DTN 049: Intuitive Machines Becomes First Private Company to Land on Moon

Plus: Disney star goes deep tech, Blue Origin gets it up, a new type of magnetism, a gun that never misses, science journal retracts article featuring a well endowed AI-generated rat, and more.

“The realization that led to ZeroMark came one day when I was driving a Tesla with Full Self-Driving Beta to a shooting range. I had this epiphany that the technology at this car’s disposal could solve more than just self-driving on city streets in New Jersey. It struck me as insane that I’d never seen anything even remotely close to that even on large platforms in the military. Dismounted soldiers especially have nothing of that level of sophistication. So I had this realization and then I was immediately in a shooting range where I was reminded of the fundamentals and difficulty of marksmanship. So I put two and two together and asked if we have small camera gimbals and high compute power in small silicon packages, why is there not something that can help with the hardest part of firefighting and help take skill out of the equation?”

The Big Picture

“A spacecraft built and flown by Texas-based company Intuitive Machines landed near the moon's south pole on Thursday, the first U.S. touchdown on the lunar surface in more than half a century and the first ever achieved by the private sector. NASA, with several research instruments aboard the vehicle, hailed the landing as a major achievement in its goal of sending a squad of commercially flown spacecraft on scientific scouting missions to the moon ahead of a planned return of astronauts there later this decade.” (Reuters)

“Y Combinator is putting hard tech in the spotlight. On Wednesday, the accelerator released an updated list of ideas it would like to see in applications — with categories like space, manufacturing and defense featured prominently.

YC has backed plenty of hard tech startups before. Launch companies Stoke Space and Relativity Space and satellite broadband provider Astranis are among its alumnus. The accelerator’s biggest exit is still General Motors’ $1 billion purchase of autonomous vehicle company Cruise Automation in 2016.

But overall, hard tech comprises a very small fraction of the companies that have passed through its program. The accelerator is better known for nurturing breakout software startups in sectors like consumer and fintech. So the spotlight on hard tech suggests that YC sees hard tech as underinvested, and more likely to generate the massive valuation spikes required for a successful venture portfolio.” (TechCrunch)

Deep Tech News

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A spacecraft containing pharmaceutical drugs that were grown on orbit has finally returned to Earth today after more than eight months in space.

Varda Space Industries’ in-space manufacturing capsule, called Winnebago-1, landed in the Utah desert at around 4:40 p.m. EST. Inside the capsule are crystals of the drug ritonavir, which is used to treat HIV/AIDS. It marks a successful conclusion of Varda’s first experimental mission to grow pharmaceuticals on orbit, as well as the first time a commercial company has landed a spacecraft on U.S. soil, ever. (via TechCrunch / Varda Space Industries)

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