Most people think space missions are defined by liftoff.

From an engineering perspective, Artemis II is defined by everything that doesn’t fly.
Before a single engine ignites, NASA runs Artemis II through months of rehearsals: stacking operations, integrated system tests, simulations, wet dress rehearsals, emergency evacuations, and full countdowns that intentionally stop seconds before ignition.
Why?
Because a crewed launch is not a single event — it’s a distributed system.
Each phase is a checkpoint:
- Can Orion talk to ground systems?
- Can the crew get out if something fails?
- Can software take over when humans must step back?
- Can the system recover from a pause at the worst possible moment?
At T-33 seconds, control of the countdown is handed to automated systems. Humans intentionally remove themselves from the loop because software reacts faster and more consistently than people can under pressure.
This is a pattern every engineer recognizes:
You don’t test in production.
You rehearse until failure becomes boring.
Artemis II is NASA applying that mindset at a planetary scale.
I built artemis2.live to document these details in one place — not as news, but as a living reference for how a modern human spaceflight mission actually works.
If you’re curious how large, safety-critical systems are prepared for the moment where nothing can go wrong, this mission is worth watching.
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