|
|
|
|
|
by wongarsu
87 days ago
|
|
On the other hand a lot of SpaceX's success can be attributed to applying modern software development methodology on spacecraft. They are very much doing agile development, betting on velocity enabling fast iteration. That has lead to some of the best rockets ever developed, and the largest satellite constellation by far. But part of the secret sauce is creating situations where you can take risks. Traditionally anything space-related deals in one-offs or tiny production volumes, so any risk is expensive. A lot of SpaceX's strategy is about changing this, whether that's by testing in flight phases the customer doesn't care about, being their own best customer to have lower-risk flights, or building constellations so big that certain failure scenarios aren't a big issue (while other scenarios still have to be treated as high-risk high-impact) |
|
I would love to update myself if anyone has a good source.
For better or worse, it's hard to argue with results.