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NASA finally realized SpaceX is the best Spacecraft, Refuse to fly on the Competition... === #techmap #techmaps #elonmusk #starshipspacex #starship === NASA finally realized SpaceX is the best Spacecraft, Refuse to fly on the Competition... For years, NASA swore by redundancy—multiple spacecraft, multiple options, a safety net for every mission. But what happens when that safety net starts falling apart? With Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus cargo spacecraft recently facing setbacks and Boeing's Starliner stuck in endless scandals, NASA is quietly shifting its bets. Meanwhile, SpaceX’s Dragon just keeps proving one thing: It’s the only spacecraft NASA can truly count on. So, is it time for NASA to admit the obvious? Let’s break it all down in today’s Techmap episode! NASA finally realized SpaceX is the best Spacecraft, Refuse to fly on the Competition... Imagine ordering a package online, only for the delivery guy to wrap his truck around a telephone pole before it even gets to your doorstep. That’s essentially what happened with Northrop Grumman’s Cygnus cargo spacecraft. Scheduled to launch in June on the NG-22 resupply mission to the International Space Station, Cygnus hit a snag—before even making it to the launch pad. The problem? Damage to its cargo module’s shipping container. Yep, it got dinged up before liftoff. Because when it comes to space travel, sometimes the hardest part isn’t the launch—it’s surviving Earth’s logistical nightmare. NASA finally realized SpaceX is the best Spacecraft, Refuse to fly on the Competition... NASA, caught in the domino effect, is now juggling cargo schedules. On March 5, the agency announced it was “assessing potential mission impacts” due to the incident. Translation: they were peering into the metaphorical wreckage, trying to decide if this was a fender bender or a total loss. === Subcribe TechMap: http://tinyurl.com/3z5ysrtf