Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Valley of Depth
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| From F-18s to Term Sheets, with Chris Morales (Partner at Point72 Ventures) | 26 Nov 2024 | 00:48:51 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we are joined by Chris Morales, Partner at Point72 Ventures, for a discussion on venture capital’s role in shaping the space and defense technology landscape. In this episode, Chris provides a detailed overview of Point72 Ventures’ strategic approach to investing, drawing on his background as a former naval officer and his experience in venture capital. The conversation covers key trends and challenges facing the space and defense sectors, with a focus on how startups can navigate this evolving ecosystem. In addition, we discuss:
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 01:02 - Chris's Thanksgiving must-haves 02:15 - Point72 Ventures overview 05:35 - History with space 06:42 - Why did Point72 Ventures first get into space? 09:00 - Chris's thesis about the space industry 10:49 - Proliferated LEO 12:11 - Predictive work and investments 13:02 - At what stage in a company is Point72 Ventures looking to invest? 13:53 - How does space fit into the investment strategy? 15:51 - What happens when a portfolio company isn't hitting their milestones? 17:12 - The process 18:39 - How Point72 Ventures separates itself and what it provides beyond capital 20:31 - Public and private sides of the firm 21:13 - Market dynamics 24:05 - Is there enough government funding for startups, and are they winning enough contracts? 27:29 - Does SpaceX's valuation make sense? 29:47 - Starship vs. Starlink business prediction 32:42 - Is SpaceX a monopoly? 33:26 - Is SpaceX a concern when it comes to investing in the industry? 35:04 - Biggest issues facing startups today and how can investors help 39:04 - Over and under-hyped areas of the market 40:36 - Space ventures in the next decade 42:25 - Gaps in the market 43:37 - Advice to founders looking to start a space company 45:00 - Mars 47:00 - What does Chris do for fun?
• Show notes • Point72 Ventures’ website — https://p72.vc/ Point 72 Ventures’ socials — https://x.com/p72vc Chris’ socials — https://x.com/MrChrisMorales Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| End-to-End Space, with Peter Beck (CEO of Rocket Lab) | 19 Nov 2024 | 00:52:54 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we’re excited to welcome the one and only Peter Beck, founder and CEO of Rocket Lab. Rocket Lab continues to solidify its position as a leading end-to-end space company, offering launch services, spacecraft platforms, and in-house satellite manufacturing. In light of Rocket Lab’s Q3 earnings report, which saw a 55% year-over-year revenue increase and a growing backlog of over $1B, this episode dives deep into the company’s strategic and operational decisions driving its success. In addition, we discuss:
And much more... • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:34 - Where is Peter Beck? 01:20 - Space and the coming administration 02:05 - Rocket Lab in the market and where they're going 03:42 - Neutron's first launch 04:24 - What's next after Neutron? 05:41 - What will be the most dominant aspect of Rocket Lab in the future? 07:10 - Hypersonics 08:51 - Electron demand vs. supply 10:02 - Electron after Neutron 13:05 - Neutron's development timeline 16:07 - How does Neutron compare to Falcon 9? 17:20 - Neutron launch cadence 18:12 - What leads to capital efficiency? 21:03 - How Rocket Lab created successful projects 23:04 - Aesthetics vs Engineering 24:26 - SDA contract and de-risking 25:23 - Why build both spacecraft and launch vehicles? 27:33 - Why own and operate your own constellation? 29:56 - DoD's proliferated LEO satellite services program 30:40 - Frank Klein joining Rocket Lab 31:50 - Operations and scaling philosophy 33:25 - Outlook of the supply and demand for launch market 35:13 - Is there still room for new launch startups? 36:46 - Future of launch outside the US 38:30 - Timeline on human spaceflight at Rocket Lab 40:01 - Most strategic or technical risk that Rocket Lab currently faces 41:14 - Rocket Lab and the Moon 43:24 - Things to embrace in order to build a successful company 44:30 - What keeps Peter up at night? 45:16 - When will the space industry be welcomed by the public markets? 49:20 - Things Peter is keeping an eye on 51:03 - Date for humans on Moon and Mars • Show notes • Rocket Lab's website — https://www.rocketlabusa.com/ Rocket Lab’s socials — https://x.com/RocketLab Peter's socials — https://x.com/Peter_J_Beck Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Space Marketing Playbook, with Brian D'Erario (Payload) | 27 Aug 2024 | 00:59:27 | |
This week’s Pathfinder pod features Brian D’Erario, the man who keeps the lights on at Payload as the Director of Client Partnerships. Brian’s role is to bring in all the revenue that makes everything at Payload possible (no pressure, Brian!). With experience working with over 97 partners, Brian has been instrumental in shaping Payload's approach to brand awareness and lead generation. Brian shares his journey from selling B2B hardware and software to government contractors, to his time at Morning Brew, and finally joining Payload to drive partnerships in the space sector. We explore Brian's background, including his work with various industries and his insights into the unique challenges of marketing within the space industry. We also discuss:
And much more… • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 01:04 - What does Brian do at Payload? 01:51 - Brian's background 04:33 - Morning Brew 08:09 - Initial assessment of space marketing strategies 10:39 - Do space companies market themselves well? 12:27 - Marketing your product before you start selling 19:46 - Brand awareness vs lead generation 27:40 - When does it make sense for a startup to spend money on marketing? 31:44 - How can a startup develop a marketing plan for a product that competes against a prime competitor? 34:46 - Creating engaging B2B content 41:31 - Agency vs in-house 43:39 - Conference strategies 47:44 - The Marketing Playbook 52:53 - Brian’s publication 55:11 - Partnerships consultant 57:15 - From hockey to pickleball
• Show notes • Brian’s Marketing Newsletter — https://payloadspace.com/marketing-deep-tech-newsletter/ Brian’s socials — https://twitter.com/derariob Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Caleb Henry: The Soup-to-Nuts Space Economy | 13 Sep 2022 | 01:00:58 | |
Today's episode of Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems, an industry leader in cybersecurity. Check out SpiderOak’s space cyber whitepaper at spacecyber.com *CHAPTERS*00:00 — Intro Caleb's Twitter — https://twitter.com/CHenry_QA Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we publish Payload, our flagship newsletter, from Monday to Friday; Pathfinder, and Parallax. Parallax is our brand-spanking new weekly science newsletter for the space industry. Subscribe now so you can say you were early by signing up at parallax.beehiiv.com You can subscribe to our daily newsletter and find out more about Payload at payloadspace.com | |||
| Solar System Communications with Kelly Larson | 07 Sep 2022 | 00:54:07 | |
Today's episode is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems, an industry leader in space cybersecurity. Check them out at https://spideroak-ms.com/ and download the new NSR/SpiderOak sponsored whitepaper, titled “Space Cybersecurity – Current State and Future Needs,” at www.spacecyber.com *SNEAK PEEK*For starters, we get a status report on what Aquarian’s been up to over the last six months. But there’s plenty more on tap, such as:
…and more! Come for the above topics, stay for ever-so-brief discussions of yoga and astrology (Ryan’s totally unbiased opinion: Aquarians rule). Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com *CHAPTERS*0:00 - Introduction Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Barry Matsumori on Solar System Logistics | 30 Aug 2022 | 00:52:01 | |
Our guest is Barry Matsumori, a space industry veteran who’s held exec roles at SpaceX, Virgin Orbit, and most recently, was CEO of BridgeComm. Barry’s now the COO of Impulse Space, which was started by SpaceX founding team member Tom Mueller. Impulse is just a year old and it has only ~40 employees, making it all the more surprising when Impulse and Relativity said they’d partner to launch the first commercial Mars mission in the next available window (late 2024). We grill Barry on the specifics of the mission, and though it feels highly ambitious, it’s safe to say that you don’t want to bet against these teams. Today's episode is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems, an industry leader in space cybersecurity. Check them out at https://spideroak-ms.com/ and download the new NSR/SpiderOak sponsored whitepaper, titled “Space Cybersecurity – Current State and Future Needs,” at www.spacecyber.com *CHAPTERS*0:00 - Introduction Video referenced in episode: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uuL7iYUNg6o&feature=emb_title Impulse's website: https://www.impulsespace.com/ Barry's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/barry-matsumori-35676/ Mars mission details: https://www.impulsespace.com/mars Q+A with partner Relativity: https://payloadspace.com/qa-with-tim-ellis-on-relativitys-mars-mission/ *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Giuseppe Santangelo Talks Martian Helicopters, Skypersonic, and More! | 23 Aug 2022 | 00:57:27 | |
Giuseppe is president at Red Cat Holdings ($RCAT) and founder of Skypersonic, which builds drones that can inspect and survey sites in high-risk, confined, or GPS-denied locations. Skypersonic's product enables remote operators to fly drones indoors 100% remotely and over the internet. Previously, Giuseppe was responsible for the development of projects on behalf of the European Space Agency at Thales Alenia Space, and has been involved in development of space systems used at NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA). He studied Astronautical Engineering at the University “La Sapienza di Roma” and he achieved the Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering (MSME) at Engineering Faculty of Catania. What's the space angle? Skypersonic just recently completed a 15-day set of testing its drone at Mt. Etna, an Italian volcano with Martian-esque terrain. Pilots in Houston flew Skypersonic's drones to demonstrate the feasibility of the technology in a Mars-like environment. In 2021, NASA awarded Skypersonic a five-year contract to provide drone and rover software, hardware, and services/support for the US space agency's simulated Mars mission. *CHAPTERS*0:00 - Introduction Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Creating a Live Earth Catalog, with Emiliano Kargieman | 16 Aug 2022 | 01:00:17 | |
By the end of 2023, Satellogic hopes to have 60+ satellites in orbit (and 200+ by 2025). The company made $4.2 million in 2021, the year it began selling and delivering imagery to customers. Today’s Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems (https://spideroak-ms.com/), an industry leader in cybersecurity. Check out the company’s space cyber whitepaper at spacecyber.com *CHAPTERS*0:00 - Intro Satellogic's website: https://satellogic.com/ Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Tackling Space Trash with Dr. Moriba Jah | 09 Aug 2022 | 00:53:56 | |
On today's episode of the Pathfinder podcast, we’re tackling the topic of space junk. We’re very fortunate to have Dr. Moriba Jah, one of the world’s foremost authorities on this topic, joining us this week. Moriba is an astrodynamicist, space environmentalist, and associate professor of aerospace engineering and engineering mechanics at UT Austin (obligatory 'hook em' from Ryan). Moriba is also the chief scientist and cofounder of Privateer, with Alex Fielding and Steve “Woz” Wozniak. Privateer, which stayed highly secretive until relatively recently, bills itself as “a data and intelligence platform empowering the future of space sustainability.” Today’s Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems (www.spideroak-ms.com), an industry leader in cybersecurity. In the simplest of terms, Moriba specializes in studying and predicting the motion of objects in space. It’s a hot topic at the moment, given recent uncontrolled spacecraft reentries, the growing pile of junk in LEO, and the rising importance of space domain awareness (SDA) and space traffic management (STM). *SNEAK PEEK*Moriba walks us through his framework for thinking about the orbital commons. Among other things, we discuss…
In the back half of the episode, we focus on Privateer and work through the following questions:
Come for Moriba’s insightful takes on the serious matters at hand; stay for the dog cameo, keto detour, and wearable technology talk. *CHAPTERS*0:00 - Intro 3:09 - Moriba’s résumé … from hook ‘em to science committees to disarmament and advising the Scottish government 5:19 - Explain it like I’m five: what’s astrodynamics? … and @ 7:11, same question but for space environmentalism. Moriba coined the term so he’s a good person to ask. 8:06 - Space may be an abundant and limitless expanse, but from a resource consumption POV, especially in LEO, it is quite finite 9:44 - How do you feel about the influx of attention to orbital debris and LEO congestion in recent years? 11:42 - Are there parallels, theoretically speaking, between the Kessler Syndrome and planetary feedback loops that could be induced by runaway climate change? 14:36 - Risk assessment, forecasting, pattern-matching, structured vs. unstructured data, building models, and “epistemic uncertainty” … and @ 18:00, “You can’t know something better than its inherent randomness” 19:49 - Overseeing our orbital commons is the quintessential international relations problem. With regards to taking ownership and cleaning up the mess, does the buck stop with national governments? 24:59 - Is there a new co-host of Pathfinder??? 🐶🐶🐶 26:08 - What does reaching our carrying capacity of LEO look like? How many objects can be up there at once? Is it possible to even answer these questions? 28:28 - The dangers of mucking up key orbits 30:52 - Privateer intro. Privateer was cofounded by the three amigos: Moriba, entrepreneur and Privateer CEO Alex Fielding, and Apple cofounder Steve “Woz” Wozniak 33:45 - You have a near-real-time, open-access feed of objects around Earth on your website. Where are you pulling this data from? As it relates to your Wayfinder product, what’s unique about Privateer’s tech stack? In what ways is this an aggregation play? Are you making this data interoperable? 39:24 - Operationalizing and productizing Moriba’s life work through Privateer’s platform 40:47 - Privateer will operate its own on-orbit assets 46:42 - You’d have all the reasons in the world to be a jaded realist. Why aren’t you one? How do you stay optimistic? 50:20 - If you weren’t working in astrodynamics and aerospace, what would you be doing? And finally…favorite taco spot(s) in Austin? *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Jordan Noone on 3D printing, Relativity, KittyCAD, and Embedded Ventures | 02 Aug 2022 | 01:14:47 | |
Today’s guest is Jordan Noone, the cofounder and founding CTO of Relativity Space. Noone now holds the same titles at Embedded Ventures, a self-described deeptech VC “skunkworks” that Noone runs with cofounder Jenna Bryant. Embedded Ventures has partnered with the US Space Force on R&D, and backed early-stage startups like Slingshot Aerospace and Inversion. Jordan is also the cofounder and CEO of KittyCAD, which aims to reinvent how engineers and companies create hardware products. On the Relativity front, Jordan helped scale up the company’s additive manufacturing capabilities and hone the rest of the startup’s tech stack. Today, Relativity’s Terran 1 is vertical on the pad in Florida for final tests, before the company conducts an orbital launch attempt this summer. Terran 1 is a 110-foot-tall expendable rocket, and according to Relativity, the largest 3D printed object to exist and to attempt orbital flight. Relativity’s first Terran 1 is 85% 3D printed by mass. Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems, (http://www.spideroak-ms.com) an industry leader in space cybersecurity. Check out their space whitepaper at spacecyber.com *SNEAK PEEK*And now without further ado, here’s a glimpse into the range of discussion topics in today’s episode:
…and much more! This was a long one, and there’s plenty of other great nuggets and stories buried in the full episode. We’ll leave it to you to discover them yourselves. *CHAPTERS*0:00 - Intro and Jordan’s background in brief 02:05 - Rundown of Jordan’s résumé left of starting Relativity, from rebellious streaks as a student to his take on medieval history 06:15 - How did the USC administration react to a group of students trying to do something that few other countries, let alone college students, had ever done? 09:59 - Meeting Tim Ellis, Relativity’s cofounder and current CEO (and a Pathfinder alum…Tim joined us on episode #0009) 11:15 - Interning, then working full-time, at SpaceX … and how SpaceX gives its early-stage employees an impressive amount of substantive projects. 13:50 - Jordan was the first student to receive what?! 14:04 - One does not simply launch a rocket into space. We give a glimpse into the hoops that you need to jump through, from calling NORAD to filling out reams of legal paperwork, to launch a rocket into space 19:10 - Starting a multi-billion dollar company at 22, cold-emailing Mark Cuban, and going through Y Combinator (Relativity was in the YC W16 batch) 23:41 - Taking a deeper look into the positives and negatives of 3D printing. What are the technical advantages of 3D printing combustion chambers, engines, and other rocket parts? 28:22 - Transitioning from Relativity back to the earliest stages of company formation … “I was very hungry to go back to an earlier stage” 31:50 - The genesis story of Embedded Ventures, how Jordan linked up with Embedded cofounder Jenna Bryant, and her backstory 34:52 - A look at the all-mighty CFIUS (the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States) 36:04 - Jordan frequently uses the term “clean capital.” What does he mean by that? 44:20 - Graduating from startup founder to the other side of the boardroom table: VC investor and first-time fund manager 52:31 - Leading KittyCAD, which aims to brings software automation and manufacturing digitalization to the hardware world 55:30 - Are the founders of KittyCAD cat people? 59:50 - “If you can explain it to your grandmother, a venture capitalist will understand it” 1:04:04 - Hot takes (or most contrarian views) on the space industry … spoiler alert: “we’re in the worst spot for encouraging national security entrance” 1:10:05 - Jordan’s advice for students who want to break into the commercial space industry *ABOUT US*Today’s episode is Pathfinder #0010, which means we’ve made it into the double digits. So far, so good. We’ll see you soon at Pathfinder #0100. Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand that also publishes newsletters and hosts events around the US. Subscribe to our industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com See you back here next week! | |||
| Printing Rockets: Relativity's Tim Ellis | 26 Jul 2022 | 01:03:01 | |
On today’s episode of Pathfinder, we’re joined by Tim Ellis, the CEO and cofounder of Relativity Space. Tim was in his twenties when he started Relativity Space with cofounder Jordan Noone six and a half years ago. Fast forward to today. Relativity’s 3D-printed Terran 1 rocket is at the pad in Cape Canaveral and an orbital launch is “weeks away,” Tim tells us. Relativity also recently announced that it’s secured more than $1.2B+ worth of launch agreements for the forthcoming, fully reusable Terran R rocket. There are more customer contract announcements to come, Tim says. In fact, just since we recorded 12 days ago, Relativity announced a highly ambitious commercial Mars mission with Impulse Space. Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems, an industry leader in space cybersecurity. *SNEAK PEEK*
…and much more. Over the course of an hour, our conversation took us from writing novels and Fight Club to interplanetary travel and chilling on Mars with a Corona. We hope you’ll learn as much as we did. *CHAPTERS*00:00 - Intro 1:23 - Settling Tim's age, once and for all 5:03 - A non-linear path into aerospace and Tim's passion for screenwriting and cinema 9:51 - Joining USC Rocket Lab 11:20 - Interning at Blue Origin back-to-back-to-back 12:48 - What % of Relativity's employee base previously worked at SpaceX or Blue Origin? 14:02 - "Several hundred person effort" working just on 3D printing ... and @ 15:43 the perks of 3D printing, "the holy grail of automation technologies for aerospace" 17:32 - How the hell did you get Y Combinator to accept a rocket company? 18:36 - Incorporating, cold-emailing Mark Cuban, Relativity's Y Combinator cohort, and the YC Mob 🙃 21:07 - How does a pre-revenue, pre-product rocket startup sell investors and what does it point to as a sign of progress or traction? 23:23 - Setting the scene for Relativity's first orbital launch attempt with the Terran 1 rocket from Cape Canaveral 28:40 - Relativity's tech stack 36:25 - Would Relativity consider selling 3D printers or making other large 3D-printed structures? 38:25 - Surveying the launch landscape...Tim shares his thoughts on where the launch market is still undersupplied 43:43 - Relativity's $1.2 billion Terran R backlog is growing, with more commercial contracts to be announced 48:07 - How is Relativity navigating market turbulence and a potential R-word (recession)? 52:35 - Tim's testimony to Congress & recruiting for the commercial space industry and building mission-driven teams 54:08 - The cast of characters attracted by making life multiplanetary 58:07 - What's that behind Tim? 58:44 - How does Tim use Twitter? Relativity is scaling headcount quickly. Relativity had 100 employees before Covid; it now has 850 and expects to hit 1,000 soon. 1:00:00 - Getting swole like Jeff Bezos and staying in touch with his former boss 1:01:06 - Does Tim have plans to travel to the Red Planet one day himself? *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Kevin Weil on Leading Product at Planet, Earth Observation, Going Public, and Ukraine | 19 Jul 2022 | 01:02:14 | |
Kevin joined Planet last April to accelerate software and data product development (or help the company move “up the stack”). Before he worked in commercial space, Kevin held leadership roles at Silicon Valley mainstays that have become household names, like Twitter and Instagram. He managed products with hundreds of millions of daily active users. Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems — www.spideroak-ms.com — an industry leader in space cybersecurity. *SNEAK PEEK*
0:00 - Intro 2:00 - Rundown of Kevin’s résumé, from studying particle physics to quickly shipping code at startups and eventually running product at consumer apps that became household names 4:19 - Joining Twitter in ‘09…and growing with the company until he departed in ‘16 5:07 - Running product at Instagram, while the Facebook division was still relatively autonomous 7:07 - What convinced Kevin to jump ship to the new space industry? 9:11 - Launching what into space?! Unpacking the tech tailwinds powering the cubesat and smallsat revolutions 11:51 - A simple walkthrough of what Planet’s constellation does daily 13:30 - the Silicon Valley-style startup product management playbook…What cringe “best practices,” if any, did Kevin take from consumer social to Planet? 15:07 - Where is the EO (Earth observation) industry at today, in terms of maturity and adoption? 18:01 - On selling to both governments and commercial users…and when the “flippening,” as Ryan calls it, may happen 21:26 - Expanding on Planet’s “one-to-many” model 24:20 - The trials and tribulations of being a publicly traded company 27:50 - Will SPAC turbulence have a lasting impact on future funding? 30:00 - How Planet processes their data 33:00 - Case study: VanderSat acquisition and Planetary Variables 35:23 - Switching gears to Ukraine, and Planet imagery’s role in shaping the world’s understanding of what’s happening on the ground 36:40 - The value of the daily Earth-imaging scans, as it relates to Ukraine and Russian aggression 37:55 - The geopolitical value of unclassified commercial satellite imagery for governments, who can point to the data and say: “This happened. You don’t have to take our word for it.” 41:55 - Buzzfeed researchers noticing pixelated map tiles on Baidu, digging in to Planet data, and making an ugly discovery 43:45 - Mental health and content moderation 46:15 - What safeguards Planet puts in place to prevent abuse or misuse of its data 48:30 - Genie in a bottle question…What’s one thing that Kevin wishes could change overnight in the EO industry? 52:30 - Will more engineers follow in Kevin’s footsteps, and move from Big Tech companies to commercial space? 1:00:06- Worlds colliding question…Will Elon end up owning Twitter? *SHOW NOTES*Kevin's Twitter handle: twitter.com/kevinweil Kevin is a proven leader with a track record of leading software and data product organizations through hyper-growth, and delivering market-making customer solutions — a mindset and body of experience that aligns perfectly with Planet’s high-growth business objectives. Kevin has built and scaled teams and products at the world’s fastest growing and most consequential companies. Kevin was one of Twitter’s first 50 employees and ultimately became its SVP of Product, leading its consumer, developer, and monetization products as the company went public and scaled to over $2bn in revenue." *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| The Orbital Age: Sierra Space's Tom Vice on Dream Chaser, Orbital Reef, and His Space Restaurant | 12 Jul 2022 | 00:46:49 | |
Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems — www.spideroak-ms.com — an industry leader in space cybersecurity. Check out the company’s space cybersecurity white paper at spacecyber.com *SNEAK PEEK*
The two parts of the bio we discuss: ...and more. There's plenty of mind-boggling bits baked into this conversation, from manipulating the electromagnetic spectrum to peering back in time with JWST to Tom's concept for an Asian fusion restaurant in low-Earth orbit. *CHAPTERS*0:00 - Intro 2:00 - Tom’s résumé 4:15 - Most guidance systems rely heavily on air and space 8:30 - Sierra Space spins out from Sierra Nevada 9:50 - A **massive** $1.4B Series A 12:45 - Being a unique space and technology company 15:25 - Still bringing people back from space the same way we did in the ‘60s 18:35 - Capturing Apple’s platform play 20:10 - Sierra is building a value ecosystem 22:05 - What makes the period of time we’re currently in so profound? 26:00 - Is “early internet age” the right analogy for space? 28:29 - Low-cost transportation lowers barriers to LEO 32:50 - Making low earth orbit (LEO) accessible and affordable 37:15 - There’s something extraordinary about the Pale Blue Dot 40:10 - Understanding the significance of Earth 41:50 - ‘For All Mankind’ 43:53 - When is Tom going to space? *SHOW NOTES*Tom's LinkedIn bio: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tomvice/ *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Dodging Debris, with Tony Frazier (CEO of LeoLabs) | 20 Aug 2024 | 00:53:26 | |
This week’s Pathfinder pod features Tony Frazier, LeoLab’s newly appointed CEO, to discuss the critical role the company plays in building a living map of orbital activity for space operations. With over $120M of private capital raised, LeoLabs has continued to expand its global network of ground-based radars, currently cataloging over 22,000 objects in LEO. Tony shares his journey from a 13-year career at Maxar to joining LeoLabs, driven by his belief in the company's mission to enhance space safety and security. We explore Tony's background, including his experience managing billion-dollar P&L operations at Maxar and his involvement with Iridium, which shaped his understanding of the risks posed by debris. We also discuss:
And much, much more… • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:33 - What is LeoLabs? 01:34 - Where is LeoLabs based and how long have they been around? 02:42 - How did Tony end up at Leo Labs? 04:26 - The mission 08:04 - Why LeoLabs hired Tony? 09:55 - How important is debris and traffic management? 13:52 - The Kessler Syndrome 15:48 - LeoLabs' architecture 23:08 - Competitor differentiation 25:29 - Advantages of a space-based architecture 28:14 - Scaling 30:09 - 3rd-party data integration 32:12 - Current demand for situational awareness and future predictions 35:06 - Market catalysts 39:38 - How LeoLabs makes money 41:41 - Data tracking for the lowest tier subscription 44:26 - Government vs commercial bookings 44:59 - What makes LeoLabs attractive to investors? 48:16 - Is the goal to become a public company? 49:26 - Killer asteroids 50:07 - Favorite space-related media
• Show notes • LeoLab’s website — https://leolabs.space/ LeoLab’s socials — https://twitter.com/LeoLabs_Space Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes • About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| The Macro View with Mo Islam | 05 Jul 2022 | 01:03:10 | |
A Payload on Payload interview? It’s like the Spiderman pointing at another Spiderman meme. Jokes aside, Ryan invited Mo on to discuss a presentation he prepared for the Payload team at their recent off-site meeting. This week’s episode focuses on an adapted version of the deck and what’s happening within the macroeconomy. Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems — www.spideroak-ms.com — an industry leader in space cybersecurity. Check out the company’s space cybersecurity white paper at spacecyber.com. *SNEAK PEEK*
...and much more! It's a great conversation and we're super excited for you to hear it. Thanks to Mo for coming on Pathfinder! *CHAPTERS*0:00 - Show intro 1:17 - Introduction of the founder of Payload, Mo Islam 2:13 - Mo’s résumé 4:32 - Filling the big gap in media coverage within the space economy 10:52 - America’s current struggle with inflation 13:41 - We are facing a global food crisis 16:00 - Mo’s take on a potential technical recession 21:30 - Mo’s favorite topic….. Crypto! 24:40 - Aerospace & Defense (A&D) was the top traded sub sector in Q2 29:30 - The Fed is deliberately bursting the bubble on purpose, lowering asset prices on purpose…. “this is different than the global financial crisis” 33:10 - 2021 was a record year for government space investment, leading to increased future budget requests 34:21 - Russia-Ukraine conflict’s effect on the race for space dominance 38:20 - “It’s important to remember how quickly the macro can flip” 43:31 - The end of the first chapter of new space is closing 49:50 - Unicorn companies typically start in the period following a downturn 51:40 - Mo’s opinion on the new space race 58:37 - Mo’s hobbies.. He’s a DJ?! 1:01:10 - Will we get boots on the moon in the next decade? *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Escaping Gravity: Lori Garver on Leading the Commercial Space charge at NASA | 29 Jun 2022 | 01:04:40 | |
Welcome to the fifth episode of Pathfinder, a weekly show where Payload managing editor and host Ryan Duffy sits down with the top shot-callers in space. Per Escaping Gravity’s cover description, “from inside the space agency, Garver collaborated with key players such as Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and President Obama to usher in a more peaceful, inclusive and meaningful space age.” Lori led the NASA transition team for then-President-elect Barack Obama and would eventually go on to be the second-in-command at the US space agency. During her tenure, Lori was widely credited for ushering in a new era of competition in commercial space. Now, Lori is a Senior Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, an Executive in Residence at Bessemer Venture Partners, and a member of the Board of Directors for Hydrosat. Garver founded Earthrise Alliance, a philanthropic organization utilizing satellite data to address climate change, and cofounded the Brooke Owens Fellowship, an internship and mentorship program for collegiate women. Thanks to Lori for coming on Pathfinder, and for being our third video interview! And thanks to SpiderOak Mission Systems for their continued support. Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems — www.spideroak-ms.com — an industry leader in space cybersecurity. Check out the company’s space cybersecurity white paper here. *CHAPTERS*0:00 - Show intro 1:21 - Lori’s résumé 5:09 - Her view of American space exploration with “a very unique window on a very important time in our history” 6:20 - Looking beyond space to how the nation grapples with complex threats, COVID-19, and the military industrial complex 8:44 - SpaceX and the first crewed launch, “it was a relief that it was happening” 10:34 - Are we in a paradigm shift? 11:55 - Pushback within NASA and walking the line…“it’s very hard to make meaningful change in government” 14:02 - Dealing with adversity within NASA and justifying the need for spaceflight programs 18:17 - Former head of NASA proposing to transfer the commercial crew budget and move it to the rocket program, “embedded a conflict between the private sector…. And SLS & Orion” 19:48 - NASA’s purposes include commercial space development 23:10 - What are cup boys?! 25:09 - Transferring from NASA to industry, aka the revolving door, is “a cycle that’s unhealthy for our nation’s space program” 28:05 - What are Lori’s key performance indicators (KPIs) 33:20 - Lori on the difficulties of leaving NASA 37:04 - Unpacking “Political science can often be more complicated than rocket science” 41:30 - You don't need a technical background to get into the space industry! 45:29 - Who are the space pirates and space elites now? 49:04 - Convergence between space and tech industries, and how/whether the two are competing for talent 53:00 - Lori’s thoughts on diversifying the space industry and how thinking differently can drive positive change 56:16 - Are we going to have an animal metric system for measuring asteroids? 59:05 - Lori’s experience training for space, singing John Denver to help her stay calm during the spinning chair 1:02:40- When will Lori go to space? *SHOW NOTES*If you’d like to order a copy of Escaping Gravity, you can find one from a range of retailers at www.lorigarver.com. For a signed copy, reach out to East City Books at www.eastcitybookshop.com/pre-orders/lori-garver-escaping-gravity Lori’s socials: @Lori_Garver *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| a16z's Katherine Boyle on A&D Investing, Dual-use Tech, and Space Optimism | 21 Jun 2022 | 00:54:19 | |
Welcome to the fourth episode of Pathfinder, a weekly show where Payload managing editor and host Ryan Duffy sits down with the top shot-callers in space. Katherine is a prolific writer and deep thinker on aerospace and defense, the US national interest, dual-use technology, and the relationship between Silicon Valley and Washington. As you can see below, we had a wide-ranging conversation on Pathfinder 0004. Prior to a16z, Katherine was a partner at General Catalyst, and before that, cut her VC teeth at Founders Fund. She was also a general assignment reporter for the Washington Post before moving out to Silicon Valley and started her investing career. Disclaimer, via a16z: "The content here is for informational purposes only and should not be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice, or be used to evaluate any investment or security and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund." Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems — www.spideroak-ms.com — an industry leader in space cybersecurity. Check out their space cybersecurity white paper at www.spacecyber.com *CHAPTERS*0:00 - intro 2:35 - From pre-Bezos WaPo to B-school to venture investing 3:42 - Culture shock of Silicon Valley and trying to “figure out the story I saw in front of me” 5:40 - Joining a16z and defining the American Dynamism thesis 8:00 - No more tyranny of geography (Katherine is in Miami!) 10:15 - VC + Silicon Valley exports to the world 13:10 - “It is our goal that every firm has an American Dynamism practice” 15:00 - The false dichotomy of atoms & bits (not mutually exclusive) … and @ 15:15, Palmer Luckey (founder of Oculus & Anduril) as case study 15:45 - a16z Cofounder Marc Andreessen’s canonical pieces - “Software is eating the world” in 2011 and “it’s time to build” in 2020 - converging 18:00 - Building in digital vs. physical worlds 20:05 - Space is no longer a niche specialized area of investment 21:45 - VCs enabling commercial space sector and government/DoD serving as key initial first customers to help startups get through the “valley of death” 22:40 - Governments as customers vs. competitors 23:10 - You can sell to government and move into enterprise, but you can also build a large enough business just selling to “US government and her allies” 24:43 - Dual-use technology, Silicon Valley working with the Pentagon, and Russia-Ukraine war as a catalyst for more cooperation? 27:30 - Defense as bipartisan issue then…to national security as ESG 30:00 - How can A&D startups compete with Big Tech for talent? 34:20 - Hardware-software hybrids, standing up new A&D company models, and sharing the playbook by “building in public” … talent not only going to Big Tech or academia, but into companies like SpaceX, Anduril, and Hadrian, and then starting companies of their own 35:30 - The role of storytelling in startup success … and @ 36:35, having “an extraordinary storyteller at the helm” … @37:30, motivating teams through common missions and authentic storytelling 38:00 - Hadrian investment. Tackling issues in the US defense industrial base, supply chains, and fragmented machining/parts manufacturing industry … and 40:45, where Hadrian makes the biggest impact first 41:00 - Legacy industries serving USG often lack quality software or customer support … consumerization of B2G products 42:30 - CS PhDs working with machinists and people who resonate with the mission 43:45 - Key under-discussed questions: Who is the team? How did you meet the team? And how are you going to recruit the team? 48:20 - Criticism of space exploration has been a constant since the inception of the US’s space program … but @ 49:00, space is cool again! We’ve moved to a world where people see space as cool again. 50:08 - Katherine’s predictions on the future of space exploration … “I don’t think people realize how fast it’s going to be here.” 51:30 - Family conversations on leaving Earth?! 52:45 - Does a16z have a full-time chief meme officer yet? *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Assembling a Great Crew with Lauren Lyons | 14 Jun 2022 | 01:03:19 | |
Welcome to the third episode of Pathfinder, a weekly show where Payload managing editor and host Ryan Duffy sits down with the top shot-callers in space. Joining us this week is Lauren Lyons, a space industry consultant, startup advisor, and STEM evangelist. Lauren is working on a new venture, but most recently, was COO of Firefly Aerospace. Before that, Lauren held senior engineering roles at Blue Origin and SpaceX. While at Blue, Lauren worked on the company’s lunar lander and Orbital Reef programs. At SpaceX, Lauren worked on the development/certification of Crew Dragon; the launch of Starlink; chief engineering and mission assurance for Falcon 9 and Dragon; and Falcon 9 mission management. Rather casually, she also hosted launch livestreams for a variety of missions, including the Emmy-winning Demo 1. She makes a cameo on Return to Space, the Netflix documentary that aired in April. Lauren estimates these streams were just 5% of her time/duties…so needless to say, she kept busy. Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems — www.spideroak-ms.com — an industry leader in space cybersecurity. Check out their space cybersecurity white paper at www.spacecyber.com *SNEAK PEEK*In Pathfinder #0003, Lauren and Ryan discuss:
…and more! *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is powered by Payload, a modern space media brand. Subscribe to our industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com. Thanks again to SpiderOak Mission Systems for supporting Pathfinder. Finally, as Ryan mentioned in the conversation before the break, here’s the thread from Payload Director of Operations Jess Lis about investing in deeptech during downturns: https://twitter.com/jessicaxlis/status/1530262449139724290 | |||
| Back to the Moon: Rob Meyerson on Building Blue Origin and the Lunar Economy | 07 Jun 2022 | 00:44:27 | |
Welcome to Pathfinder, a new weekly show where Payload Managing Editor Ryan Duffy sits down with the shot-callers in space to discuss all the top news and trends beyond Earth. In Pathfinder #0002, Ryan sits down with Rob Meyerson, the founder and CEO of Delalune Space and former president of Blue Origin. Pathfinder is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems, an industry leader in space cybersecurity. Check out their space cybersecurity white paper here. *ABOUT ROB MEYERSON*While at Blue Origin, Rob reported directly to Jeff Bezos, oversaw Blue’s growth from 10 to 1,500 employees, and managed development of New Shepard, among many other programs. Rob has also worked at NASA and Kistler Aerospace. Delalune is a management consulting firm serving the aerospace, mobility, technology, and financial services sectors. At Delalune, which literally means “of the moon,” Rob backs and advises leading aerospace startups, including Axiom Space. While he spends plenty of time in the private markets, Rob also sits at the junction of space and public capital markets. He is the CEO of C5 Acquisition Corp., a blank-check company seeking a SPAC merger “at the leading edge of national security innovation in space, cybersecurity, and energy transition.” Early on in the discussion, Rob shares his thoughts on why investors would be ill-advised to avoid investing in space during our current market downturn. Later on, Rob and Ryan drill down on the products and services NASA is looking to buy rather than build or operate itself. Rob also surveys the technologies we’ll need to build, buy, deploy, and launch to ensure an expeditious return to the Moon and sustained presence on the lunar surface. We touch on building out the lunar economy, then consider all the other puzzle pieces that humanity will need to assemble to not only go back to the Moon, but also set the stage for a lasting multiplanetary future. *CHAPTERS*1:53 - The NS-21 crewed spaceflight mission 4:00 - Joining Blue Origin at the tail end of its think tank stage 4:24 - Reporting directly to Jeff Bezos, Rob's expansive portfolio of duties, and scaling headcount from 10 to 1,500 7:14 - Blue in stealth mode 9:00 - After Beal Aerospace shut down, "the most recent story about commercial space was a negative one." 11:27 - Pockets of talent density in commercial space across the US 15:55 - Why we'd be ill-advised to stop investing in space during a potential market pullback 19:08 - Defense/aerospace industrial base discussion 22:32 - Space market assessment, data, and NASA procurement opportunities for startups 27:45 - What's the killer app for low-Earth orbit? 30:15 - The need for reentry vehicles from low-Earth orbit and return services to Earth 31:38 - Cost-plus contracting 35:02 - NASA planting a flag on the moon, and staying, and what that might mean for commercial space entrepreneurs 36:11 - Lunar services and businesses that excite Rob 38:49 - Overhyped/underhyped aspects of space 41:06 - Rob's advice for students looking to break into the space industry *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| Your Next Space Landlord: Axiom's Michael Suffredini on Private Space Stations | 31 May 2022 | 00:47:53 | |
Axiom is a Houston-based space startup unicorn. Axiom is building a space station, brokering private spaceflight missions with SpaceX, and even has a slot at the International Space Station (ISS) with its name on it. If you can't tell, we love saying the word space. Suffredini is one of the world’s foremost authorities on building and operating space stations. He spent three decades at NASA and 10 years as the ISS program manager, before hanging up his space agency cleats and starting Axiom with Kam Ghaffarian. In April, Axiom clinched a world, or maybe intergalactic, first. Together with SpaceX, Axiom launched Ax-1, the first all-private mission to the ISS. In our conversation, recorded in early May, Suffredini shares plenty with us on Ax-1, Axiom's business model, his time at NASA, Tom Cruise's LEO movie, in-space manufacturing, and much more. Pathfinder's first episode is brought to you by SpiderOak Mission Systems, an industry leader in space cybersecurity. *CHAPTERS*0:00 - intro 1:33 - Ax-1 mission introduction 3:07 - Staying busy after the mission concluded 4:17 - Looking back at the launch, what surprised Mike the most? 6:50 - Mike’s departure from NASA, fateful convos with eventual Axiom cofounder Dr. Kam Ghaffarian, and the decision to start Axiom 9:40 - “He called me back probably the next day and said: 'Okay, I'm in. Let's go build a space station.'” 11:54 - How could a commercial station improve upon what’s been started with the ISS? What’s different between public and private stations? 13:21 - Spacewalks are expensive and time-consuming, but necessary to repair American components outside the International Space Station 14:13 - At the ISS, “we transitioned to a laptop you could buy online.” Axiom is taking this approach to a whole new level. 14:40 - UX (user experience) space stations - a niche but important discipline 15:29 - Fixing issues in flight without calling the ground and using automated onboard hardware 15:50 - Cost comparisons between public and private stations 16:10 - Buy vs. build 18:07 - Vertical integration 19:56 - Axiom’s roadmap: Phase #1 @ 20:04, Phase #2 @ 21:45, and Phase #3 @ 22:46 23:46 - Later this century, Axiom has sci-fi visions of creating rotating space cities in low-Earth orbit 26:24 - NASA shifting from owning/operating a station to being one customer on it 31:04 - Axiom’s target markets, from applied research to in-space manufacturing 33:16 - “The big thing that’s really ‘gonna change our lives”... 33:12 - The killer app for space stations? 36:01 - Internet analogy … and Amazon comparison @ 40:07 37:20 - Inspiring kids to start thinking about microgravity and building products/businesses suited to the conditions of microgravity 42:52 - “The movie flight is the worst-kept secret in the industry” (👀Tom Cruise👀) 43:53 - Closing out the show with a bunch of Texas questions *ABOUT US*Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand. While we have designs on becoming the biggest space content company in the galaxy, for now, we send newsletters and publish podcasts. Subscribe to our flagship industry-leading daily newsletter at payloadspace.com | |||
| 100% Reusability, with Andy Lapsa (CEO of Stoke Space) | 13 Aug 2024 | 00:58:10 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we welcome back Andy Lapsa, cofounder and CEO of Stoke Space. Stoke has made remarkable strides since Andy's last appearance on the show two years ago. They've grown to over 140 employees and developed innovative full-flow staged combustion cycle engines and reusable upper-stage prototypes. Andy shares his insights on the challenges and progress in creating fully reusable launch vehicles, emphasizing the importance of rapid reusability for reducing costs and increasing availability and reliability. We dive into Andy's background, including his ten years of experience at Blue Origin and his decision to start Stoke Space to accelerate the pace of innovation. We also discuss:
And much more...
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:34 - What's changed since our last episode? 03:04 - Why Andy started Stoke? 07:09 - Andy's time at Blue Origin 09:14 - What makes Stoke different from other launch providers? 12:14 - Focusing on 2nd stage launch first 14:47 - Payload capacity 15:53 - Why has it taken so long for SpaceX to work on fully reusable launch capabilities? 18:36 - Is there a market for multiple launch providers? 21:32 - Growth in launch demand 29:04 - Value proposition for working with Stoke 30:25 - Getting to orbit 36:24 - Minimum viable success 37:59 - Product roadmap post-Nova 40:03 - Investor misconceptions about launch 42:21 - The factory is the product? 44:52 - Fusion 53:29 - What keeps Andy up at night? 54:47 - Funding 55:19 - Stoke's big vision 56:12 - Who plays Andy in the movie about Stoke? • Show notes • Stoke’s website — https://www.stokespace.com Stoke’s socials — https://twitter.com/stoke_space Andy’s socials — https://twitter.com/AndyLapsa Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Space Station Foundations, with Colin Doughan (Gravitics) | 06 Aug 2024 | 00:51:49 | |
This week's Pathfinder features Colin Doughan, CEO of Gravitics, a Seattle-based startup that specializes in the development of modular space infrastructure to support the expansion of stations and orbital platforms. Their primary product is the StarMax module, which can be customized in various sizes to accommodate different launch vehicles and mission requirements. Colin shares his journey into the aerospace industry and his vision for building real estate platforms in space. With a background that includes nearly 20 years at Lockheed Martin and founding Altius Space Machines (acquired by Voyager), Colin brings a considerable amount of experience in infrastructure development. We explore:
And much more...
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro & Epsilon ad 02:04 - Colin's background 03:23 - Colin's first business venture 04:02 - Why start a space station business? 05:25 - Evolution of the Gravitics's vision 06:57 - Zero G modules 07:36 - Business model 08:26 - Why not operate modules? 10:04 - How do you perceive the market opportunity for free-flying space stations? 18:19 - Design decisions 22:25 - Turning a competitor into a customer 25:02 - Gravitics's approach vs existing providers 26:14 - Is there enough capital and investors to sustain this market? 30:26 - Countries creating their own launch capabilities 33:24 - StarMax 35:44 - Insourcing vs outsourcing 36:52 - Scaling manufacturing 40:05 - Testing 42:50 - Technical challengers that keep Colin up at night 44:42 - Commercial and government traction 48:34 - Long-term view 50:09 - ETA for Elysium? 50:35 - Who's going to play Colin in the future movie about Gravitics?
• Show notes • Gravitic’s website — https://www.gravitics.com/ Gravitic’s socials — https://twitter.com/graviticsinc Colin’s socials — https://twitter.com/colindoughan Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes • About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Global Satellites, with Tina Ghataore (Aerospacelab) | 30 Jul 2024 | 01:01:18 | |
This week's Pathfinder guest is Tina Ghataore, Chief Strategy and Revenue Officer at Aerospacelab as well as CEO of Aerospacelab N.A. With a background in aerospace engineering and extensive experience in business development and strategy, Tina has been instrumental in taking products and services to market in both large and small companies. Aerospacelab is a Belgium-based company specializing in satellite platforms and components. Our conversation with Tina covers the fascinating world of satellite technology and Aerospacelab's role in it. We explore
And much more... • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 01:04 - About Tina and her path to Aerospacelab 04:44 - Why Aerospacelab? 06:24 - Aerospacelab's history and Tina's division 09:38 - Why does Aerospacelab need a division focused on North American clients? 12:20 - Market opportunity and distinguishing from their competitors 17:29 - Gauging SpaceX's long-term bus desires 19:44 - Current and future product roadmap 23:53 - How is Aerospacelab currently building satellites 27:43 - Aerospacelab's max satellite capacity 31:49 - Customer base 36:41 - How is Aerospacelab funded? 39:15 - 10 year vision 42:06 - Space in the Middle East 50:32 - Startups that Tina is excited about 53:54 - What does Tina do for fun?
• Show notes • Aerospacelab’s website — https://www.aerospacelab.com/ Aerospacelab’s socials — https://twitter.com/aerospacelab_ Tina’s socials — https://twitter.com/Tina_Ghataore Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Nuclear in Space, with Kate Kelly (BWXT) | 23 Jul 2024 | 00:46:29 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we feature Kate Kelly, Director of Space and Emerging Programs at BWXT, an 8,000-person firm that specializes in delivering nuclear reactors and components for the Navy, commercial nuclear industry, and advanced technologies. Kate shares her journey into the nuclear and space industry, providing insights into the advancements and challenges faced by BWXT. With a background in chemical engineering, Kate has been with BWXT for over a decade, contributing to significant projects like small modular reactors and space nuclear propulsion systems. Our conversation with Kate covers the world of space nuclear technology and BWXT's role in it. We also discuss:
And much more... • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 01:25 - How Kate ended up at BWXT and pursuing nuclear 03:47 - Quick rundown on BWXT 04:34 - What has made Kate stay at BWXT for her whole career? 06:50 - Director of space and emerging programs 08:02 - For All Mankind and how nuclear propulsion works 11:29 - First spacecraft to use nuclear propulsion 12:51 - Milestones 14:33 - What does nuclear propulsion solve? 16:25 - What kind of work is BWXT doing on the power side when it comes to space? 19:46 - Possible scenarios for nuclear power solutions on Earth 21:38 - Long-term value behind BWXT's tech 23:19 - The size of Kate's division 24:45 - How does regulation work for nuclear technologies in space? 27:40 - State of nuclear today and how long until it becomes commercialized 30:38 - BWXT post successful demonstration prediction 32:03 - Safety and combatting public perception on nuclear 34:54 - How BWXT tests their propulsion systems 37:24 - Competitors 38:57 - How does BWXT compete against faster and more agile startups? 41:34 - Nuclear for space in 10 years 43:16 - What Kate does with her free time • Show notes • BWXT’s website — https://www.bwxt.com/what-we-do/advanced-technologies/ BWXT’s socials — https://twitter.com/BWXT Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Grand Design, with Ian Cinnamon (Apex) | 16 Jul 2024 | 00:58:04 | |
Fresh off of a $95M Series B funding round, this week we bring back Ian Cinnamon, CEO of Apex, on to the show. Ian, along with his co-founder Max Benassi, started Apex to address the bottleneck in satellite bus manufacturing. Apex is revolutionizing the small satellite bus market with its productized approach and rapid manufacturing capabilities. Our conversation explores Ian’s journey from concept to scaling production, including:
And much more... • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro & 100th episode! 02:42 - Apex origin story 03:59 - Changes between funding rounds 05:12 - Key factors in raising $95m 06:40 - Financing needs of Apex 07:35 - Current fundraising environment 09:07 - Market opportunity of satellite buses 10:55 - Is there serious demand for buses if you take out Starlink? 16:05 - Winning niche for contracts 17:53 - How Apex separates itself from competitors 19:27 - SpaceX's bus building capabilities 21:04 - Plans beyond LEO 22:06 - Apex naming scheme 23:49 - Mission 1 28:23 - First expectations for Mission 1 30:10 - Mission 1 timeline 32:24 - Combatting the unreliability of the current state of launch 37:03 - Balancing Apex's needs and the government's 40:42 - Impending government contract win? 41:53 - Why Apex built an e-commerce workflow 44:22 - Scaling 48:09 - Team size and expansion goals at Apex 49:34 - What kind of capital would Apex need to be self-sustainable 51:56 - Advice for prospective founders 53:15 - Long-term vision, 10 years out 55:53 - Who is playing Ian in the movie about Apex?
• Show notes • Apex’s website — https://www.apexspace.com/ Apex’s socials — https://twitter.com/ApexSpacecraft Ian’s socials — https://twitter.com/IanCinnamon Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Space Market Realities, with Pierre Lionnet (Eurospace) | 09 Jul 2024 | 01:08:41 | |
There aren’t many dedicated space economists out there, but today we’re lucky enough to be joined by one. This week’s Pathfinder guest is Pierre Lionnet, Research and Managing Director at Eurospace, who shares his critical and thought-provoking insights into the space economy. Pierre, with a background in engineering and finance, has spent 30 years analyzing and providing data-driven perspectives for the space industry. He’s also not afraid to ruffle feathers or challenge conventional thinking with his views. Eurospace, a non-profit trade association, focuses on delivering analytics and independent assessments to its members. Our conversation delves into Pierre's critical perspective on the space economy and the industry's current dynamics. We also explore:
And much more...
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:38 - The Space Economist 02:50 - Space industry over 30 years 04:56 - What sparked Pierre's passion for space economics 07:39 - Previous economists before Pierre 10:43 - Pierre's team at Eurospace 11:15 - Common misconceptions about the industry 13:36 - Concerning and interesting trends in the industry 18:53 - How big is the industry today? 21:43 - Gaps in estimates 25:46 - Negative effects of inaccurate estimates 28:26 - Current view on the startup market and future predictions 34:28 - US vs European startup ecosystem 35:32 - How Pierre would invest his capital 38:35 - Challenges of commercialization and launch costs 44:45 - Is there a viable business model around Starlink? 48:14 - Business case for the Moon 50:31 - What causes a break in interest and passion in investors? 55:27 - Overlooked or undervalued areas of the market 58:08 - What startup would Pierre work at if he had to choose one? 01:00:57 - Space leaders that Pierre follows 01:04:02 - Advice for making sure the space economy continues to grow in the right way 01:06:41 - What does Pierre do for fun?
• Show notes • Eurospace website — https://eurospace.org/ Pierre’s socials — https://twitter.com/LionnetPierre Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms. 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Agent to Investor, with Mike Palank (MaC Venture Capital) | 02 Jul 2024 | 01:04:21 | |
It’s not every day you get to hear space industry perspectives from a former Hollywood talent agent turned investor. Today we're joined by Mike Palank, General Partner at MaC Venture Capital, who shares his career path and insights into the world of VC. Mike, with a background in the entertainment industry, including working at WME as a talent agent, with Will Smith and co-founding MaC Venture Capital, brings a unique perspective on identifying talent and investing in innovative startups. MaC Venture Capital, founded in 2019, focuses on early-stage investments, emphasizing diversity and unique backgrounds among its partners and portfolio. Our conversation delves into Mike's strategic vision and track record. We also explore:
And much more...
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 01:56 - Mike's background 07:23 - From talent agency to VC 11:07 - Spotting talent 13:33 - MaC's structure, investment thesis, and thoughts about space 26:00 - How to get up to speed on new industries and the state of startups in the current market as an investor 33:07 - Notable investments 44:02 - Common founder mistakes 51:24 - Mike's view on diversity in the space industry 57:22 - Hyped and overhyped sectors in the market
• Show notes • MaC Venture Capital website — https://macventurecapital.com/ Mike’s socials — https://twitter.com/mpalank101 Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| A View From Above, with Mason Angel (Industrious Ventures) | 18 Jun 2024 | 00:45:06 | |
Ever wanted to hear the firsthand experience of a New Shepard astronaut? Well, today we're joined by Mason Angel, General Partner at Industrious Ventures, who was on Blue Origin’s most recent flight to space. Mason, with a background deeply rooted in industrial sectors like GE and Linde through his family, shares his unique journey and insights into investing in legacy industries, focusing on aerospace and defense. Industrious Ventures, founded over four years ago, aims to revitalize these often-overlooked sectors by leveraging innovative technologies and substantial expertise. Our conversation delves into Mason's strategic vision and track record. We also explore:
And much more…
• Chapters • 00:38 - Mason and Industrious Ventures 01:37 - Family expertise 02:33 - What is a legacy industry? 04:11 - Being a crew member of Blue Origin's Shepard 06:35 - Experience vs expectation of going into space 07:45 - What's the moment where you are not allowed to get off anymore? 09:04 - Training 11:28 - Weightlessness 13:37 - How does Industrious differ from other firms? 15:43 - State of space investment 18:45 - Why is there room for multiple launch companies? 19:54 - Investing in Stoke & Ursa Major 21:53 - Starship's economic impact 23:14 - Why is interest in the Moon increasing and is Mason thinking about investing in those companies? 24:57 - AstroForge 26:15 - Resources beyond He3 27:16 - Space stations today 31:40 - How has going to space affected Mason's perspective on the business of space? 33:00 - Investing beyond space 35:30 - Areas of the market that are underhyped 36:43 - Technologies that don't exist today that will in 10 years 38:24 - Prediction: Starship's first commercial launch 40:35 - What are LPs looking for from GPs today? 42:37 - If Mason wasn't doing space, what else would he be doing
• Show notes • Industrious Ventures website — https://www.industrious.vc/ Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes • About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Direct to Deployment, with Robert Sproles (CEO of Exolaunch) | 11 Nov 2024 | 00:54:59 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we explore the world of satellite deployment and launch services with Robert Sproles, CEO of Exolaunch. Exolaunch is a leader in satellite integration, offering launch services and deployment solutions for commercial and government clients. We explore how Exolaunch has built a cashflow-positive business with a remarkable track record of reliability, all without external funding. In addition, we discuss:
And much more...
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:30 - Robert's background 08:13 - What is Exolaunch and the products offered? 10:02 - Founding of Exolaunch and building a company without the need for raising capital 14:09 - Bootstrap from day one and future funding plans 16:35 - From Arkansas to Germany 19:02 - Robert transitioning to CEO 21:16 - Current market for rideshare, deployment, and mission management 23:45 - What is different about Exolaunch? 25:48 - Are more launch companies good for Exolaunch and is SpaceX a monopoly? 27:02 - Are transporter missions anti-competitive to other launch companies? 30:13 - Future satellite trends 31:42 - How larger launch vehicles affect Exolaunch 33:33 - Is the launch market supplier demand constrained? 35:35 - How do non-American operators feel about using American launch providers? 37:39 - What does reliability look like? 40:08 - Exolaunch's agility 43:34 - Missions that pushed the boundaries of Exolaunch's capabilities 45:36 - Exolaunch headcount and future plans 46:32 - Growth areas 47:37 - 10+ year outlook 49:07 - What does Robert do outside of Exolaunch? 52:26 - Places to eat in Little Rock, Arkansas
• Show notes • Exolaunch’s website — https://exolaunch.com/ Freeform’s socials — https://twitter.com/Exolaunch Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| The Blue Ghost, with Ray Allensworth (Firefly) | 11 Jun 2024 | 00:47:50 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we're joined by Ray Allensworth, Spacecraft Program Director at Firefly Aerospace. Ray, who has a previous background with major aerospace names like Raytheon and Northrop, helps lead Blue Ghost, Firefly’s lunar lander program designed to deliver scientific and commercial payloads to the surface of the Moon. The company is currently on track to be the next commercial lunar lander on the Moon with its planned launch in November aiming for the elusive 100% flawless mission which has not yet been achieved by any commercial entity. Our conversation delves into the comprehensive capabilities of Firefly as an end-to-end space transportation company, the intricacies of the Blue Ghost program, and the significance of lunar exploration. We also explore:
And much more…
• Chapters • 00:00 Intro 00:37 Firefly overview 01:27 Blue Ghost 03:02 How Ray got to Firefly and her background 04:22 Building a space company in Texas 05:18 What is the importance of returning to the moon? 07:01 National security interest in the Moon 08:20 Viability of developing products for the Moon 09:50 Current moon landing customers and where Ray sees growth 11:04 Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) Program 12:26 Most promising commercial opportunity on the Moon 14:43 Why is it still so hard to land on the Moon? 16:58 How is the Blue Ghost Architecture different from other lunar landers? 19:54 Technical milestones, team, and launch for Blue Ghost 21:01 Most important challenges to overcome for Mission 1 23:04 Powering beyond solar 23:54 Testing for the lunar environment 28:29 What risks keep Ray up at night? 29:52 Customer goals for Mission 1 31:20 The international market 35:44 Commercial landing on the dark side of the Moon 36:53 What's next after CLPS? 37:47 Blue Ghost profitability 39:58 Firefly's role in Artemis program 41:37 Is sample return in the future plan? 42:03 Press bomb prep 43:17 Is the Moon your calling? 44:54 What would you send to the Moon? 46:22 Ray's favorite place to eat in Texas
• Show notes • Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Firefly’s Blue Ghost website — https://fireflyspace.com/blue-ghost/ Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Free-Flying Stations, with Jed McCaleb & Max Haot (Vast) | 04 Jun 2024 | 00:58:57 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we're joined by Jed McCaleb, Founder, and Max Haot, CEO, the leaders behind Vast, a company pioneering the development of commercial space stations. Jed, a seasoned software entrepreneur, and Max, a veteran in space and internet ventures, bring their unique expertise to the ambitious goal of advancing human habitation in space. Our conversation covers the critical aspects of creating economically viable space stations, the strategic role of life support systems, and the significance of reducing transportation costs. We also explore:
• Chapters • 00:00 Intro 00:53 Jed's career path and creating Vast 02:57 Balancing aspirations and making money 04:57 Max's history building business and how he came to Vast 08:49 Max's primary objective at Vast 11:22 Jed's experience building a hardware company 12:31 Market opportunity for a free flying space station 15:20 Haven 1 19:17 Building components in house 21:07 Materials use and construction safety 23:03 Vast's approach vs competitors 29:45 Importance of being first in the market 31:41 Is the market large enough to sustain multiple station providers? 33:25 Common misconceptions of space station investment 38:02 Vast x SpaceX partnership 40:55 Product roadmap 43:22 Coinciding with Starship timelines 45:06 Will Starship be converted into a space station? 46:10 Fundraising 47:09 Economics around Haven 1 51:37 Military applications 53:30 Utilization after acquisition 54:13 What excites you and keeps you up at night?
Max’s socials — https://twitter.com/maxhaot Jed’s socials — https://twitter.com/JedMcCaleb Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Vast’s website — https://www.vastspace.com/ Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| The State and Future of EO, with Sid Dixit (Space Exec, Former Maxar) | 21 May 2024 | 00:55:34 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we're joined by Sid Dixit, former CTO of Maxar and a seasoned leader in the space industry. Sid's career spans pivotal roles at Planet, Amazon, and Maxar, where he has been at the forefront of satellite technology, artificial intelligence, and geospatial data platforms.
• Chapters • 00:00 Intro & Epsilon Ad 01:24 Sid's journey from Planet, Amazon, and Maxar 04:57 Sid's robotics work at Amazon 07:24 How Sid got back into Earth observation 08:21 Maxar's acquisition 11:11 Advent and BCI's end goal 13:20 State of Earth observation 18:50 SpaceX's potential impact on LEO 23:04 If SpaceX goes after remote sensing, what will happen to all the companies operating in LEO? 25:37 Commercial demand 28:31 Do you see imaging tech as improving marginally or step-wise? 34:14 Will AI help open up the commercial market? 41:05 Who's the winner when it comes to the use of models in EO? 45:07 Will satellite imagery become commoditized? 46:48 At what point will imaging quality improvements be enough? 49:03 If you were managing $1m, how much of it would go to EO? 51:20 EO startups to look out for 52:54 Overview | |||
| A Critical Lens, with Sinead O'Sullivan (European Space Policy Institute) | 14 May 2024 | 01:05:51 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we’re joined by Sinead O’Sullivan, an economist and board member of the European Space Policy Institute. Sinead has had a unique career, from her early days in aerospace engineering in Northern Ireland to significant roles on Wall Street and at top academic institutions like Georgia Tech and Harvard. In her free time, she’s written about space, economics, wine, and even music for publications such as the Financial Times, Vogue, and The New Yorker—because who doesn't love a little light writing and high-profile journalism to unwind? Our discussion explores the intricate dynamics of public vs. private funding in the space industry and the challenges posed by venture capital and institutional investments. In addition, we discuss:
This episode is brought to you by Epsilon3, a cloud-based platform that supports a wide range of operational procedures requiring extreme efficiency and control. Innovative teams at NASA, Blue Origin, Redwire, and Firefly Aerospace use it to plan, execute, and automate their most complex workflows.
• Chapters • 00:00 Intro & Epsilon ad 01:16 Sinead's background 07:56 Engineer or Economist? 09:49 Sinead, the writer 12:14 Public vs private funding sources 20:00 The sustainability of current private-first funding mechanisms 28:14 Role of DoD in supporting startups 46:39 What will make institutional capital take the space industry seriously? 55:31 Space financing in 10 years 01:00 Irish modern art
• Show notes • Sinead’s socials — https://twitter.com/SineadOS1 Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Global Connectivity, with Chris Taylor (Aalyria) | 07 May 2024 | 00:54:45 | |
This week’s Pathfinder features Chris Taylor, CEO and founder of Aalyria, a Google spinout that specializes in advanced connectivity solutions. The company is developing what could be game changing free-space optics hardware and network orchestration software to meaningfully change communication speed and efficiency across air, space, land, and sea. It’s core products include:
In this episode, we dissect:
• Chapters • 00:00 Intro 00:32 Chris's path to Aalyria 02:15 What is Aalyria building? 04:52 How do different space assets communicate with each other today? 05:59 What is optical communication? 07:58 The coherent light free space optics (FSO) program 10:50 Why did Google sell their optical comms tech? 12:56 Why is this so important? 15:15 Benefits of Tightbeam over existing free space optics, coherent vs non-coherent space optics 21:22 Customer profiles 25:41 Real-world use case 28:02 Use case in autonomous fleet navigation 29:44 Fleet of autonomous taxis 30:53 Size of Aalyria's addressable market 35:34 Commercialization prospects 38:32 Work with DIU (Defense Innovation Unit) 40:01 Competitors 42:25 Limits of technology 44:22 Funding 47:00 10-year vision 50:34 What does Chris do for fun?
• Show notes • Aalyria’s website — https://www.aalyria.com/ Aalyria’s socials — https://twitter.com/AalyriaTech Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes • About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Single-Stage-to-Orbit, with Livingston Holder (Radian Aerospace) | 30 Apr 2024 | 00:59:57 | |
The first single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) space plane? That's exactly what we're discussing on this week’s Pathfinder podcast. We interview Livingston Holder, cofounder and CTO of Radian Aerospace, which is developing a fully reusable space plane designed for horizontal launch and landing. SSTO? Essentially, SSTO vehicles are designed to reach orbit using a single stage without discarding any hardware. We explore Livingston’s background as a former USAF astronaut as well as the Seattle-based startup’s roadmap to build the world’s first SSTO space transport vehicle. In addition, we cover:
And much more… This episode is brought to you by the Italian Trade Agency (ITA).
• Chapters • 00:00 Intro & ITA Ad 02:12 Why space? 04:45 The astronaut program 06:06 Culture of NASA vs AF astronauts 07:29 Life after the program 09:24 Livingston's path to Radian 12:39 What is Radian building? 16:05 Unique take off 18:17 Who designed the sled? 19:36 Single-Stage-to-Orbit 23:26 Nozzle extensions 25:10 Why now? 29:12 How Livingston met his cofounder 33:19 Where is Radian today? 38:19 First flight test projection 39:23 Capabilities and market positioning 43:19 Hypersonic travel 47:32 Government and commercial traction 49:41 Direct competitors 52:15 How expensive is it to build Radian's spaceplanes? 54:43 What does Livingston do for fun?
• Show notes • Radian's website — https://www.radianaerospace.com/ Radian's socials — https://twitter.com/RadianSpace Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Drugs in Space, with Will Bruey & Delian Asparouhov (Varda Space) | 23 Apr 2024 | 00:59:38 | |
Right on the heels of their $90M funding round, this week’s Pathfinder spotlights Varda and its cofounders, Will Bruey (CEO) and Delian Asparouhov (President). The LA-based startup harnesses microgravity for pharmaceutical development and manufacturing. In its latest mission, the company successfully processed ritonavir, a crucial antiviral drug utilized in HIV/AIDS treatment. In addition to Varda’s origin story and the Series B fundraise, Mo, Will, and Delian discuss:
And much more… This episode is brought to you by the Italian Trade Agency (ITA).
• Chapters • 00:00 Intro & ITA Ad 01:21 Varda’s origin 05:40 What are you building? 08:17 What does space have to offer for manufacturing? 12:00 The business case for space manufacturing 18:02 What drugs have been improved in space? 19:13 What happened to ZBLAN? 20:54 R&D for manufacturing in space 22:34 The W-1 mission 29:05 Customer traction 30:38 Where does Varda's business risk lie? 38:22 Competitive landscape 39:49 Potential partnerships 42:48 Regulatory learnings 45:30 The Series B 46:57 Use cases beyond pharma 48:19 Space stations 55:35 Other companies Will is excited about 57:22 Where would Delian invest his last space investment? • Show notes • Varda’s website — https://www.varda.com/ The Return of Ritonavir Paper: https://www.varda.com/papers/1711063046-return-of-the-ritonavir-a-study-on-the-stability-of-pharmaceuticals-processed-in-orbit-and-returned-to-earth.pdf Will’s socials — https://twitter.com/WillBruey Delian’s socials — https://twitter.com/zebulgar Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes • About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| The New Edge, with Dan Wright (Armada) | 16 Apr 2024 | 00:52:06 | |
Dan Wright is no typical founder. With a formidable background at software powerhouses like AppDynamics and DataRobot, Dan has shifted his focus towards bridging the technological gap in edge computing with his latest venture, Armada. As the world’s first full-stack edge computing platform, Armada integrates computing and AI capabilities directly where data is generated. Dan started Armada after recognizing a significant shift in data generation to the edge and the inadequate response of centralized clouds to the demands of heavy data producers in sectors like oil and gas and manufacturing. In today’s episode, Dan discusses the origin story of Armada and its strategic partnership with Starlink, which allows it to extend its edge computing capabilities to remote locations. We also discuss:
And much more… This episode is brought to you by the Italian Trade Agency (ITA).
• Chapters • 00:00 Intro & ITA Ad 01:11 What is Armada and why did you start the company? 02:33 Adding hardware capabilities 04:34 What is edge computing? 07:00 75% of all data will be generated at the edge 10:12 Serving remote corners of the world 11:22 What kind of efficiency will edge computing be able to make? 14:06 Armada x Starlink 16:59 How did Armada build their relationship with Starlink? 18:51 How did you convince SpaceX to work with you? 20:30 Without Starlink, can Armada still be successful? 22:11 Armada’s product suite 25:41 Creating demand for 3rd parties in the marketplace 28:11 The Galleon 30:44 Customer traction, targeting, and product in the field 32:58 Armada's smallest but still relevant customer 34:18 The competitive landscape 36:13 Extreme testing for Galleon 38:45 Capital raising 41:38 What keeps Dan up at night 43:17 Galleons but in space? 44:47 10 year vision 46:04 Dan's opinion on Starship's next flight test 50:40 What does Dan do for fun? • Show notes • Armada’s website — www.armada.ai Dan’s socials — https://twitter.com/danwrightSF Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| The State of EO + SatCom (Payload Editorial) | 09 Apr 2024 | 00:44:13 | |
This week, we bring you our second installment of Pathfinder’s special podcast series on the State of the Space Industry. As a reminder, you’ll hear from two members of Payload’s editorial staff on key trends, exclusive interviews, and insights shaping the industry. Today’s episode explores EO & SatCom, featuring Payload’s Research Director, Jack Kuhr, and Lead Reporter, Rachael Zisk. Highlights from the discussion include: EO
SatCom
This episode is brought to you by the Italian Trade Agency (ITA). Be sure to check out the Italian Pavilion in South Hall (Booth 603) during Space Symposium! • Chapters • 00:00 Intro & ITA Ad 01:22 Jack's background 02:21 Earth Observation market in 2023 04:41 State of the public EO 06:23 Major fundraisers in 2023 07:51 EO startups securing venture capital 14:20 Spire and BlackSky 16:19 SpaceX and EO 18:59 Consolidation in the EO market 22:37 Rachel’s background 23:30 Satcom in 2023 24:51 Ukraine & SatCom 26:45 Direct to cell technology 28:51 Starlink’s impact 33:22 Edge computing 35:30 Investing in SatCom 39:47 FCC and regulations 42:17 Predictions for SatCom in 2024
• Show notes • Jack’s socials — https://twitter.com/JackKuhr Rachael’s socials — https://twitter.com/RachaelZisk Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| The State of Launch & OSAM (Payload Editorial) | 02 Apr 2024 | 00:41:34 | |
Pathfinder is shaking things up for the next two weeks with a special pod series on the State of the Space Industry. In each episode, you’ll hear from two members of Payload’s editorial staff on key trends, exclusive interviews, and insights shaping the industry. This week? Launch & OSAM, featuring Payload’s Managing Editor Jacqueline Feldscher and Senior Space Reporter Tim Fernholz. Highlights from the discussion include: Launch
OSAM
And much more… This episode is brought to you by the Italian Trade Agency (ITA). Be sure to check out the Italian Pavilion in South Hall (Booth 603) during Space Symposium!
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro & ITA Ad 01:35 - The state of launch in 2023 04:14 - Peter Beck & Rocket Lab 06:31 - Tory Bruno & ULA 11:43 - Tim Ellis & Relativity Space 14:09 - Make or break in launch 15:27 - Government’s perspective on launch outside SpaceX 17:46 - What Jacqueline is excited for in 2024 19:07 - Blue Origin & ULA 21:41 - Tim Fernholz! 22:28 - OSAM. What is it and what companies fall underneath the OSAM umbrella? 24:22 - Core capabilities 25:19 - OSAM market in 2023 25:59 - Challenges of building 27:10 - Gaps in technology 29:53 - Should startups be investing in OSAM technology? 32:21 - How integral is the government in developing OSAM? 34:13 - Who is setting standards? 35:42 - OSAM 1 37:56 - What Tim is excited for in 2024
• Show notes • Jacqueline’s socials — https://twitter.com/jacqfeldscher Tim’s socials — https://twitter.com/TimFernholz Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| The Future of Manufacturing, with Erik Palitsch & TJ Ronacher (Co-Founders of Freeform) | 29 Oct 2024 | 01:02:14 | |
This week on Pathfinder, we explore the future of 3D metal printing and manufacturing with Erik Palitsch and TJ Ronacher, co-founders of Freeform, a pioneering startup aiming to redefine industrial-scale additive manufacturing. Both SpaceX alumni, Erik and TJ share their journeys from leading projects on the Merlin and Raptor engines to co-founding Freeform, where they’re using high-power lasers and real-time process control to create a new era of rapid, scalable 3D printing. We dive into how Freeform’s approach is addressing longstanding challenges in the additive industry, from quality control to production speed. Erik and TJ outline their vision for Freeform as a “manufacturing as a service” model, where clients can access high-quality printed parts without the steep learning curve and costs of traditional additive systems. We also discuss:
And much more… • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:35 - TJ's background 02:15 - Erik's time at SpaceX before Freeform 07:25 - How has materials in 3D printing changed in the past 10 years? 12:27 - Manufacturing as a service and the tech at Freeform 18:16 - 3D printing vs traditionally manufactured parts 23:11 - What is the tech that Freeform is building? 32:45 - True factory scale 3D printing 37:10 - Traction beyond space 38:06 - What Freeform is printing today 38:41 - Revenue and customers 41:53 - Manufacturing capability today and in the future 43:51 - Advice for investors looking to invest in 3D printing 49:18 - Future of 3D printing 54:24 - What will off-planet 3D printing look like? 57:08 - Favorite stories from SpaceX days 60:47 - Milestones to look out for
• Show notes • Freeform’s website — https://freeform.co/ Freeform’s socials —https://x.com/freeform_future Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 4) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Live from Austin, with Dan Goldin (Former NASA Administrator) | 19 Mar 2024 | 00:44:08 | |
This week, we're going live from Austin, TX, at Payload’s inaugural event, “The Ultimate High Ground: The Role of Space in National Security,” held during SXSW. Our episode features a fireside chat with Dan Goldin, the longest-serving NASA Administrator, from April 1992 to November 2001. Dan is known for leading NASA’s resurgence during one of its most challenging periods following the Cold War. His tenure was characterized by the philosophy of "faster, better, cheaper," which established the foundation for the modern space industry. We spend a considerable amount of time discussing Dan’s contributions outside NASA, including his tenure at TRW and his efforts at Cerberus, a leading private equity firm that is now heavily involved in aerospace and defense. Additionally, we explore:
And much more…
• Chapters • 00:00 - Introduction 01:44 - Military and intelligence programs at TRW 03:49 - Potential unforeseen gaps in technology 06:35 - 1958 Space Act 10:17 - Life at Cerberus 14:12 - Common missteps from startups today 17:35 - Do startups understand physics? 19:29 - Overcrowding in parts of the market 21:18 - Where the opportunity is today 26:12 - National security…more than just weapons 28:54 - Directed energy 33:33 - What question is not being asked more often 35:19 - Cislunar space 38:24 - When will we land on the Moon? 38:50 - Are we underestimating or overestimating China's capabilities? 39:21 - When will we land on Mars?
• Show notes • Dan’s’ socials — https://twitter.com/dansgoldin Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday 4) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 5) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Command and Control, with Nate Hamet (Quindar) | 12 Mar 2024 | 00:45:37 | |
This week's Pathfinder podcast features Nate Hamet, cofounder and CEO of Quindar, a startup attempting to dramatically change satellite operations. Quindar's software suite simplifies satellite command and control, enhancing health, security, and connectivity management. With a rich background in satellite operations at notable companies like OneWeb and Orbital Effects, Nate's team uses their expertise to reduce human intervention and increase efficiency in satellite constellations. In addition, we discuss:
And much more…
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 01:22 - What is Quindar and what are you building? 03:14 - What is satellite command and control? 05:47 - Nate's background and how he started Quindar 10:04 - Why is cyber security important? 11:34 - How does the Mission Management Software simplify the operation of satellite constellations? 19:55 - Managing data 21:34 - How far away are we from fully autonomous solutions? 23:30 - How does Quindar make money? 25:08 - Use cases beyond space? 25:57 - Commercial and government traction 27:37 - What is Quindar's ideal customer? 29:14 - The onboarding experience 33:01 - Location and team 35:51 - KSAT integration 38:11 - Quindar's plan from recent funding 39:59 - What to look out for in the future 40:57 - The Star Trek vision 41:46 - What is Nate doing when he's not building Quindar?
• Show notes • Quindar’s website — https://www.quindar.space/ Nate’ socials — https://twitter.com/NateHamet Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday 4) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 5) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Breakthrough Solar, with Stan Herasimenka (Solestial) | 05 Mar 2024 | 00:46:55 | |
Did you ever think that solar power generation in space could be 10x cheaper, 20% more efficient, and extend operational life to over 50 years? Well, that’s what the Arizona-based startup Solestial believes it can achieve with its silicon cell technology. We bring in CEO and cofounder Stan Herasimenka for his first-ever podcast to discuss the unique challenges and differences between terrestrial and space solar cells, and the technological advancements his company is making to produce radiation-hardened, thin, and flexible solar cells for space use. Stan and Mo also cover:
And much more…
00:00 - Intro 00:36 - What are you building? 00:59 - What prompted Stan to start Solestial? 01:57 - Terrestrial vs extraterrestrial solar cells 05:10 - How long would a terrestrial solar cell last in space? 08:27 - Who are the main players? 11:02 - What is III-V? 12:25 - Supply/demand gap 16:03 - Core product offering 18:26 - What is the reason not to have a turnkey solution? 19:53 - Cost of activeness vs COTS 23:40 - Target cost of cells 24:30 - Why would a customer pay more for a premium solar cell? 27:37 - Self-curing radiation damage 30:52 - Perovskite cells 33:20 - Manufacturing and scaling 36:18 - Where is Solestial based? 37:01 - Customer traction 38:39 - Team makeup 40:18 - Financing plans? 41:51 - When will Solestial have their first array in space? 43:13 - What does Stan do when he's not talking about solar cells? 44:09 - Other companies Stan is excited about
• Show notes • Solestial’s website — https://solestial.com/ Stan’s socials — https://www.linkedin.com/in/stan-herasimenka-5932561b/ Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday 4) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 5) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| The Architect of Change, with Lori Garver (NASA) | 28 Feb 2024 | 00:56:36 | |
This week’s Pathfinder features Lori Garver, a pioneering force in the space industry known for her instrumental role in propelling NASA into the modern era of commercial spaceflight. The former Deputy Administrator of NASA joins us today to discuss how partnerships with private space firms helped to shift the landscape from government-dominated missions to a thriving commercial space sector. In addition, Lori and Mo discuss:
And much more…
• Chapters • 00:00 - Introduction 01:00 - Commercial partnerships during Lori's tenure 05:55 - Why did you write your book? 08:29 - The COTs program 10:42 - Support for the Constellation program 12:44 - Is the SLS part of the future of Artemis? 15:40 - Feasibility of NASA's Artemis plan 19:00 - NASA’s CLPS program 22:40 - View on SpaceX's launch dominance 25:52 - Future of human spaceflight 27:05 - Does NASA risk losing relevance? 29:25 - How does great power competition affect NASA? 32:48 - Policies Lori is championing 34:14 - What prompted Lori to work in the industry? 38:40 - What Lori is working on today 45:33 - Viability of asteroid mining 49:18 - Lori's bets on next Moon/Mars landing 50:52 - What does Lori do for fun?
• Show notes • Lori's book — https://www.amazon.com/Escaping-Gravity-Quest-Transform-Launch/dp/1635767709 Lori’s socials — https://twitter.com/lori_garver Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 19,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing five media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday 4) Polaris, our weekly policy briefing, publishes weekly on Tuesdays 5) Payload Research, our weekly research and analysis piece, comes out on Wednesdays You can sign up for all of our publications here: https://payloadspace.com/subscribe/ | |||
| Space and Defense Tech Roadmap, with Tess Hatch (BVP) | 13 Feb 2024 | 00:49:14 | |
San Francisco-based venture capital firm, Bessemer Venture Partners, is diving into defense technology, with Payload securing the first interview to discuss the firm's new strategy with Partner Tess Hatch. Despite the firm's historical successes with space companies such as Terra Bella (formerly Skybox), Spire, and Rocket Lab, they are cautiously awaiting a new technological catalyst before making further industry investments. Meanwhile, Tess has turned her attention to the defense sector highlighted in the firm’s recent Bessemer's defense tech roadmap. She highlights AI/ML solutions and autonomous systems as critical investment areas, aiming to influence the future of national security significantly. Tess joins us to recount her transition from an aspiring astronaut to a deep tech investor. In addition, Mo and Tess discuss:
And much, much more…
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 02:15 - Tess's career arc 04:06 - Tess’s transition from engineer to investor 06:27 - High capex in deep tech investing 09:04 - BVP’s investment strategy 15:59 - Space industry today and future predictions 18:37 - New investors in the space industry 21:07 - A third catalyst? 23:41 - Bessemer's defense tech roadmap 26:28 - How does Bessemer differentiate itself 28:11 - How do you define defense tech? 30:43 - Concept of dual use 32:21 - Reality of dual use 35:12 - Challenges of defense tech investing 38:41 - Future opportunity in national security 40:53 - Liquidity in defense tech 42:48 - Who should partner with Bessemer? 45:08 - Favorite war movie/book
• Show notes • BVP’s Defense Tech Roadmap — https://www.bvp.com/atlas/roadmap-defense-tech BVP’s socials — https://twitter.com/BessemerVP Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 15,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing three media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern (https://newsletter.payloadspace.com/) 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday (https://parallax.payloadspace.com/) | |||
| Starship is Misunderstood, with Casey Handmer (Terraform Industries) | 06 Feb 2024 | 01:00:12 | |
Our guest this week not only has a PhD in theoretical astrophysics but is also a pilot, musician, entrepreneur, language enthusiast, and a thought leader on how humanity can create a better future for itself. No, we’re not constructing a dating profile, but describing Casey Handmer, the founder of Terraform Industries, a startup focused on scaling technologies to produce cheap natural gas with sunlight and air. Today, Casey joins us not to talk shop about his company's innovations but to share his vast knowledge on a subject he's deeply passionate about—Starship, Starlink, and the future of space exploration. Casey has been a prolific writer on these topics, sharing his insights and analyses on his blog since first discussing Starship in 2019. He has a very clear message: the industry significantly underestimates what Starship is capable of and the impact it will have on society at large. Additionally, Mo and Casey chat:
And much, much more…this is one of the most special discussions we've had, so don't miss it. This episode is brought to you by Epsilon3, software for complex engineering, testing, and operational procedures. Learn more at https://www.epsilon3.io/ • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro & Epsilon3 Ad 02:45 - Career arc and Terraform Industries 06:33 - Humanity will move beyond fossil fuels by 2040 09:33 - Everyone must read Casey’s blog 10:13 - Is Starship still misunderstood? 16:12 - In what ways does Starship challenge traditional design philosophies 19:33 - Launch capacity 22:25 - $10m launch costs 25:14 - Epsilon3 Ad Break 25:43 - HLS & why Artemis hasn't been redesigned 28:24 - Thoughts on Blue Moon 29:43 - Why does a non-Starship Artemis program not move the needle? 34:18 - Mars & NASA 36:47 - Is Mars a business? 37:55 - Startups building in this new regime 41:09 - Starship IFTs 42:36 - When will we see the first payload deploying Starship launch? 43:18 - Does the Starlink model work without Starship? 44:28 - Is the Falcon enough to replenish Starlink satellites? 45:24 - Will there be political support for a future with Starship? 52:05 - How will Starship affect the science fiction genre?
• Show notes • Casey’s blog — https://caseyhandmer.wordpress.com/ Terraform’s website — https://terraformindustries.com/ Casey’s socials — https://twitter.com/CJHandmer Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 15,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing three media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern (https://newsletter.payloadspace.com/) 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday (https://parallax.payloadspace.com/) | |||
| Space Research 2.0, with Jack Kuhr (Payload) | 30 Jan 2024 | 00:47:18 | |
Two weeks ago, we launched Payload Research, a new division within Payload dedicated to providing incisive, insight-driven analysis tailored for industry leaders and investors. Today, we welcome Jack Kuhr, the esteemed Research Director of Payload, to go under the hood of our new venture. We explore the motivations behind its inception and offer a glimpse into what the future holds. In addition, they discuss:
• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:36 - Jack's history with Payload 04:14 - Why are we building Payload Research? 10:34 - The Starship Report 15:58 - When will we see Starship commercial payloads? 20:12 - Starship cost-analysis 27:35 - What is Starbase like? 30:13 - SpaceX’s 2023 financials 33:18 - Launch assumptions 34:52 - Starlink assumptions 39:38 - SpaceX’s Other revenue 42:44 - Payload's next research newsletter 43:18 - What should people expect from future Payload research editions? 44:50 - What is Jack looking forward to covering the most this year? 46:18 - How to sign up
• Show notes • The Starship Report — https://payloadspace.com/starship-report/ Payload Research’s website — https://www.payloadspace.com/research Jack’s socials —https://twitter.com/JackKuhr Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes
• About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 15,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing three media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern (https://newsletter.payloadspace.com/) 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday (https://parallax.payloadspace.com/) | |||
| The Future of Engineering, with Malory McLemore (Stell) | 23 Jan 2024 | 00:39:59 | |
Our guest this week is Malory McLemore, the co-founder and CEO of Stell, an LA-based startup that is building workflow software to serve as the future data layer for hardware and industrials. Their platform enables complex, multi-company hardware development efforts to track engineering and compliance documentation, replacing traditional methods like Excel sheets and PDFs. Malory shares her journey from being an aerospace engineer dealing with subpar software tooling to founding Stell. In addition, we discuss:
And much more… • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:48 - What is Stell? 01:44 - Malory's career arc in the space industry 05:19 - Why are Harvard students becoming more interested in space? 06:37 - Malory's previous jobs that led her to Stell today 07:49 - How could aircraft like Boeing's latest be improved? 10:53 - How have companies operated in the past and why should they work with Stell? 12:38 - Current offerings and roadmap 14:19 - Stell's business model 14:55 - What does the ideal Stell customer look like? 15:50 - Stell's selling point 16:45 - How do you quantify money savings to a client 18:33 - Government clients 20:39 - How did Stella build the team 22:36 - Plans for expanding beyond aerospace 23:28 - How do you differentiate among other engineering management tools? 26:51 - Do you think that this looks from other companies, but we’re headed to start to look similar? 29:45 - Current fundraising plans 30:06 - Grand vision to investors 31:41 - What kicked off the growth of hard tech startups? 33:23 - What would Malory be working on if it weren't for Stell? 33:56 - Apollo-era management 37:26 - What does the startup community look like in Huntsville? 38:32 - Was building in LA the best decision you've made?
Stell's website — https://www.stell-engineering.com/ Stell's socials — https://twitter.com/stell_space Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes • About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 15,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing three media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern (https://newsletter.payloadspace.com/) 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday (https://parallax.payloadspace.com/) | |||
| Creating Constellations, with Tim Kienberger (LeoStella) | 16 Jan 2024 | 00:45:12 | |
Our guest this week, Tim Kienberger, has been at the forefront of the industry's evolution from large-scale satellite buses to the small satellite revolution. As the current CEO of LeoStella, a joint venture between Thales Alenia Space and BlackSky, he is helping the company redefine small satellite manufacturing. In today's episode, Tim reveals insights into the production of small satellites and the unique challenges of managing a joint venture. In addition, we discuss:
And much more… • Chapters • 00:00 - Introduction 00:22 - Tim's career overview 02:40 - Thales/Blacksky JV 06:56 - Core offerings and customer makeup 09:01 - Current demand 12:19 - Product roadmap 14:03 - Capability needs from LEO to cislunar 17:53 - Government customers 19:50 - Balancing customization vs standardization 23:18 - Production hurdles 26:16 - Competitive landscape 27:36 - Challenges for new startups 31:32 - Impact of Starship on the small sat market 40:18 - Long-term funding needs 42:19 - What would Tim be doing if he wasn't in the space industry • Show notes • LeoStella's website — https://leostella.com/ LeoStella's socials — https://twitter.com/LeoStellaLLC Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes • About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 15,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing three media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern (https://newsletter.payloadspace.com/) 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy publication, hits inboxes Tuesday (https://polaris.payloadspace.com/) 4) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday (https://parallax.payloadspace.com/) | |||
| Refueling the Space Economy, with Daniel Faber (Orbit Fab) | 09 Jan 2024 | 00:48:59 | |
In this episode, Daniel Faber, CEO of Orbit Fab, a US-based company that is pioneering in-space refueling infrastructure, shares his journey from Tasmania to becoming a leader in the space economy's refueling efforts. Additionally, we delve into:
And much more… • Chapters • 00:00 - Intro 00:35 - Gas stations in space 01:44 - Daniel's background 05:49 - Origins of Orbit Fab 10:46 - Initial customer base 11:48 - The demo mission 13:05 - How does Orbit Fab make money today? 14:26 - Working with launch providers 15:25 - Structuring contracts 20:25 - Do small satellites need refueling? 23:02 - Contracting with the DoD 24:11 - Partnership with Astroscale 26:27 - Findings from the demo mission 27:54 - RAFTI standardization 29:10 - The inflection point for refueling 34:30 - The competition 35:57 - Fundraising environment 39:07 - Milestones investors should watch for 39:58 - Viability of asteroid mining 44:53 - What Daniel would be building if he wasn't building Orbit Fab 46:06 - Companies that excite Daniel
Orbit Fab's website — https://www.orbitfab.com/ Orbit Fab's socials — https://twitter.com/OrbitFab Daniel's socials — https://twitter.com/_DanielFaber_ Mo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload’s socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes • About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 15,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We’re also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we’re a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing three media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern (https://newsletter.payloadspace.com/) 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy publication, hits inboxes Tuesday (https://polaris.payloadspace.com/) 4) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday (https://parallax.payloadspace.com/) | |||