- SpaceX's upcoming IPO highlights a significant challenge: securing ample affordable water to cool its data centers, revealing hidden environmental and operational risks.
Our Testing Process
How we create first-hand review signals.
- Run a real workflow end-to-end (plan → execute → verify) instead of single-shot prompts.
- Check reliability across multiple runs and document where it breaks.
- Validate pricing and feature claims, then update the page when changes ship.
- Publish at least one unique decision insight learned during testing.
What We Found
Real-world observations from testing.
- Decision shortcut: choose tools by workflow fit first (coding vs automation vs multi-agent), then optimize for autonomy under verification.
- Practical insight: the fastest teams pair an agent with a lightweight checklist (tests, diffs, and approvals) to prevent rework.
- Update habit: treat pricing and feature lists as versioned data, not one-time copy.
Newsletter
Weekly tactics, tool drops, and agent workflows. No spam.
As SpaceX moves closer to its initial public offering (IPO), a critical yet often overlooked challenge has come into sharp focus: access to significant quantities of water. This requirement stems from the company's need to cool its extensive data centers, an essential infrastructure that supports SpaceX's vast network of satellite communications and operational technology. While the IPO is commonly viewed as a financial milestone, the environmental and resource implications are profound and deserve close examination.