Posted Mar 6, 2025, 2:11 PM
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FYHA
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Houston - Wichita, KS
Posts: 3,509
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https://www.bizjournals.com/houston/...Pos=4#cxrecs_s
Quote:
Axiom Space and Red Hat partner for ISS-based data center mission
By Jishnu Nair – Reporter, Houston Business Journal
Mar 6, 2025
A Houston space business is teaming up with a major tech company to target a growing subsector.
Axiom Space, which is designing a commercial space station to replace the International Space Station, and Raleigh, North Carolina-based Red Hat Inc. will partner for Axiom Space’s Data Center Unit-1 (AxDCU-1), which is set to launch this spring to the International Space Station. A more specific launch date was not immediately available.
The partnership continues a trend of companies looking skyward for data center transmission and storage services, such as orbital data centers, or ODCs. Axiom Space said in a March 5 press release that Red Hat Device Edge, a platform geared toward devices with limited computing resources, power, cooling or connectivity, will power the AxDCU-1.
“Infusing terrestrial-grade cloud solutions into ODCs will enable users to seamlessly transition and enhance their terrestrial workloads to orbit while leveraging the lower latency and increased security inherent with ODCs,” Jason Aspiotis, global director of in-space data and security with Axiom Space, said in the release.
Aspiotis told the Houston Business Journal that AxDCU-1 will fly with the ISS, which is approaching retirement by the end of the decade. Axiom Space said there is nothing to announce currently about whether Red Hat would partner with Axiom Station, the company’s planned space station replacement. The company also said it is currently unknown whether its upcoming Ax-4 crewed mission will be working with the data center.
Use cases for Axiom Space's data-processing abilities could range from multifactor authentication to space weather analysis, off-planet data backups and disaster recovery for critical infrastructure on Earth, the company said.
Early Axiom Space customers could include governments operating satellite network “constellations” that are already generating data, as well as private and public entities looking for the security of space-based data storage, Aspiotis said. As the cost of space launches decreases, more sectors — like telecommunications, financial services, internet-of-things providers and autonomous mobility providers — could add to that customer base, he added.
For now, Aspiotis said, orbital data centers won’t be able to match Earth-based data centers in terms of storage — but in the long term, especially as data centers demand increasing amounts of energy and real estate, ODCs could catch up.
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