@simonbp I don't know why you would bring up the survivability of crew on a ship that was designed not to have a crew in the first place.
I call the rocket launch successful because it met the goals set out to define success.
It's kind of off to declare it a failure because it didn't meet some goals that you personally had for it, to replace the goals of the actual launch provider putting it up.
@simonbp they have not sold this rocket as a crewed commercial flight. A crewed rocket has not yet been developed, and I imagine it won't be for a few years.
This is not intended to be a crewed rocket.
A future rocket is, but not this one.
Heck, one would think that if they intended this rocket to have a crew they would at least install a door for the crew to enter :-)
But no, you're confusing some different rockets.
@volkris Um, yeah. It's absolutely intended as a crewed vehicle, and they've already sold at least three crewed commercial flights, plus of course, the NASA Human Landing System.
And because it is intended to be not just a crewed system, but a *NASA* crewed system, Starship will face continuous and intense scrutiny over its safety. And rightfully so considering the billions of tax dollars that are bankrolling the program.