There’s something about audacity that makes the impossible seem inevitable. When Elon Musk first declared his vision for SpaceX, many laughed. Reusable rockets? A private company challenging the dominance of established space agencies? It all seemed too far-fetched. But Musk pressed on, driven by the conviction that radical ideas often need time to be seen for what they truly are: revolutionary. One of SpaceX’s most iconic moments came when they landed the Falcon 9 booster back on Earth—an achievement that redefined the limits of space technology. But what happened recently marks another step towards redefining the future. Just this past week, SpaceX successfully caught the Lower stage of its Starship rocket with “chopsticks”—a giant mechanical arm designed to capture the descending rocket. The feat, once planned for early 2025, happened ahead of schedule, showing once again that Musk and his team are constantly pushing beyond what anyone thought possible. The image of those massive ...
Segun Omisakin talks and write about technology, Strategy and Digital transformation