Not Your Father’s Data Center - Data Centers in Space Pt. 2
Episode Date: April 26, 2022Rick Ward, CTO, and Founder of Orbits Edge, described how space is becoming increasingly accessible to laypeople. “We’re getting more and more to the place where I can see myself there. A...nd that is a big deal. You don’t have a space-bearing civilization when the only people who go up there are less numerous than Olympic gold medalists.” Ward and Raymond Hawkins, Chief Revenue Officer of Compass Data Centers, discussed this increasing accessibility in the context of data on Part Two of “Data Centers in Space” on Not Your Father’s Data Center Podcast. Orbits Edge uses high-power compute in space before sending data to Earth. Mass amounts of data are captured, but there is a bottleneck in the transportation. Ward said, “Image capture is haystack generation, compute is needle finding,” said Ward. If you can only transport a fraction of the data haystack, it needs to be the high-quality “needles.” Data is shipped to countries through bands that have varying reliabilities and throughputs. A low-orbit satellite may conduct with a ground station for a certain distance, then have a fuzzy connection for another distance, and finally have no connectivity for several kilometers until it reaches the next ground station. High, dry locations are best for ground station connectivity. “What it comes down to is intermittent connectivity of variable throughputs of various windows of connectivity,” said Ward. Data is then transported from the ground station to a data center. Some ground stations have antennas to reduce the fiber run distance. Orbits Edge satellites range from the size of a dorm mini-fridge to the size of a regular fridge and weigh about 200 kilos. Despite the small size, Ward predicted that satellite data will play an increasingly heavy role in space and research stations, crystallography, space metallurgy, and ceramics.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome again to another edition of Not Your Father's Data Center.
I'm Raymond Hawkins, your host.
We are joined again for the second time by Chief Technology Officer and founder of Orbit's Edge, Rick Ward.
Rick, thanks for coming and talking with us again.
We appreciate it.
It's my pleasure, man.
All right, Rick, so there's a bunch with us again. We appreciate it. It's my pleasure, man. All right, Rick.
So there's a bunch of stuff going on in outer space.
It's making a lot of news.
The stuff that makes the news I don't think necessarily is the most interesting.
Yeah, it's awesome that William Shatner got shot up into space for 45 seconds or whatever it was,
but I don't think that's near the coolest thing going on.
So would you give us your take a little bit on the billionaire boys club racing
to go into space and come right back down and why that gets so much attention
and then let's transition into the actual business of what's going on in space.
I would say probably the reason that it's getting so much attention is,
first of all, I really loved the Shatner experience. I've listened to, watched, and even spoken with a fair number of astronauts.
And the way he described it when he was just fresh on the ground and there's still smoke coming off of the ship, wherever the ship ended up landing. That was fantastic.
I remember one of the astronauts one time said they should have sent a poet.
And the way Shatner was speaking immediately afterwards, they finally did.
And I've heard some very well-spoken astronauts speak. And his, his take on that was just his, his, the way he compared it to the
realm of life and the realm of death and the blackness and the void and the, the, the, it
really is like the light and dark dichotomy. You have light here and then you have the cold darkness over there. That was a very powerful set of images
he created. And I feel stuff like that really resonates with regular folks. And also it kind
of bridges. It kind of says, you know, William Shatner is the space guy we know from our youth.
He's the guy who did all the movies and he fought the Klingons and he made peace with the Klingons ultimately. And he did all these things and now he is intersecting
with the real space program and going there in the flesh as a man, not as a character.
And that really does bridge things.
We're going to see, I guess, Tom Cruise is going to go up there relatively soon-ish,
sometime next year, I think.
He's going to be working on a movie there, going to get some footage there.
We'll see others who follow. The names are going to get smaller and smaller until they're like regular folks.
That makes me think about Inspiration4 that SpaceX also flew, where they actually had four relatively normal people.
I mean, good grief.
One of them was a slightly chubby older guy. And another one was a,
a girl who had titanium in her body,
cancer survivor.
Like we're getting more and more to the place where I can see myself there.
And that is a big deal.
That's you don't have a space-faring civilization when the only people who go up there are less numerous than Olympic gold medalists.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah, my father spent years working for Boeing Aerospace, working on Space Station Freedom, and his job was to interact with the astronauts.
He had a degree in engineering and a degree in psychology. And I guess here on earth, we call that, you know,
ergonomics. And in his world, it was human factors engineering. How do we engineer the space station
so that the astronauts like it? And he said the same thing, right? He said, you know, these
astronauts, there's so few people who've ever been to space that, uh, you know, he had a very small
pool of people he could interview and try
to understand what needed to be done there because it's such a small group of people.
And I think what you're alluding to, such a small group of people with some pretty elite
qualifications. Absolutely. It's the best of the best that the most powerful nations in the world have been able to assemble.
Yeah, and all of that is changing.
It's not a civilization.
We're not going to send those guys to go
mining or any things like that up there.
It's going to be
regular folks.
Although, with mining, it's going to be
robots. Lots of robots.
People will be in the general vicinity if you're relatively loose with your definition of general vicinity.
Gotcha. Gotcha.
All right, Rick.
Well, so all of that, I mean, I guess – so I love the Shatner angle.
I like your comment, right?
Seeing him in my youth on the TV in the three seasons of Star Trek and what became of the movies.
Yeah, seeing a character now actually be in space is pretty fascinating stuff.
More, I guess, what I was alluding to is Richard Branson, Jeff Bezos, and those guys competing to get into space, Elon, versus the real business side of it.
And if you'd help us get a little bit more arms around what's really going on.
We're deploying satellites.
We're sending up rockets on a regular basis.
I think it's more frequent than most people recognize.
And would you talk a little bit about that, the business side of what we're doing, putting payloads in space.
So one of the issues with space, any space business, any space thing you want to do,
it's a series of chicken and egg problems. In order for me to make money off of this,
the thing has to exist. And before it can exist, I need to have some money. So that's,
that's one of the big issues. There's relatively few ways to bootstrap yourself into space because the hardware that you need for space operations is not the same hardware you need for ground
operations. It's even with better processes, it's still going to be more expensive and more complicated than aircraft parts.
And aircraft parts are pretty darn expensive anyway.
So you've got that.
It takes a long time and it's expensive to build stuff that's going to go into space.
And that makes it really hard to close a lot of the business cases because you need cash flow like every day, kind of like you got to eat every day.
So by having people who are independently wealthy, it gives them a long runway. It gives them the ability to say, I know this isn't going to make money for
five, 10 years, but I'm going to do it anyway. Branson has multiple different things going on.
He has his crude stuff, but he's also launching rockets off of a 747.
I think that's called Cosmic Girl.
And they've actually had some successful launches and putting, I can't remember if it's real payloads
or test payloads into orbit.
So they've had some success there
and they actually have some plans towards iterating that
to a more capable system.
So that's pretty cool, and that's also a very expensive endeavor, and it's one where having a fleet of 747s is kind of convenient.
So he basically took a ship that he already owned, did some stuff to it that was less expensive for him than me, and put rockets in space.
So there's a pathway there that doesn't exist for somebody who doesn't have that backing and infrastructure inherent to themselves.
Same goes for Bezos and Blue Origin.
I mean, they can liquidate a small fraction of stock
and fund that thing year over year over year.
The downside to that is you can end up in a situation
where you have advisors giving you bad advice
because they just assume you're Mr. Moneybags and there's never a bottom to the bag.
They just say, you know, I can just ride this thing for the next 10, 15, 20 years.
I don't ever actually have to produce results.
I can just be out here as long as I'm doing something, make it look convincing.
I'll keep getting funded.
And there's a couple of companies that don't exactly work that way, but you can kind of make're not, if you don't have a certain leanness to it,
um, it doesn't drive you towards, towards optimal efficiency.
So if you're, if you have just barely enough money to get to where you need to get,
then it makes you be more efficient. It makes you say, how much of this bureaucracy in my company is necessary
and how much can I get rid of?
If you don't have that fear of dying, then you can just build up the wrong things.
You can put your time and energy into things that aren't truly necessary.
You can have processes that extend things out and make things take longer than they should.
There's all sorts of fatal things that you can get into by not having a sense of urgency.
And we're seeing that in some of the billionaire companies. But still, I would much, much, much rather, and I'll echo the head of Roscosmos, Rogozin.
I will echo him and say, he made a comment, said, I wish our billionaires would start working on space projects instead of trying to compete to
see who can build the biggest yacht. I would love it if the top 100, 200, 1000, whatever,
richest people in the world put a sizable chunk of their fortunes into doing things like that that matter. Space travel, human longevity,
alternative ways of growing food, all these things that solve problems that we as a species
are having or will have soon. Solving those problems would be a tremendous boon towards
humanity. And a little bit better use than buying another boat.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, do I need a boat that can land one helicopter or five?
So yeah, Rick, we were, as we talk about billionaires building more boats,
not necessarily contributing to the good of humanity,
or I liked your phrase, human longevity.
Bigger problems and getting folks with endless resources of capital to invest some of that in things that can help more than just their suntan would be nice.
I agree with you there.
We get some of that from the space work because of the things that understanding and learning about space can do to help us as a species and a planet. If you look at it from a historical perspective, all of the stuff that you see in museums,
all the sculptures, all the paintings, all of those things, they were commissioned by the
richest men of their eras. They were commissioned by princes and kings and later on by wealthy merchants. And the centralization of that degree of wealth
has opened the possibility
for advancements that can extend on into posterity,
not just through technology, but through art as well.
So that's a consideration.
And I love the perspective too.
You're right, right?
These sculptures or paintings, someone paid that artist, someone commissioned them.
And it was, to your point, the wealthiest people of the day.
And although there was music and art being created today, we don't treat it like it was treated then. And these efforts going to space or coming up with medicines or water treatment facilities for the third world, there's things where we can invest that do contribute to the greater good out of these large net worth individuals.
All right, I'm switching gears on you.
Let's talk a little bit about Orbit's Edge if you're willing. I'd love to understand what you guys are doing.
For me, it's an intersection between our world and your world, right? Your world is data in space.
My world's data here on the dirt, down here on terra firma. Would love to understand what you
guys are doing up there, why you're doing it. I think I get my arms around,
let's do as much processing up there to avoid as much backhaul costs back down
here to do processing. I think I get that at a high level,
but I'd love it if you'd talk us through some of that.
Yeah, sure.
And I would also say that we have seen in the past six months to a year,
we've seen almost a sea change in the way the space community is looking
at some of this stuff. The reason for high-powered compute in space is, as you said, let's do the
compute up there before we send stuff back down here. And some of that is because there's a
significant bottleneck in the transport layer in getting
stuff from there to here. We have a much greater ability to capture and generate data than we do
to move it. And even with optical, that's still going to be a thing years into the future, a long time into the future.
So if you can only transport a fraction of the data you capture, then don't you want to have that data be the best data that you can get?
The best data that you can winnow out. Or the most useful data, for sure.
Yes.
So it's kind of like saying you're got, you're generating all these haystacks
and what you're interested in is needles. And the current way of doing that is to load the
whole haystack on a giant truck and track it across the country so that you can find the needles.
And you can imagine that is expensive and inefficient. So if you have a way of separating out those needles, then you can put the needles in a small box, and it's much, much easier.
So image capture is haystack generation.
Compute is needle finding.
And we want to put the needle finding ability before the transport layer.
So that's kind of the super layman's view of it.
Now, that across the country analysis or analogy is a great one. I think it's easier to get our
arms around. What does the bandwidth between low Earth orbit and Earth look like? My first question,
and I know it's probably a dumb, not understanding space guy question, how do we get data shipped into countries?
Because I think about wireless networks down here in the U.S., and all of that spectrum is auctioned off by the government, and businesses make an economically viable use case for why to pay for that spectrum and how to transmit over it.
How does that work when we start going into space?
Some of that's exactly the same.
So you have various different bands from like K, K-A, K-U, X, and a few others that are
military domains.
You have all these various bands.
Each of the bands has different inherent characteristics to it, where some of them have more reliability,
but less throughput, and others have greater throughput, but they're more susceptible to
the effects of weather and things like that. Some of it is a function of how much power you can put
through your antenna. So this antenna might not be as powerful as that other, so therefore its throughput is lower, its ability to punch through clouds in bad weather is lower, but ultimately we don't have any always-on connections.
So for a satellite that is in low Earth orbit, you can look at it as it's casting a shadow over the Earth, but it's casting a shadow
over a small portion of the Earth. So while its shadow might be a couple of hundred kilometers
across, so as it passes over a ground station at this point, it has connectivity with that ground
station for 200 kilometers. And really, it might be 160 kilometers with kind of
fuzziness and kind of not really good connectivity on either end of that. And then it has no
connectivity until it passes over the next ground station, which might be a thousand kilometers away.
And some of this depends on how many ground stations you subscribe
to, because you can either build your own or you can pay to use somebody else's.
So there's various services. From the ground station, it has to go to a data center before
it can be processed, which is probably a fiber optic link, which AWS and Microsoft have both started putting antennas on top of their data
centers. So it reduces the amount of distance. So instead of having a 50 kilometer fiber run,
you have to go through, well, now it's just 100 meters. So there's various things that people have done to address this problem.
But ultimately, it comes down to you have intermittent connectivity of variable throughputs for each of those windows of connectivity.
Like, for instance, there's relatively few ground stations over the ocean.
There's definitely some on islands and things like that,
but also over the ocean, you're susceptible to storms.
So if there's bad weather over your ground site,
you're probably not getting data through.
Optical is the next thing that's coming.
That's going to have super fast, super high density.
So you're going to be able to move a lot of data for each burst.
But at the same time, it is more susceptible to weather.
So you've got a series of tradeoffs.
Starlink can potentially address a lot of that.
But it's still, it's not going to be an optimal solution. It'll be better than what we have right now, but it won't be it won't be like, oh, well, everything's fine.
And you have always on connectivity, just like I do with you standing in the same room with me right now.
It's it's not going to get to that point. And that's where our value is.
Gotcha. Rick, can I say back what I think you said? I want to make sure I
understand it. So I've got my satellite, it's spinning around there in low Earth orbit.
It's casting, I like your phrase, a shadow on the Earth, right? For lack of a better term,
it gets coverage over that station in a certain window while it's passing around.
And as soon as I get out of that window, I got to wait till I get the next one.
How does that, so I could get that when it comes to going across the United States.
What happens when I get to other continents? Do you have services that are global? Do you have
services where there's stuff in multiple countries? Or do you just have to have different agreements
with different countries? And then I love the point you also made. What do you do about, I mean,
70% of the earth is covered in water. I got to believe we don't – we got some long stretches where we're not getting information.
Yeah, all of that.
All of that's true.
There's a lot of – so for some reason, a lot of the Nordic countries seem to have a lot one ground station, it's just a matter of a real estate deal and getting some services done to build a second ground station.
So there might be a company that I don't want to name any particular one because there's a bunch of different companies and I don't want to play favorites at this point. Um, so you, you make a contract with, with ground station, uh,
Acme ground stations, and they own 10 ground stations scattered around the world. They own
one in Morocco. They want own one in Argentine, um, somewhere in the Andes. They own one in Colorado. They have one in Helsinki, somewhere out in the Urals.
And basically, the geography for a ground station is high and dry. That's your best ground station. If it's high altitude, less atmosphere between it and space, and dry with relatively few storms coming,
because every time there's a storm, you're not getting connectivity.
And if you're not getting connectivity, you're not getting paid.
So that's the description of your optimal ground station.
And that's part of the reason that a lot of those Nordic countries got into that game
because it lets them communicate with a lot of satellites right in their own backyard.
So that's kind of the drivers on that.
Yes, you do have to have nation-specific agreements for your ground side communications. But these companies
are kind of a one-stop shopping, so they handle all that with their host countries.
Gotcha. So, Rick, in your business model, you're deploying the satellites and the tech,
for lack of a better term, the micro data centers. I'm not even sure if that's the term
you would use it. But for that compute function in space, the micro data centers, I'm not even sure if that's the term you would use it.
But for that compute function in space, who are your customers?
Who's coming and needing that compute power up there?
Who do you guys, who's coming and getting a service from you?
That's the easiest way I guess I could say.
I certainly get the Earth observation, right?
Shipping channels and weather patterns.
I get Earth observation stuff.
What are other business cases for needing that computational capability in low Earth orbit?
So a year ago, I would have hesitated to talk about a lot of this.
But now I mentioned that there's kind of been a sea change in the space industry where they're feeling more optimism than what was previously there. Now I am more comfortable saying space stations and research stations are
definitely going to be things where we play a heavy role. We're seeing more interest and more
development for in-space manufacturing, in-space research, in-space various sorts of experiments.
And all of that stuff is going to be data intensive.
So if you have, for instance, a space station, what does your space station do?
Well, there's a lot of economic activity that you can undertake there.
And that's going to be stuff like one of my favorite ones to
talk about is crystallography, the study of how crystals form. And that happens completely
different in microgravity. It also happens differently in hard vacuum. So it also touches a lot of different industries.
Crystallography governs metallurgy, so how different metals behave and how they solidify in space from a molten state, what sort of crystal formations occur, even tempering.
Even tempering can produce a different result for the same alloy,
an alloy that already exists. You can get a different hardness of steel for tempering it
in space rather than tempering it on the surface. So you have metallurgy, you have optics where you can generate crystals that have higher purity or introduce the exact impurities you want at exactly the spot and casting that is essentially one crystal,
a monocrystalline structure, which is not terribly easy to do here on Earth.
And I understand most of the processes that do that have a high reject rate.
So there's a lot of different things that you can do in space.
Rick, can I take those three?
So metallurgy, crystals, and ceramics. Are those all for things that you would use in space. Rick, can I take those three? So metallurgy, crystals, and ceramics.
Are those all for things that you would use in space? Because I can't see the economic viability
of doing that creation in space and then shipping it back down to earth. Are those all applications
where the finished product can be used on some space deployed solution? Yes and yes.
Okay.
So yeah, a lot of that's going to be made in space for use in space.
But it's not as hard as we think to get stuff down.
The trick is to get it down safely.
Okay. So, and also by having something that is dense and robust, it can handle a little bit of stuff.
Bumpy ride.
You can get that down relatively safely. that somewhere on the Australian outback or the American Southwest would be attractive places for
bringing down large, dense payloads where you have some sort of an aerobraking system
followed by some sort of a parachute. And then it lands here on Earth on the surface at, say, 30 miles an hour.
Or you could get it down to three to five miles an hour if you wanted to.
It's just a matter of how expensive you want to be to get there.
And also, I would say that should Starship come online,
then bringing it down on board a rocket might be very feasible.
All right. Fascinating stuff.
As I think about manufacturing stuff up there, I guess it holds.
Getting stuff out of orbit is hard.
Getting stuff back in, not nearly as hard or nearly as expensive. Yeah, and I would go back to the historical analogy where there was a point where European
nobility were the only people who had stuff from the colonies, from all the way across
the Atlantic or from China.
And then as you normalize travel, now there isn't a single person on this planet who doesn't have a thousand things they own that originated 5,000 miles or farther from their home.
Right.
Yeah, it's changed the way commerce happens here has changed everyone's lives and continues to change it.
And what I think you're saying is, hey, let's think in that same context for what it's like in this early phase of going to space.
Yeah.
That normalization.
Yeah.
The trivialization even.
Yeah.
All right, Rick, I'm going to get you down another path if you're willing.
So explain to us what constellations are. I don't, I've heard that term and want to see if I can get to understand a collection of satellites.
What's going on there?
I don't know of a specific threshold for what constitutes a constellation versus not a constellation.
I would say something where you have a collection of satellites that are not in the same orbit.
They are not flying in formation, but they each have a similar orbit that are separated in time.
So that different satellites go over the same location multiple times per day and offer whatever the services they're offering to customers on the ground where you're receiving the same service from several different satellites.
And you have relatively continuous service
because they have that sort of staggered orbit.
And the one that everybody's thinking about right now
is the Starlink formation
that is supposed to be tens of thousands of satellites
so that every person who's not already well-served
by dense urban wire-based internet or cable-based internet or
optical-based internet has continuous connectivity. So that if you're in
the middle of the Mojave Desert or farmland out in Georgia or on a boat in the South Pacific,
you can have a lossless, lagless conversation with somebody,
including video, anytime you want.
That's the gist of constellations.
And there's different purposes.
Yeah.
If the coverage gets sufficient from a
star length that they have clear line of sight all the time that's ultimately sort of the vision
right we've got this coverage of the planet all the time of these satellites constantly orbiting
in a like you said not in formation but in defined orbital routes so that we can get comms across
we can get those shadows as you We could get those shadows, as you said,
producing communications abilities planet-wide. Yeah. And as an example of an earlier
constellation, you had things like DirecTV and the satellite internet providers or satellite TV
providers from the 80s. In those scenarios, you have their constellations,
maybe a half dozen, maybe up to a dozen satellites, and they provide global continuous
communications. It's one-way communications in many of those instances. But because they're in geostationary orbit,
the shadow cast by one satellite
is effectively an entire hemisphere of the Earth.
Or depending on the altitude.
So they're further up.
Yeah, they're much farther away.
Now, the reason Starlink exists at the orbit they've selected
is time. So, if you have something, if I'm sending you a TV signal, that's not an interactive thing.
It's not going to change. After this program comes the next program, and that's something where time lag latency is not an issue.
If I'm gaming, well, I want low latency.
So having a shorter distance is highly appealing.
And having a round trip pathway of 1,000 kilometers, 800 kilometers is not going to work well for me.
So that's why Starlink is intended to operate at such a low orbit.
And also, they're actually competing with fiber optics,
which the speed of light through fiber is about half what it is through vacuum.
So that's part of the attraction for that.
I got you.
That makes sense.
All right, last question.
Can you help me and the folks that listen to us understand when I think of satellites,
I think of really big things, but don't they span the scale of size and functionality?
So will you give us a little bit of understanding of how big are we talking about,
what things, your satellites, how big are they?
And talk me through what goes where and how big it is.
So our initial mission that we're looking at launching is about the size of a college dorm mini fridge.
So around 200 kilos, around that size.
And it's going to have essentially like a blade architecture
with Hewlett Packard Enterprise
microdata server stuff.
It's probably going to have like
8 to 16 blades
is our current thought.
And due to the size and the way that's kind of packaged, we're planning on having about half of them on at any given time.
And the other half basically turned off so that they can be a backup, cold backup.
And by having them turned off, they're going to be less susceptible to radiation events.
So the intent is to have enough redundancy that we can offer an entire mission lifecycle
and offer you the service for the whole time that you've paid for it. Another part of that is providing enough power
for that sort of computation is kind of expensive
in terms of mass and size and paying for launch.
But having the compute there unpowered is not quite as expensive.
So it kind of,
uh,
kind of drive says that,
uh,
it's good to have redundancy in this scenario.
And also you need it anyway.
Uh,
so beyond there,
we're looking at something also about the size of a residential,
uh,
fridge,
uh,
you know, fridge with, with ice box on top and all that.
It probably won't give you ice cubes, but it'll be around about that size. And from there, we can go larger. We're also looking at a small one that's basically two blades and that's going to be around about the size of a briefcase.
That is something intended to integrate into your satellite and offer you some degree of edge
compute on your satellite. And the reason we're looking at two blades is to have one on and one
off. Yeah, the redundancy. Sure. Yeah, I gotcha.
Fascinating stuff. Well, yeah, I just, as I think about my personal experience being with my dad in
the space station, I think of this big thing, but the reality is you can have tiny satellites
doing very specific missions deployed in a constellation, right? Not an unheard of thing.
Sure. You're talking about two blades. That's a pretty small thing. Yeah.
Now, would those get deployed a bunch in one launch?
So that smallest one is intended to be what we're calling a bolt-on solution, where it's just the compute that integrates into your satellite platform.
Okay. Gotcha. So it would go up with the platform that it was into your satellite platform. Okay.
Gotcha.
So it would go up with the platform that it was bolted onto when it goes.
Yes.
I got it.
Okay.
Gotcha.
Got it.
Got it.
Okay.
I understand.
Well, Rick, man, I appreciate you jumping on with us and talking about what's going on in space and the data in space and helping us understand it even better.
The latency thing was super helpful.
I get it. Right. Right. If I thing was super helpful. I get it, right?
If I'm programming TV, I can stream it down whenever I want.
I can start it five minutes early as long as it's coming one direction.
It's that bi-directional latency.
Conversations in gaming are great examples of why I need to be closer
so I can get the latency low enough that I can still have an experience that's usable.
It's a good thing. I can get the latency low enough that I can still have an experience that's usable. So good.
Sure thing.
Yeah.
That's also the reason that we're looking at having a similar ish,
um,
orbit to what Starlink is going to have.
Obviously you can't have this two different things in the same orbit,
but that's,
that's part of the reason driving the most popular orbit in the past five years
has been Leo. and that is because everybody
is concerned about reducing latency. So it's a matter of how low can you go and still have a
reasonably stable orbit that's going to last for long enough to get your job done. Right, right.
Not deteriorate. I gotcha. Yeah. Very cool stuff. All right, Rick, as always, I enjoyed talking to you. Likewise.
Fellow Marine, fellow Southerner, and fellow guy in the data business. I appreciate it. Thank you so much, man. Thank you.