News Grower

Independent coverage of AI, startups, and technology.

Ars Technica Mar 24, 2026 at 11:00 Big Tech Stable Warm

Orbital data centers, part 1: There’s no way this is economically viable, right?

"This is not physically impossible; it’s only a question of whether this is a rational thing."

Signal weather

Stable

The story has moved beyond the first headline and now acts as a reliable context anchor.

By Eric Berger Original source
Orbital data centers, part 1: There’s no way this is economically viable, right?

Let's start with the basics. What, exactly, is an orbital data center? On the ground, data centers are typically large, warehouse-sized facilities filled with racks of storage and servers, and usually some high-speed networking gear to connect everything. A data center can be small or large, but the ones SpaceX is looking to supplant are of the big kind—the ones operated by major industry players like Amazon Web Services and Google, which provide most of the online services you use today. These are sprawling buildings, or even campuses of buildings, with redundant connections to the electrical grid, on-site generators, massive banks of batteries, and enormous cooling systems to handle the heat being shed by thousands upon thousands of machines operating around the clock. An orbital data center replicates all of that, but in space. Read full article Comments

Stay on the signal

Follow Orbital data centers, part 1: There’s no way this is economically viable, right?

Follow this story beyond a single article: new follow-ups, adjacent sources, and the evolving storyline.

We send a confirmation link first, then only meaningful digests.

Story map

Understand this topic fast

A quick entry into the story: why it matters now, who is involved, and where to go next for context.

Why it matters now

This story is still moving and pulling follow-up coverage.
There are already 6 connected articles in the same storyline to continue from here.
The story keeps orbiting around Ars Technica, Economically, and Economically Viable, so the entity pages are the fastest way to build context.
Ars Technica already has 4 follow-up stories on the same theme.

Topic constellation

Open the live map for this story

See which entities, story threads, sources, and follow-up articles shape this story right now.

Click nodes to continue

Entity Cluster Article Hub Source

Story timeline

Continue with this story

A short sequence of events and follow-up stories to understand the arc quickly.

Jun 22, 2026 at 21:52 Ars Technica

GM installs robots at flagship EV factory after laying off 1,300 workers

US autoworkers union warns of robot automation as dark factory future looms.

Jun 22, 2026 at 21:02 Ars Technica

Man used massage gun on his tired eyeballs. It went as well as you'd expect.

He had retinal tears and bruises from squishing his eyeballs with the gun.

Jun 22, 2026 at 19:16 Ars Technica

Following user outcry, AMD reinstates memory encryption in consumer CPUs

Critics saw the move as an underhanded way to steer them toward more costly chips.

Jun 22, 2026 at 19:02 Ars Technica

Valve's Steam Machine ships June 29 for $1,049, but you probably won't be able to buy one yet

Valve says it's using a randomized purchase queue to make the experience "less frustrating and more fair."

Jun 22, 2026 at 17:10 Ars Technica

NHTSA investigating alleged Tesla Autopilot crash that killed woman in her home

Tesla touts Autopilot as lifesaving a day after grandmother died in crash.

Mar 24, 2026 at 11:00 Ars Technica

Orbital data centers, part 1: There’s no way this is economically viable, right?

"This is not physically impossible; it’s only a question of whether this is a rational thing."

How reliable this looks

Signal and trust for Ars Technica

This source works at a rapid pace: 100% of recent stories land in the hot window, and 0% carry visible search signal.

Trusted

Reliability

92

Freshness

100

Sources in storyline

1

Related articles

More stories that share tags, source, or category context.

More from Ars Technica

Fresh reporting and follow-up coverage from the same newsroom.

Open source page