Minggu, 12 Mei 2019

Elon Musk 420 weed joke around Starlink SpaceX satellites launch plans - Business Insider

elon muskElon Musk, the rare CEO to joke about smoking marijuana.AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

Elon Musk isn't done making 420 jokes just yet.

His latest came this weekend while revealing 60 SpaceX satellites to the public for the first time. Rocket company SpaceX plans to launch them into space for its a first mission late Wednesday

SpaceX wants to build up a global network of nearly 12,000 satellites, part of a bold project called Starlink aimed at bringing ultra-high-speed internet to the world. 

But getting minor internet coverage will take just six more launches of 60 satellites, Musk tweeted.

If you do the math, that's 420 satellites in total. That's how people refer to smoking marijuana, something that's gotten Musk into hot water before. Most famously, Tesla was fined $20 million by the SEC after Musk claimed that he might take the electric car company public at $420 a share.

When one Twitter user pointed the 420 sum out, Musk joked back about it. 

"That *might* not be my lucky number," Musk tweeted, adding an emoji of a four-leaf clover.

Musk was also notoriously filmed smoking a mixture of marijuana and tobacco last fall while being interviewed on a podcast.

Marijuana use is legal in California, where it happened, but NASA's top official later publicly chastised Musk about it, describing the incident as "not appropriate behavior."

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https://www.businessinsider.com/elon-musk-420-weed-joke-around-starlink-spacex-satellites-launch-plans-2019-5

2019-05-12 16:53:52Z
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Elon Musks shows off SpaceX’s 60 internet-beaming satellites packed together for launch - The Verge

On Saturday, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk revealed the 60 satellites his company will be launching this week — the first batch of thousands of satellites that SpaceX hopes to deploy in the years ahead to provide global internet coverage from space. Musk tweeted a picture of the satellites packed tight together inside the nosecone of the Falcon 9 rocket that will take the spacecraft to orbit.

The satellites are the first operational units of SpaceX’s Starlink initiative, a planned mega-constellation of nearly 12,000 spacecraft that will sit in a low orbit above Earth and beam internet connectivity to the surface below. The Federal Communications Commission has granted SpaceX permission to launch two groups of satellites for the Starlink project: one constellation of 4,409 satellites, followed by a second constellation of 7,518 that will operate at a slightly lower altitude than the first. Together, the satellites are meant to fly in a synchronized dance over the Earth, providing internet to every region of the planet.

SpaceX’s FCC approvals are contingent on the company being able to launch half of all these satellites within the next six years. So far, SpaceX has only launched two test Starlink satellites, nicknamed TinTin A and TinTin B, which flew to space in February of 2018. The duo seemed to performed well, according to Musk and SpaceX investors, though the company did end up keeping the satellites in a lower orbit than originally planned. As a result, SpaceX successfully petitioned the FCC to fly some of its satellites in the lower orbit, based on what the company had learned from those test satellites.

Now the company is preparing to launch the Starlink project in earnest. This first group of 60 consists of “production design” spacecraft that are different than the TinTin satellites, according to Musk. However last week during a satellite conference, SpaceX president and COO Gwynne Shotwell noted that these satellites still lack some design features needed for the final constellation, according to a report in Space News. While the satellites will have antennas for communicating with Earth and the capability to maneuver through space, they won’t be able to communicate with one another in orbit, she said.

Shotwell ultimately referred to this batch as “demonstration” satellites, which will test out how the company plans to deploy these vehicles into orbit. On Twitter, Musk noted that the satellites are flat-packed inside the nosecone, or payload fairing, and there is no dispenser for deploying them into orbit. More details will about the mission will be provided on launch day, he said. The flight is currently scheduled for May 15th out of Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Musk also noted that “much will likely go wrong” on this first flight. He argued that at least six more launches of 60 satellites will be needed to provide “minor” internet coverage, while 12 launches will be needed for “moderate” coverage. Shotwell said SpaceX could launch two to six more Starlink missions this year, depending on how this first flight goes, according to Space News. One Twitter user was quick to point out that seven launches would equal 420 satellites, a number that Musk has enjoyed. But based on recent events, the CEO admitted it might not be his lucky number anymore.

SpaceX is just one of many companies eager to launch large constellations of satellites into space, in order to offer global internet coverage. Companies like OneWeb, Telesat, LeoSat, and now Amazon are also working on massive constellations that would provide internet connectivity from low orbits over Earth. OneWeb launched its first six satellites in February of this year. But now SpaceX is poised to gain a significant lead in the race to provide internet from space, though it looks like more hardware upgrades are still needed for future missions.

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https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/12/18616535/spacex-starlink-elon-musk-60-satellites-launch

2019-05-12 14:00:00Z
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Hold Tight for Volatility as Trade Turmoil Rattles Markets Anew - Bloomberg

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Hold Tight for Volatility as Trade Turmoil Rattles Markets Anew  Bloomberg

Investors are standing by for a *fresh* bout of market turmoil as President Donald Trump turns up the heat on Beijing over trade.


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-05-12/hold-tight-for-volatility-as-trade-turmoil-rattles-markets-anew

2019-05-12 10:31:00Z
CAIiECUKXjvwwMX1yxQckX3WyWQqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow4uzwCjCF3bsCMIrOrwM

"Saturday Night Live" tackles Trump issues in "Meet The Press" spoof - Axios

"Saturday Night Live" addressed the latest issues surrounding the Trump administration in a "Meet The Press" spoof sending up Republican lawmakers for its cold open.

Details: The NBC show's host Chuck Todd, played by Kyle Mooney, asked Beck Bennett's Sen. Mitch McConnell, Kate McKinnon's Sen. Lindsey Graham and Cecily Strong's Sen. Susan Collins, "What would it take for President Trump to lose your support?" Hypothetical situations they discussed included the president becoming Muslim and divorcing Melania Trump to marry Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

Go deeper: Trump asks how "SNL" can air "without retribution"

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https://www.axios.com/snl-trump-cold-open-meet-the-press-spoof-with-gop-df721daa-9696-489e-8eff-191525d2bb91.html

2019-05-12 09:15:00Z
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Trade-War Scenarios Force Investors to Rewrite Playbook - Bloomberg

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  1. Trade-War Scenarios Force Investors to Rewrite Playbook  Bloomberg
  2. US-China trade tensions reverberate around the world  The Thaiger
  3. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-05-12/trade-war-scenarios-force-investors-to-rewrite-playbook

2019-05-12 06:49:00Z
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"Saturday Night Live" tackles Trump issues in "Meet The Press" spoof - Axios

"Saturday Night Live" addressed the latest issues surrounding the Trump administration in a "Meet The Press" spoof sending up Republican lawmakers for its cold open.

Details: The NBC show's host Chuck Todd, played by Kyle Mooney, asked Beck Bennett's Sen. Mitch McConnell, Kate McKinnon's Sen. Lindsey Graham and Cecily Strong's Sen. Susan Collins, "What would it take for President Trump to lose your support?" He threw up hypotheticals, such as the president becoming Muslim and divorcing Melania Trump to marry Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

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https://www.axios.com/snl-trump-cold-open-meet-the-press-spoof-with-gop-df721daa-9696-489e-8eff-191525d2bb91.html

2019-05-12 04:46:00Z
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Sabtu, 11 Mei 2019

Uber's IPO stalled out, caught in a perfect storm - Axios

Uber's IPO stalled out yesterday, stunning both Silicon Valley and Wall Street.

Details: The ride-hail giant priced shares near the bottom of their range on Thursday night. They opened even lower on Friday morning before falling again by market close. In all, Uber lost nearly $6 billion in market cap in its first five hours as a public company.

No, this is not normal for a highly anticipated IPO.

Uber got hit by a confluence of negative events, some of which were outside of its control:

  • The Dow was already down more than 300 points before Uber's first trade, due largely to President Trump's imposition of higher tariffs on Chinese imports. Stocks recovered later on, but investor sentiment was lousy during the time when an IPO would typically pop.
    • Maybe Trump played the long revenge game on Uber, after it snubbed him just days into his presidency.
  • The world is a vampire. North Korea. Iran. Venezuela. Pick your geopolitical poison.
  • Uber went public at the end of the stock market's worst-performing week of 2019.
  • Lyft already had investors running scared, having earlier in the week reported disappointing Q1 results and warning that 2019 would represent "peak losses."
  • Ride-hail driver strikes on Wednesday didn't seem to have much impact on car availability, but they did raise awareness and prompted tweets from several presidential candidates.
  • Unwelcome attention after Axios first reported that Uber founder and ex-CEO Travis Kalanick wanted to help ring the bell but was relegated to the NYSE floor by current CEO Dara Khosrowshahi.
    • Kalanick watched the bell-ringing with his father from a side balcony before heading a block away to celebrate with early Uber colleagues at The Bailey Restaurant NYC.
  • Uber and Lyft recently ramped up their rider discount offers, prompting overheard talk in the NYSE hallways about artificially-inflated numbers. The discounts could obviously continue, but that wouldn't help ride-hail get closer to profitability. Speaking of which...
  • Uber loses more money than any other company to ever go public. It's the sort of thing that everyone ignores until they don't.
    • Uber has argued that it's the next Amazon, which also spent years in the red without an apparent path to profitability.
    • Investors either didn't agree, or figured they could wait for the numbers to improve. Or perhaps until Uber finds its own Amazon Web Services (flying taxis?).

But, but, but: IPOs are just a moment in time, and Uber has still managed become a $76 billion company in less than a decade. Facebook gained just 23 cents on its IPO day before spending 15 months below its IPO price; now it's the world's fourth most valuable company.

Uber's IPO ran into the perfect storm. Other money-losing unicorns and minotaurs will now watch closely to see if it can navigate into calmer waters, or if they need to begin scrambling for life vests.

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https://www.axios.com/ubers-ipo-perfect-storm-2a75a55a-adec-496b-bc23-02d99d02920f.html

2019-05-11 16:58:00Z
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