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The Digital Iron Curtain: Is Iran About to Crash the Global AI Boom?

 For decades, the "Middle East crisis" was a headline about crude oil, tankers, and the price at the pump. But as of March 2026, the stakes have shifted from the engine to the motherboard. While the world watches drone strikes over Isfahan and naval skirmishes in the Persian Gulf, a more quiet, more lethal war is being fought over the very building blocks of the 21st century: semiconductors. The "Digital Iron Curtain" is falling, and it isn't just dividing East and West—it’s threatening to starve the global AI revolution of its most basic needs. The Helium Hostage: Why the Strait of Hormuz is the New Silicon Valley We’ve long been told that the South China Sea is the "front line" of the chip war because of Taiwan’s dominance in fabrication. But the ongoing U.S.-Israel war with Iran has revealed a terrifying bottleneck: The Middle East is the lungs of the semiconductor industry. To make the world’s most advanced 3nm chips, you don’t just need engineers;...

Elon Musk’s ‘successful failure’ formula: How SpaceX learns from rocket explosions

Have you ever wondered how Elon Musk, the founder and CEO of SpaceX, can achieve his ambitious and visionary goals of colonizing Mars and making space travel affordable and accessible? The answer may surprise you: he is not afraid of failure. In fact, he embraces it as a learning opportunity and a catalyst for innovation.





This was evident on April 20, 2023, when SpaceX launched its first test flight of Starship, a colossal, next-generation rocket system that Musk hopes will eventually carry humans and cargo to the Moon, Mars and beyond. The launch was highly anticipated by space enthusiasts and media outlets, who watched as Starship soared off its launch pad in south Texas, mounted to its powerful Super Heavy rocket booster.


However, things did not go as planned. Starship tumbled out of control some 20 miles up in the sky and failed to separate from the booster as designed. The combined vehicle then blew to bits in a spectacular fireball that was captured on video by spectators and cameras.


SpaceX later acknowledged that several of the Super Heavy’s 33 Raport engines malfunctioned on ascent and that the booster and Starship failed to separate due to a communication error. The flight was terminated to avoid further damage or danger.


But instead of seeing the explosion as a setback or a disaster, SpaceX executives and experts praised the test flight for achieving its main objective of getting Starship off the ground and providing valuable data that will help improve its design and performance.


“This is a classical SpaceX successful failure,” said Garrett Reisman, an astronautical engineering professor at the University of Southern California who is a former NASA astronaut and a senior adviser to SpaceX. He told Reuters that SpaceX’s strategy of embracing failure when the consequences are low sets it apart from traditional aerospace companies and even NASA.


He explained: “Even though that rocket costs a lot of money, what really costs a lot of money are people’s salaries. SpaceX saves more money in the long run, and takes less time to identify and correct engineering flaws by taking more risks in the development process rather than keeping a large team working for years and years and years trying to get it perfect before you even try it.”


Musk himself tweeted after the launch that he was “proud of the SpaceX team for achieving this major milestone” and that he was “looking forward to future flights with more improvements.” He also thanked the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) for its support and cooperation.


Starship is not the first SpaceX rocket to explode during testing. In fact, SpaceX has a history of learning from failures and using them as opportunities to innovate and advance its technology. For example:

In 2015, SpaceX successfully landed its Falcon 9 rocket booster for the first time after several failed attempts that resulted in crashes and explosions. Since then, SpaceX has become the leader in reusable rockets, which reduce launch costs and environmental impact.

In 2019, a Crew Dragon capsule exploded during a ground test due to a faulty valve. In 2020, another Crew Dragon capsule suffered a leak during a test flight due to a manufacturing defect. However, SpaceX fixed these issues and successfully launched two crewed missions to the International Space Station (ISS) in 2020 and 2021.

SpaceX’s ‘successful failure’ formula may seem counterintuitive or risky to some, but it has proven to be effective and efficient for achieving its ambitious goals. By embracing failure as part of the learning process, SpaceX is able to iterate faster, innovate more and ultimately make space exploration more accessible and affordable for humanity.

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