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The business of commercial spaceflight is actually very simple: how to make money at low cost. But behind this simplicity, there are many bottlenecks. Building more low Earth orbit satellites is useless if you can't establish a sustainable commercial cycle. Now, a concept has gained popularity in the industry—space computing power. Why? Because it directly addresses two pain points. First, cost—space operations expenses are only 1/12 of ground operations; second, application limitations—data transmission difficulties and insufficient computing power are quickly solved. As a result, the entire business logic is being rewritten. What are the two pillars supporting this logic? Reusable rockets and launch infrastructure. With these two, "more launches, more savings" can become a reality rather than just a slogan. Industry estimates that by 2030, this market could reach 85 billion, which is not just wishful thinking but a natural outcome of low-cost launches combined with high-value applications. The current timing is critical—policies are easing, technology is breaking through, and capital is focusing. In this time window, commercial rockets and satellite payloads, as the core links of the industry chain, will be the first to benefit from scaled development. This is a long-term opportunity worth paying attention to.