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Lunar Colonisation: The Architecture of an Interplanetary Data Platform

Paul Barlow

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0:00 | 21:19

The episode argues that modern lunar exploration has evolved from a feat of aeronautics into a complex data engineering challenge. Sustaining a permanent presence on the Moon requires a distributed data platform capable of managing communication blackouts, autonomous systems, and massive telemetry streams. Key infrastructure like LunaNet and delay-tolerant networking facilitate this by treating space operations as high-volume digital pipelines rather than isolated events. Furthermore, the use of AI assistants and digital twins allows for mission planning and habitat maintenance without constant human intervention. Ultimately, the source highlights that the success of the Artemis program depends on rigorous metadata standards and robust software architecture. These advancements in interplanetary informatics serve as a high-stakes blueprint for building resilient data systems back on Earth.