Boeing has successfully completed numerous critical milestones in the first half of 2015 for their CST-100 capsule and commercial crew launch services plan for NASA as the aerospace company continues on its intricate path toward a scheduled crewed flight debut in 2017 – despite numerous funding shortfalls and future funding uncertainties from the United States Congress.
"C3PF"
-
Physical changes to a number of historic pads located on Florida’s Space Coast are progressing…
-
Boeing Vice President John Elbon believes the CST-100 spacecraft is part of an intertwined forward…
-
It’s been over three years since the world famous Kennedy Space Center (KSC) last felt the…
-
Just weeks ago, it was widely believed both SpaceX’s Dragon V2 and SNC’s Dream Chaser…
-
As NASA closes in on the next major milestone of its Commercial Crew Program (CCP),…
-
The highly anticipated confirmation that Dream Chaser will be taking up residency at the Kennedy…
-
NASA’s Commercial Crew Program – one of the Agency’s key near-term priorities – is once…
-
As the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) continues its transformation into a multi-user spaceport, the three…
-
NASA’s Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP) have provided a report to NASA administrator Charlie Bolden…
-
CommercialUncrewed
KSC could facilitate military and commercial operators in the OPFs
by Chris BerginAs Kennedy Space Center’s transition from the home base of the Shuttle fleet to a…
-
As the United Launch Alliance (ULA) look forward to a potential surge in activity later…