may spot Falcon 9 liftoff
Fresh off a record-shattering launch cadence in 2025, SpaceX is planning to fly its first rideshare mission of 2026 from Space Launch Complex-4E at Vandenberg Space Force Base on the central California coast. This rideshare will be the first of its kind for SpaceX, and not part of the Transporter or Bandwagon series.