Saturday, May 23, 2026

SpaceX V3 Starship Mega-Rocket

The most powerful rocket in history just roared off its launch pad in a spectacular show of power and technology.

SpaceX launched the newest version of its giant Starship rocket Friday (May 22), from a recently completed second pad at its Starbase manufacturing and test facility in South Texas. Liftoff occurred at 6:30 p.m. EDT (2230 GMT), sending the massive 408-foot-tall (124-meter) vehicle skyward on its 12th suborbital test flight.

It was the first Starship mission since October 2025, and the first-ever flight of Starship Version 3 (V3), a next-generation build of the rocket that features a complete design overhaul meant to evolve the vehicle toward operational missions. And today's suborbital Flight 12 was a significant step toward that ambitious goal, even if it was a day later than planned after a glitched thwarted a first launch try on Thursday. . .Starship has a number of boxes to check before NASA certifies the vehicle to fly astronauts, but V3 has been built with those goalposts in mind. . .SPACE.com

SpaceX just launched Starship V3 — its most powerful megarocket yet — into space for the 1st time in spectacular Flight 12 test (video) 

https://i0.wp.com/spacenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/starship-flt12-liftoff.jpeg?fit=1200%2C592&ssl=1 

 
 . . .SpaceX included 22 payloads for Ship to deploy during its suborbital jaunt today — 20 dummy versions of the company's Starlink broadband satellites and two actual Starlink spacecraft equipped with imaging sensors.

The payloads were deployed as planned over a 10-minute span, beginning roughly 17 minutes after launch, via Ship's "PEZ dispenser"-like door. The two modified Starlink satellites were tasked with scanning Starship's heat shield tiles, in a test meant to assess the ability to inspect them for possible damage prior to reentry.

Shortly after the final two Starlink simulators deployed (the ones with cameras that SpaceX nicknamed "Dodger Dogs" after the famed hotdogs at Dodger Stadium), SpaceX broadcast the spectactular video they captured as they flew away from Starship.

 
 

Nothing Starship accomplished on Flight 12 was particularly groundbreaking for SpaceX; the mission goals and trajectories were broadly similar to those of the previous few test missions.

However, even successfully following a previously blazed trail was huge for Starship V3, given that it's a brand-new vehicle with a variety of modifications and upgrades over its predecessors. And V3's road to the launch pad was a bit rocky. . .

 

SpaceX Wild Footage on Starship launch 12 attempt will blow your mind!  Never Seen before...

NASA is relying on Starship as one of the crewed lunar landers for its Artemis program, which aims to eventually establish a permanent human presence on the moon. The space agency has also contracted Blue Moon, a Blue Origin spacecraft, to land Artemis astronauts on the moon, and has indicated a willingness to fly with whichever private lander is ready when it's time for the missions to get off the ground.

The next of those missions is Artemis 3 — the follow-up to April's Artemis 2, which flew four astronauts aboard NASA's Orion spacecraft on a successful 10-day mission around the moon. NASA is targeting mid to late 2027 for Artemis 3, which will launch Orion to low Earth orbit (LEO) to rendezvous and dock with one or both of the private lunar landers, and late 2028 for the first lunar landing on Artemis 4. . ."


 

Friday, May 22, 2026

Apartment List Research: In Phoenix, homeowners now pay 66% more on housing than renters

 

 

Hi Tim,

 

A new report from Apartment List examines the “homeownership premium” – the gap in monthly housing costs for homeowners vs renters: Buying A Home Is Becoming Much More Expensive Than Renting One

This premium unlocks certain advantages for homeowners: building wealth through equity, protecting long-term housing security, accessing certain neighborhoods. But recently, homeowner costs have ballooned, and the premium is growing so large that many are revisiting the “rent v buy” decision. 

The National Trend:
Since 2020, not only have home prices increased dramatically, so too have interest rates, insurance premiums, property taxes, and maintenance costs. Meanwhile the rental market, as a whole, has been sluggish for the past three years. The homeownership premium is growing so quickly that many are rethinking the classic “rent v. buy” decision. 

Today, the median monthly cost for new homeowners is $2,679, compared to $1,630 for new renters — a homeownership premium of 64%. 

The Local Trend:


This report includes data for the nation’s 100 largest housing markets, and homeowner costs exceed renter costs in every single one. 

  • In Phoenix specifically, the homeownership premium is 66%, or $1,212.
  • Phoenix homeowners typically spend $3,052 per month on housing, while renters spend $1,840.

You can explore the data using the interactive chart in our new report: Buying A Home Is Becoming Much More Expensive Than Renting One

For more data, tools, and insights about the rental market, please visit the Apartment List Research Blog.

 

This much is true. . .

 

A rapidly developing El Niño may dramatically weaken this year’s hurricane season.

Scientists say an El Niño event is now strengthening across the tropical Pacific, and early forecasts suggest it could significantly suppress hurricane activity in the Atlantic Ocean this year.
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Some models are even hinting at a potential “super El Niño” – an unusually intense warming event that can reshape weather patterns across the planet.
  • The reason lies in an invisible atmospheric bridge stretching from the Pacific to the Atlantic.
  • During El Niño, warm ocean waters in the Pacific alter global air circulation patterns, increasing upper-level winds over the Atlantic hurricane development region. 
  • This creates stronger “wind shear” — fast-changing winds that can rip apart developing tropical storms before they fully organize.
  • At the same time, El Niño tends to promote sinking, drier air over the tropical Atlantic, creating a more hostile environment for hurricanes.
Historically, strong El Niño years produce fewer Atlantic hurricanes, fewer major hurricanes, and fewer US landfalls on average.
 
Researchers analyzing past hurricane seasons found that the stronger the El Niño, the more hurricane activity tends to weaken. Forecast models from NOAA and the European ECMWF weather center now show unusually strong El Niño conditions emerging during the peak of hurricane season between August and October.
 
Some forecasts are projecting ocean temperature anomalies above 3°F (2°C) in key parts of the Pacific — levels associated with some of the strongest El Niño events ever recorded.
But scientists stress that this does not mean hurricanes will disappear.
 
Even during strong El Niño years, destructive storms can still form. Hurricane Andrew struck during an El Niño year in 1992, and major landfalls remain possible whenever conditions briefly become favorable.
Still, if the current forecasts verify, the Atlantic Basin could see a noticeably quieter season than recent hyperactive years.
 
In other words, what happens deep in the Pacific Ocean over the next few months may determine how dangerous hurricane season becomes thousands of miles away along the U.S. coastline.
 
Learn more:
"Latest Data Shows a Significant El Niño Impact on the 2026 Hurricane Season and U.S. Landfalls." Severe Weather Europe

SpaceX V3 Starship Mega-Rocket

The most powerful rocket in history just roared off its launch pad in a spectacular show of power and technology. SpaceX launched the newes...