Inspiring Gen Alpha: The Youngest Users Interacting with Satellites
By Harri Laitinen
If you think space is only for engineers in lab coats or university students with grants, think again. A new generation is listening in. Building up. Beaming out.
We’re talking about Gen Alpha—kids born between 2010 and the mid-2020s. They’re digital natives. Touchscreen thinkers. AI conversers. And now, some of them are interacting with satellites before they hit their teens.
At Interstellar Communication Holdings Inc., through our icMercury platform, we’ve seen firsthand how this generation is transforming space tech from an elite domain into something familiar—and even playful.
Meet the New Space Natives
For Gen Alpha, space isn’t abstract. It’s interactive.
These are kids who:
Use apps to track PocketQubes from their backyard
Hear satellite beacons as part of school STEM kits
Write their own satellite commands in simple scripting languages
View downlinked data like it’s just another part of their digital life
They’re not amazed that satellites exist. They’re amazed that they can talk to them.
How We’re Supporting Their Curiosity
At icMercury, we believe it’s never too early to get involved in space. So we’re making sure our tools:
Simplify complexity with age-friendly dashboards
Offer guided mission builder kits for classrooms
Include visual data storytelling tools so even 10-year-olds can interpret telemetry
Provide open callsigns where students can help “name” live satellites they’re tracking
Partner with schools to design payloads that include creative and cultural inputs from Gen Alpha learners
Because what we teach now becomes the tech they’ll lead tomorrow.
Real Stories, Real Kids, Real Satellites
A 9-year-old in the Philippines designed an icon-based satellite control interface using Scratch
A primary school in South Africa used icMercury data to track weather patterns over their village
A girl in Finland drew a comic strip that was encoded and uploaded as an orbital time capsule
A Gen Alpha user in Mexico became a local media hero after detecting his first satellite signal using a homemade antenna
They’re not waiting to “grow into” space. They’re already growing with it.
Why This Matters
When we include kids this young, we’re not just sparking interest in STEM. We’re laying the groundwork for:
A generation that feels ownership of orbital tech
Engineers who understand space not as cold and distant—but personal
Global citizens who care deeply about data ethics, space sustainability, and accessibility
Creators who won’t just fly satellites… but imagine entirely new ways to use them
And in a world that’s more connected—and more chaotic—than ever, we need young voices shaping the future of space.
The View Ahead
As Interstellar Communication Holdings Inc. prepares for the 2025 Go Global Awards in London, we’re not just highlighting our tech. We’re highlighting the kids who already use it. The ones growing up fluent in orbital language. The ones who won’t ask “Can I access space?” They’ll ask, “Why wouldn’t I?”
Because if Gen Alpha is already in orbit with us, the future of space is in very good hands.














