It's not about faster, it's about the approach. They were out there pushing National Team landers, Orbital Reef, giant multistage orbital rockets, brand new engines for ULA rockets. And all they'd managed to do was build a small sub-orbital rocket and capsule. There's no iteration from that, no building the company structures, setting pathways for development and testing. Those allow you to plan the commercial offerings with confidence (Praise Shotwell) and created space to think about those more ambitious projects.
SpaceX succeeded because Kestrel and Falcon 1 was the focus, and eventually that worked. Other possible follow-ons like Falcon 5 and Air were scrapped. What they learned as an organisation allowed them to move on to Merlin, Falcon 9 and Dragon.
That capacity may be there at BO, but there's no substitute to experience.
davoloid
joined 11 months ago
good bot!
Savagery. But fair.
There's a reason that the SpaceX reddit used to have a policy of not linking to space.com articles. They're badly written more often than not.