
China has taken another step toward bringing AI computing into space.
China has taken another step toward bringing AI computing into space. On Saturday, Shanghai Xingshu Tiansuan Space Technology announced it had launched the first group of satellites for a project the company says will eventually include 1,000 satellites.
The announcement came as Chinese President Xi Jinping attended the 2026 World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai, held July 17-20. During the event, Xi presented China as a leading force in shaping global AI governance.
The satellite launch took place during a week in which China announced several AI-related developments linked to the conference, rather than as a standalone achievement.
The idea behind space-based computing is to process data directly in space instead of sending it from satellites or sensors back to Earth. Only the final results are then transmitted to Earth.
This approach could help reduce latency and bandwidth demands, especially for tasks such as Earth observation and distributed AI processing.
Several Chinese companies are working on similar projects, including Zhongke Tiansuan and the Three-Body Computing Constellation, a project led by Zhejiang Lab. Both aim to build large-scale computing networks in orbit in the coming years.
The announcement also comes as Elon Musk’s SpaceX continues to develop its own space computing project. The effort gained momentum after SpaceX completed a full stock merger with xAI in February 2026, valuing the combined companies at nearly $1.25 trillion.
Musk has said that space-based computing centers could help address the energy and cooling limitations on Earth that are slowing the future growth of AI technology.
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