

News
Bankruptcy on the horizon: SpaceX’s rival companies are on the brink of ruin
Industry players say SpaceX’s dominant position in the space launch market makes it difficult for small launch vehicles to compete. At a panel discussion at the Satellite Innovation conference on October 17, speakers noted that SpaceX’s pricing policies have significantly hampered the development of small launch vehicles, which have difficulty competing on price.
“They clearly control and dominate the market. I think the big issue is pricing,” said Kurt Blake, a former Spaceflight CEO who now runs the commercial space division of law firm Wilson Sonsini.
SpaceX began offering satellite launch services for $5,000 per kilogram. The company later raised prices to $5,500 per kilogram and plans annual increases. However, in most cases these prices are significantly lower than those of specialized small launch vehicles.
“I don’t think they needed to go that low to get significant market share,” Kurt Blake continued, estimating that SpaceX could get large orders at $10,000 to $12,000 per kilogram. SpaceX’s Transporter satellite mission lineup has been focused on sun-synchronous orbits, which is now in major demand. However, in August the company announced a new series of Bandwagon missions to launch satellites into medium orbits.
“They are gradually taking away from what small launch vehicles can do,” he added, noting that there remains room for specialized small launch vehicles to perform missions at different orbital inclinations. “But you have to take it as a threat.”
Concerns about SpaceX pricing are not new. At World Satellite Business Week in September, Marino Fragnito, vice president of Arianespace’s Vega division, said SpaceX was offering “unsustainable” prices, driving out other companies: “Space companies cannot survive at this level of pricing.”
“Is SpaceX surviving other market participants? I think that to a certain extent. It would be naive to think that their strategy for launching satellites is not aimed at fierce competition,” Rocket Lab Chief Financial Officer Adam Spies said during a panel discussion at the Satellite Innovation conference.
SpaceX’s position in the market reduces variability for other launch companies, Spies added, and the challenges many companies face have led to problems raising funding while SpaceX has “seemingly uninterrupted access to capital” from commercial launches.
They create a very difficult environment for competitors, and may continue to do so for a long time.
Other panelists said they are looking for niches in the market to remain competitive. “The one-size-fits-all model is not always the best long-term solution to meet the needs of government and private companies,” said Firefly Aerospace Chief Development Officer Patrick McKenzie. He cited Victus Nox’s success in launching a satellite for the US Air Force on an Alpha rocket on September 14 as an example of a capability that could not be achieved using standard offerings. However, he added that the services offered must also be price competitive.
Pablo Gallego, senior vice president of sales at Spanish launch vehicle developer PLD Space, said SpaceX has helped create demand for low-cost launches. His company has received interest in the Miura 5 small launch vehicle it is developing for specialized missions that cannot be accomplished using conventional satellite launches.

Components
Small, but remote. Corsair unveils SSD MP600 Micro in M.2 2242 form factor

Most modern solid-state drives have the M.2 2280 form factor, but sometimes you need a much more compact SSD – M.2 2242. Corsair did just that.
In the photo you can see the MP600 Micro model in the specified form factor. The length of such a drive is 42 mm, although there is also an M.2 2230 that is only 30 mm long.
The new product supports PCIe 4.0 and is characterized by data transfer speeds of up to 5100 MB/s for reading and 4300 MB/s for writing. Performance is respectively 600,000 and 890,000 IOPS. These parameters are typical for the 1 TB model, which also has a resource of 600 TBW.
It remains to add that the new product is based on 176-layer Micron 3D TLC NAND memory and is priced at $70.
Components
Huawei defeated American sanctions: the Chinese company now has its own 5-nanometer processor

Five years under strict American sanctions, which cut Huawei off from advanced single-chip systems, have yielded results: the company has its own 5-nanometer processor made in China.
There is an interesting story with this processor. Five days ago, Huawei introduced the Qingyun L540 laptop based on the Kirin 9006C SoC: and at that time, all the characteristics of the device were revealed, but nothing was reported about the central element of the hardware platform. Now Huawei has updated the description on the website, which clearly states that the Kirin 9006C is manufactured using the 5 nm process technology.
The official description says that the single-chip system has eight cores and a maximum frequency of 3.13 GHz. The Gizmochina resource adds: the CPU is made according to a two-cluster design – with four Arm Cortex-A77 cores and four more Arm Cortex-A55 cores.
Let’s remember that earlier Huawei had a 7-nanometer SoC Kirin 9000S, and it is used in the flagships of the Mate 60 line. Kirin 9000S is produced by SMIC, and the same company most likely produces the 5-nanometer Kirin 9006C.
News
Intel, where is the gain from new architectures? Core Ultra 9 185H was slower than Core i9-13900H with the same number of cores

Yesterday we took a look at the first tests of the Core Ultra 7 155H, which at first glance are not impressive. Today the first test results of the flagship Core Ultra 9 185H appeared on the Internet.
This CPU has the maximum number of cores for Meteor Lake: six large, eight small and two small in the SoC. The CPU operates at frequencies up to 5.1 GHz. Now there is a result only in CPU-Z: 767 and 8097 points in single-threaded and multi-threaded modes, respectively.
In this case, we are interested in both, since the single-threaded mode shows the benefits of the new architecture, and Meteor Lake has both large and small cores with the new architecture.
As you can see, in single-threaded mode the new product is faster than the Core i5-13500H, but slower than the Core i7-13800H. That is, no advantage in single-threaded performance from switching to a new architecture is visible, but this is if we ignore the issue of power consumption. Formally, the TDP of the Core Ultra 9 185H and Core i7-13800H is the same and is 45 W. If the actual consumption is also approximately equal, then it turns out that, indeed, there is no performance gain from the transition to new architectures.
If we talk about multi-threaded mode, here, interestingly, the situation is a little better, but not that radically. Yes, the Core Ultra 9 185H is already ahead of the Core i7-13800H, and noticeably ahead (by 15%), but the Core i9-13900H is already ahead of the new product by about 10%. And at the same time, all these three CPUs have the same number of large and small cores, except for the small cores in the Meteor Lake SoC. And if you count them, then the new product has even more cores.
Thus, if we summarize yesterday’s data with today’s, it turns out that we should not expect any tangible performance gain from switching from Raptor Lake to Meteor Lake when comparing CPUs with similar configurations. At the same time, Meteor Lake has a much more powerful iGPU and is likely still noticeably lower power consumption, although yesterday’s tests showed that the Ryzen 7040 is even better in this regard thanks to the much more modern 4 nm process technology.
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