00:00Can you extrapolate something like the semiconductor experience to, I guess,
00:04creating some sort of lunar base? I get it for semiconductors. We have computers
00:10on Earth. That makes sense. But if you're building a base on the moon, it would seem to me that
00:16for
00:17at least a very long time, your principal customers are going to be NASA and maybe the
00:22Department of Defense. Right. And also potentially other international partners.
00:27Right now, the Artemis base camp, as it is being developed, is imagining participation from,
00:33for example, Japanese astronauts and European Space Agency astronauts and Canadian Space Agency
00:38astronauts. Actually, the U.S. is committed to landing two Japanese astronauts on the lunar
00:43surface. First time the U.S. has ever committed to an international partner landing on the lunar
00:48surface with it. I think the lunar economy is one of the ones that's going to be a little bit
00:53farther
00:53down the road. Coming up sooner is what's called the low Earth orbit economy. And this refers more to
00:58commercial space stations.
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