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Post by Admin on May 31, 2024 22:38:05 GMT
(Bloomberg): Elon Musk's social media platform X (formerly Twitter) will host live town hall-style interviews with former President Trump and independent candidate Robert Kennedy Jr. ahead of November's U.S. presidential election. do. This will be an opportunity for him to once again demonstrate his presence as a major player in American politics.
X will partner with TV network NewsNation to broadcast live interviews. X users will be able to submit questions, but the discussion will ultimately be led by a moderator, a person familiar with the arrangement said. The host has not yet been decided. The town hall date has not yet been announced.
The person said that X also sent an invitation to President Biden's campaign. A Biden campaign spokesperson confirmed that he would not be participating.
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Post by Admin on May 31, 2024 22:38:50 GMT
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Post by Admin on Jun 1, 2024 12:26:58 GMT
SpaceX’s massive Starship rocket could take to the skies for the fourth time on June 5, with the primary objective of evaluating the second stage’s reusable heat shield as the vehicle tries to safely reenter the atmosphere for the first time.
CEO Elon Musk said on his social media platform X that “There are many tough issues to solve with this vehicle, but the biggest remaining problem is making a reusable orbital return heat shield, which has never been done before.”
His post echoes comments he made earlier this month when he noted that the primary goal of the next Starship test was “getting through max reentry heating.”
That means the second stage’s novel heat shield, composed of around 18,000 ceramic hexagonal tiles, will be put to the test. Those tiles are designed to protect the second stage (which is also called Starship) from the extreme temperatures experienced when reentering Earth’s atmosphere. One of the biggest issues, Musk suggested, is the vulnerability of the system overall: “we are not resilient to loss of a single tile in most places,” he said. That means a single damaged or faulty tile could lead to catastrophe.
As Musk noted in his post, surviving reentry is just one part of the puzzle. The company will also need to establish an “entirely new supply chain” for the high-performance heat shield tiles, and manufacture them at a very high volume.
It’s a tough problem, but solving it would move them closer to the holy grail of launch vehicles: full reusability. SpaceX made major headway in reusability with its workhorse Falcon 9 rocket — which has flown 56 times so far this year alone — but although the company recovers the booster, the second stage is expended in its target orbit. By reusing both stages of the rocket, SpaceX is hoping to drive down costs to a fraction of what they are today, all while delivering many orders of magnitude more mass to orbit in a single launch. (SpaceX’s Transporter rideshare missions cost $6,000 per kilogram.)
If all goes to plan, the company will demonstrate the ability to return Starship to Earth via a controlled reentry and a soft splashdown in the Indian Ocean. SpaceX is also aiming to return the booster, called Super Heavy, also via ocean splashdown. And it will get one step closer to bringing the largest and most powerful launch system ever built online, ready to transport cargo and eventually crew to Earth’s orbit and beyond.
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Post by Admin on Jun 5, 2024 9:21:26 GMT
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia's cyber regulator on Wednesday decided to drop a lawsuit with short-form message site X over a video showing a bishop being stabbed. The court had sought an extension of a temporary order preventing the video from being viewed, but the court denied it in May.
Julie Inman-Grant, the e-safety commissioner who oversees cyberspace, said she initially told X to delete the video to prevent it from inciting further violence and potentially harming society.
Australian authorities have condemned the April stabbing of a bishop in a Sydney church as a terrorist attack. Side X had blocked users in Australia from viewing the site, but had refused to take it down globally, saying that one country's rules should not control the internet.
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Post by Admin on Jun 5, 2024 9:23:28 GMT
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