Blue Origin certainly has ambitious launch targets for New Glenn
If Blue Origin wants to launch New Glenn 100 times a year, we're here for it.
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If Blue Origin wants to launch New Glenn 100 times a year, we're here for it.
Blue Origin's heavy-lift rocket failed to deliver a satellite to the proper orbit, prompting an investigation into the anomaly.
Amazon paid about $1.8 billion last year to Blue Origin, the aerospace company owned by its founder and board chair Jeff Bezos — nearly triple the amount the year before — as shareholders weigh a proposal citing his business interests outside Amazon as potential conflicts of interest. Read More
After liftoff, New Glenn booster makes its second successful touchdown, but AST SpaceMobile says its satellite will have to be deorbited. Read More
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has grounded Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket following an incident during Sunday's launch from Cape Canaveral, according to reporting by Orlando Sentinel and others. The rocket looked good on the way up but was ultimately unable to put its payload into the co
The New Glenn rocket will have to stay grounded while the company investigates what caused the apparent failure of its upper stage.
Blue Origin's reused first stage hit its targets, but New Glenn's upper stage did not.
"We are being intentional about creating liquidity events."
Blue Origin has revealed its plans for an orbital AI data center system in a new filing with the Federal Communications Commission. The company has asked the agency for permission to deploy 51,600 satellites, as reported by the Wall Street Journal and SpaceNews. Called Project Sunrise, the initiativ
"Project Sunrise" would include more than 50,000 satellites performing high-energy compute on orbit.