It's been a busy weekend for SpaceX.
The video sex wife swapcompany sent yet another rocket racing off into orbit on Sunday morning after a planned Saturday launch was called off due to inclement weather. The rocket, dubbed Transporter-1, is loaded with some very special cargo: A gigantic pile of satellites.
There are 143 in total aboard Transporter-1. Of those, 133 belong to government and business interests. The other 10 are Starlink satellites, the orbital high-speed internet project spearheaded by SpaceX.
Notably, Transporter-1's cargo makes this particular launch more historic than most. The 143 satellites it's ferrying up into the space are "the most spacecraft ever deployed on a single mission," according to SpaceX.
The scheduled 10:00 a.m. ET launch at Florida's Cape Canaveral proceeded without issue after Saturday's postponement. (It was actually the second postponement for this mission, which was originally supposed to launch back in December.)
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The "ride-share" mission — so called because of all the non-SpaceX satellites that hitched a ride — used SpaceX's Falcon 9, a partially reusable two-stage launch vehicle. It's "two-stage" because part of the rocket detaches after launch and returns to Earth.
That happened here about 10 minutes after launch, with the bulk of the Falcon 9's body detaching and making a safe landing about the SpaceX drone ship called Of Course I Still Love You. You can watch that landing at roughly the 26-minute mark in the below video.
Many of the satellite deployments are also watchable in the below video of SpaceX's launch livestream. It's not as exciting or dramatic to watch as a rocket liftoff, but as the purpose of the entire mission it's something worth tuning in for during the video's second hour.
The whitewashing of roller skating's online revivalIslamic Art at the Met by Robyn CreswellJohn Berger on ‘Bento’s Sketchbook’ by Anderson TepperBest yoga apps and YouTube channels for practicing at homePolice used ‘smart streetlights’ to surveil protesters, as fearedTwitter meme 'knows a spot' for some absolutely terrible datesFacebook posts about voting will get a link to 'authoritative' infoCosmic Geometry by Lauren O'NeillMusk's removal of legacy verified checkmarks did not drive Twitter Blue subscriptionsCongratulations to Jesmyn Ward by The Paris ReviewCongratulations to Jesmyn Ward by The Paris ReviewBest yoga apps and YouTube channels for practicing at homeDear Stanley by Emma StraubHelp Us Support St. Mark’s! by Natalie JacobyKanye West claims he's running for president and Elon Musk is playing alongL.A. Advice: Writers Dating, Fear of the Blank Page by Sadie SteinOn ‘ArtaudOn Homesickness by Francesca MariOn the Shelf by Sadie SteinScreen Shots by Liz Brown How to buy concert tickets on TikTok Eating Oatmeal with Alasdair Gray by Valerie Stivers On Nighttime by Hanif Abdurraqib Moon Mothering by Katy Kelleher Elon Musk wants to turn Cybertrucks into boats What Was It About Animorphs? by James Frankie Thomas Literary Paper Dolls: Franny by Julia Berick and Jenny Kroik Redux: Credible Threats That Appear and Disappear Like Clockwork by The Paris Review Strava DMs are now open On Cussing by Katherine Dunn Rite Aid is now banned from using AI facial recognition tech Comics as System by Ivan Brunetti Our Contributors’ Favorite Books of 2019 by The Paris Review Amazon air quality monitor deal: Easily detect smoke, allergens and pollutants More UFOs Than Ever Before by Rich Cohen The TikTok aesthetics and trends that ruled 2023 Comcast notifying Xfinity customers of data breach affecting more than 35 million people Robert Lowell Dressed as Santa by Saskia Hamilton Here's every new emoji we got in 2023 2023 was the 'Year of the Girl.' But what does that really mean?
2.4493s , 8581.75 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【video sex wife swap】,Prosperous Times Information Network