Even astronauts on the way to the moon hit Outlook problems

Astronauts on Artemis II ran into a familiar Outlook failure mid-flight, forcing mission control to step in and troubleshoot. The glitch shows how even deep space missions still depend on everyday software.

Even astronauts on the way to the moon hit Outlook problems

Artemis II ran into a familiar email glitch, showing how persistent software issues can be.

Artemis II rocket. NASA

Seven hours into its journey, Artemis II hit a snag that would feel familiar in any office. The mission commander lost access to Microsoft Outlook on his onboard device, cutting off email mid-flight according to Wired.

The issue showed up on a personal computing device used to manage mission data and communications during the 10-day lunar flyby. When both Outlook instances stopped responding, the commander called Houston for help and asked ground teams to check the system.

It’s a small moment in a major mission, but it lands clearly. Even on a spacecraft heading farther than humans have traveled in decades, these glitches still follow.

Houston had to step in

The failure quickly turned into a support case. With both Outlook instances down, the crew relied on mission control to troubleshoot the issue in real time.

Aircraft, Transportation, VehicleArtemis II Crew using an iPhone to take pictures. NASA

From orbit, the commander asked Houston to access the system and investigate. Ground teams confirmed they would log in and run checks, turning part of a lunar mission into something closer to a remote IT session.

These devices handle core onboard work, including mission data and communication workflows. When email drops out, even briefly, it can interrupt tightly scheduled tasks the crew depends on.

Not even space escapes software quirks

There’s still no confirmed cause, and both NASA and Microsoft were asked for more detail at the time. The likely triggers, though, are familiar, including add-in conflicts, storage limits, or corrupted app instances.

Modern missions rely on layered systems that combine specialized hardware with widely used software. That mix adds flexibility, but it also introduces more points where things can break under pressure.

NASA animation shows SLS rocket heading to space in the Artemis II mission.NASA

A small glitch, big perspective

The outage was frustrating, but it stayed on the low end of mission risk. The flight continued as planned, and the issue appears limited to email rather than any critical system.

Spaceflight has seen far worse outcomes from software mistakes, including early missions where tiny code errors led to total loss. Against that history, a frozen inbox is manageable, even thousands of kilometers from Earth.

Reliance on familiar tools isn’t going away anytime soon. As more mission systems use commercial software, expect more of these moments to surface, just far beyond where most bugs usually appear.

Paulo Vargas

Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…

AI is doing the dirty work for insurance companies, and it’s getting worse

AI is getting really good at saying no to your insurance claims, and the numbers are distressing.

Artificial Intelligence

Insurance claims adjusters have never had a reputation for generosity. But at least they were human. That’s changing fast, and not in your favor. A report by Futurism details how AI automation is now a major trend in personal insurance, the health, home, and auto coverage most of us rely on. 

Is your doctor’s opinion even part of the process anymore?

Read more

Your chatbot may have emotions, and it changes how it behaves

Anthropic finds Claude uses internal states like happiness and fear to guide outputs.

Body Part, Finger, Hand

Your chatbot doesn’t have feelings, but it may act like it does in ways that matter. New research into Claude AI emotions suggests these internal signals aren’t just surface-level quirks, they can influence how the model responds to you.

Anthropic says its Claude model contains patterns that function like simplified versions of emotions such as happiness, fear, and sadness. These aren’t lived experiences, but recurring activity inside the system that activates when it processes certain inputs.

Read more

Your next Android flagship may get a big Gemini Nano 4 boost

Google is teasing better speed, lower battery use, and broader language support for on-device AI.

Pixel 10a Ask Gemini banner.

Your next Android flagship may get a big Gemini Nano 4 boost, and Google’s already laying the groundwork. In a new developer preview, it’s pushing a faster, more efficient AI model that will power upcoming phones later this year.

The idea’s simple. Build apps now using the new Gemma 4 model, and that same code will carry over to supported devices when they arrive. It gives developers a head start while Google fine-tunes performance for real hardware.

Read more