>
Will China Retaliate Against Donald Trump's Oil Blockade and Force an American Surrender?
There can be no peace in the Middle East as long as the Zionist agenda of greater Israel rules
Elon Musk Reveals Covid Vaccine Injury After Former Pfizer Official Admits Shots Likely Killed...
Autonomous wing-in-ground effect aircraft has US military in its sights
The Most Dangerous Race on Earth Isn't Nuclear - It's Quantum.
This Plasma Stove Cooks Hotter Than The Sun
Energy storage breakthrough traps sunlight in a molecule
Steel rebar may have met its match – in the form of wavy plastic
Video: Semicircular wings give Cyclone VTOL a different kind of lift
After 20 Years, Wave Energy Finally Works
FCC Set To "Supercharge" Starlink Space Internet With "Seven-Fold More Capacity"
'World's First' Humanoid Robot For Real Household Chores Launched With 16-Hour Battery
XAI Training 10 Trillion Parameter Model – Likely Out in Mid 2026

SpaceX's Starship is poised to revolutionize global logistics and travel with breakthrough ultra-fast point-to-point flights on Earth. The US Air Force Research Lab and Space Force have awarded SpaceX contracts totaling approximately $200-$300 million for a "Global Logistics" program, aimed at rapidly delivering cargo and personnel using Starship. Capable of traveling up to 8,000 miles and landing propulsively, Starship will soon begin (maybe 2026) testing landings on Johnston Island, with up to 40 landings planned over four years. The cost of Starship flights is expected to drop significantly, potentially to under $10 million per flight, making global cargo transport economically viable with a 200-ton payload capacity at Mach 20. While initial military tests focus on cargo delivery, such as medical supplies and personnel transport in as little as 30 minutes, future commercial applications could enable passenger travel between continents in under an hour. Challenges include the need for specialized infrastructure like launch and catch towers for rapid refueling and relaunching, as well as the complexity of lifting off from remote locations without damaging the spacecraft or landing site. SpaceX anticipates Starship landings on Johnston Island by 2026, cargo missions by 2028-2029, and passenger flights by 2035, potentially transforming global logistics with same-day delivery and offering passengers a thrilling ride with G-forces and views of Earth's curvature.
The Air Force will build two landing pads on Johnston Island near Hawaii.
The flights will likely start from California so that they are not flying over land.
There will be up to ten flights per year for four years for testing.
The SpaceX Starship problems where they have exploded the last two flights will get solved this year.
The Starship will need to have landing legs.
There will be no catch tower, because the goal is to land on relatively common concrete pads. Those would be hundreds of regular military bases around the world.
The Starship could then launch from any regular launch tower and then land near where they want. Drones could then fly out and deliver the cargo or urgent supplies where they are needed.
The exciting thing is that in a few years this could change our lives with hourly delivery of cargo anywhere in the world and a few years after that flying people anywhere in under an hour.