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Big-time $200+ price drop just hit the Starlink Mini Kit AC Dual Band Wi-Fi System at $300
We are tracking the lowest price we have seen to date on the SpaceX Starlink Mini Kit at $299.99 shipped via Best Buy. Originally $599 when it launched last year, Best Buy now has it listed with a regular price tag at $500 – today’s deal knocks $200 off that to deliver the lowest total we have tracked.
Expand Expanding CloseStarship Flight 9: Is next week launch week?

Monday, SpaceX static fired its next Starship vehicle at a test stand in Starbase, Texas, for a third time. This time, SpaceX confirmed a successful static fire, making both stages now ready for Starship Flight 9. Could that be next week?
Expand Expanding CloseThe National Space Council may not be dead

Politico reports that the National Space Council may return under the second Trump Administration after it was believed dead, thanks to lobbyists from SpaceX. However, its scale and goals are unknown given the White House’s new focused mission on space exploration.
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How many rockets has SpaceX launched in 2025?
Once again, SpaceX is hoping to break records with a staggering 175 to 180 launches for the year – and that’s just for Falcons. This could also be Starship‘s biggest year yet, and maybe even by the end of it, it’s an operational rocket. Keep track of SpaceX’s progress with the list below of SpaceX’s launches for 2025.
Expand Expanding CloseStarship Flight 9: SpaceX shows off Ship 35 heading for testing

SpaceX showed off some new aerial footage of Ship 35, the next Starship segment that will fly to space, or at least attempt to, in SpaceX’s Starship program. We’re still waiting on concrete evidence of when Starship Flight 9 will fly, but some recent testing could give a hint.
Expand Expanding CloseJapan’s next lunar lander has entered orbit around the Moon

iSpace will soon be making its next lunar landing attempt after its Hakuto-R lander took the long way to arrive at the Moon. The lander completed a major milestone this week by entering the Moon’s orbit after a long, multi-month trip.
Expand Expanding CloseWhen might Starship reach 25 flights a year?

This week, the FAA approved SpaceX‘s request to increase its Starship launch limit from Starbase from five launches to 25. A great step towards full operation, but will SpaceX even reach that goal this year?
Expand Expanding CloseWhite House NASA budget funds Moon and Mars at all cost

Friday, President Trump released his “skinny” budget request for the U.S. Government’s Fiscal Year 2026; included for NASA is $18.8 billion in proposed funding. This is down 25% from what the agency received in FY2025. Here’s what programs are safe and in trouble.
Expand Expanding CloseSpaceX employees vote to create city of Starbase

After years of building up the local area, moving countless SpaceX employees, and employing thousands, SpaceX’s Starbase facility now resides in the city of Starbase, Texas. The incorporation became official after about 300 eligible voters voted yes to create the city, most of whom work for SpaceX.
Expand Expanding CloseArtemis 2 ICPS stacked, Lockheed hands Orion over to NASA

Boosters, stacked. Core Stage, stacked. Launch Vehicle Stage Adaptor, stacked. NASA’s Exploration Ground Systems (EGS) team has now stacked Artemis 2’s upper stage. The Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS) is SLS’s second stage. It will carry Artemis 2’s crew into high Earth orbit. Once finished, the stage will be jettisoned and used for a docking test with Orion. After this, Orion will fire its AJ-10 rocket engine. Sending it on a journey around the moon and back to Earth. The mission is presently set for February 2026.
Expand Expanding CloseReusable spaceplanes are back?

Currently, there are four reusable spaceplanes either operational or under development around the world. However, the leaders in the industry have switched back to space capsules, so are spaceplanes back or not?
Expand Expanding CloseFor All Mankind’s ‘Race for the Base’ could soon become reality

Apple TV’s For All Mankind original series portrayed an alternative timeline of our own: what if the Soviets made it to the Moon first? That simple question, with storytelling rooted in actual science, was supposed to have fun at a time that could have been, but might have actually precluded a real-world reality.
Expand Expanding CloseSenate science committee moves NASA Administrator confirmation to full vote

Wednesday morning, the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation voted to submit Jared Isaacman‘s nomination for NASA Administrator favorably to the full Senate. This is the final step before Isaacman can be confirmed as the new administrator.
Expand Expanding CloseAmazon launches first operational batch of Kuiper satellites

Monday, Amazon launched its first batch of operational Project Kuiper satellites as it begins the build-out of its satellite internet constellation. However, the start has been delayed, and reports show the company might not meet the FCC deadline that is fast approaching.
Expand Expanding CloseSpaceX’s market dominance has failed to save NASA money

SpaceX has been the go-to launcher for both commercial and government satellites for a few years running now. Their Silicon Valley thinking and reusability innovation were supposed to spur an era of low-cost launches, something that has yet to come to NASA missions as of yet.
Expand Expanding CloseRepublicans call for more NASA science funding

It what normally doesn’t happen often, former Republican politicians have called out President Trump’s over-the-top NASA budget cuts as “reckless” and would cede space dominance to China. This is only the latest in a small but growing list of former and current party members that are going against their sitting president on this matter.
Expand Expanding CloseJared Isaacman’s confirmation vote set for Wednesday

The Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation will vote on Jared Isaacman‘s confirmation as NASA’s next Administrator on Wednesday. Both the Committee’s Republicans and Democrats released Isaacman’s written questions, so here’s what he thinks about some of the key issues facing NASA right now.
Expand Expanding CloseElon’s days in the White House may be numbered

Since Elon Musk‘s endorsement of President Trump last year, the CEO of SpaceX has spent more time in politics than worrying about his companies, including Tesla. With Tesla’s Q1 earnings out this week, Elon announced he would be stepping back from his time at the White House to focus on the company.
Expand Expanding Close‘Skymaker:’ Canada’s next step in space robotics

MDA Space, a leading Canadian aerospace company with a legacy in robotic systems, introduced its next-generation robotics platform – MDA Skymaker – at the 2024 Space Symposium in Colorado Springs. Built on the company’s flight-proven Canadarm heritage, Skymaker is a modular suite of robotics technologies designed to support a wide array of commercial and governmental space missions.
Expand Expanding CloseTrump’s proposed NASA budget would waste $3.4 billion of taxpayers money

A new space telescope that is 87% paid for, on schedule, and on budget, could be completely canned if President Trump’s proposed budget makes it law for NASA. That wouldn’t be the only thing of NASA’s that would be going away either.
Expand Expanding CloseThese are the states gunning for NASA’s HQ

With NASA‘s DC headquarters’ lease up in 2028, the space agency is looking for a new home and suitors are already lining up. While it sounds crazy that you would take a government agency out of the political center of the US, some states think it’s possible.
Expand Expanding CloseQuantum communications are heading to space

Forget laser interlinks, Boeing is working on a new form of in-space communications that may be just as fast and infinitely secure. The company, alongside its partnership with HRL Laboratories, hit a milestone in creating its first satellites for its quantum communications demo in 2026.
Expand Expanding Close5 of our favorite photos taken by Don Pettit while on the ISS

After a seven-month stay in space, NASA astronaut Don Pettit returned Saturday on the Soyuz MS-26 spacecraft in Kazakhstan. While in space, Pettit wowed the world with a constant stream of photos taken outside the windows of the ISS. Here are some of our favorites.
Expand Expanding CloseSpaceX could once again be in for a massive government contract, alongside Palantir and Anduril

SpaceX is a leading bidder for the Pentagon’s Golden Dome missile defense platform, according to Reuters. The project will join SpaceX alongside software company Palantir and drone manufacturer Anduril in a project that could oust traditional defense primes from one of the DoD’s biggest new defense projects.
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