A beautiful public site that explains what NASA and space science actually did this month — every fact cited, key moments you can listen to, refreshed automatically. A published, self-updating space-science explainer site where every card is written from a cited source, the big moments can be played as audio, and every fact is one click from NASA's own page.
Mission Control is a public space-science site that explains recent NASA and earth-science updates in plain language, with every card one click from its cited source. It can include generated art, an activity timeline, and optional audio so the page feels polished instead of generic.
Synorb should be the source of truth for the cited science cards. If the app uses a web lookup for a missing calendar detail, keep that context labeled and separate from the Synorb-cited facts.
No setup to learn. Lovable asks a handful of normal-person questions — each with a smart default, so “you pick” always works — then builds it with live Synorb data flowing in.
Smart default: Cover all of NASA + space science, with quick filters for missions, Earth science, and astronomy. (Recommended: 'you pick'.)
Smart default: Yes — add audio playback for the top items. (Recommended; it's the wow.)
Smart default: Cosmos — dramatic and screenshot-worthy. (Recommended.)
Smart default: Weekly 'this month in space' refresh. (Recommended for a clean explainer.)
Deep-space dark theme with a subtle starfield, glowing accent type, and a generated nebula hero. Dramatic and shareable. (Default.)
Clean, bright, science-museum editorial: generous whitespace, serif headlines, restrained color — reads as authoritative and classroom-friendly.
Bold mission-poster energy: big numerals, high-contrast section art, timeline-forward — built to excite and be screenshotted.
Synorb supplies source-linked science updates and citation metadata. Lovable builds the public explainer, visual treatment, cards, timeline, optional audio, and refresh flow while keeping credentials private behind the app.
Credential safetyCredentials stay private behind the app, never in page code. Builders can get credentials from synorb.com/connect when the agent asks.
Every science card should link to the original NASA, research, or institutional source returned by Synorb. Optional web context should be labeled separately and not blended into cited Synorb cards.
Yes. The build prompt connects Synorb at build time to learn the real data shape, then wires live Synorb data into the running product. A published, self-updating space-science explainer site where every card is written from a cited source, the big moments can be played as audio, and every fact is one click from NASA's own page.
Only where they are safe. Synorb supplies source-linked science updates and citation metadata. Lovable builds the public explainer, visual treatment, cards, timeline, optional audio, and refresh flow while keeping credentials private behind the app. The public page should never contain credentials, secret names, or browser-visible keys.
Every science card should link to the original NASA, research, or institutional source returned by Synorb. Optional web context should be labeled separately and not blended into cited Synorb cards.
A real app. Lovable builds the product experience, while Synorb supplies the cited source layer. The result should have working UI, real data, source links, and honest empty states rather than a static mockup.
A few plain-English questions, each with a smart default so you can just say 'you pick': What should the site cover — all of NASA and space science, or a slice like Mars/Artemis missions, Earth & climate science, or astronomy?; Do you want a 'Listen' button so visitors can hear a short spoken rundown of the big items?; Pick a look: Cosmos (deep-space dark with starfield, default), Observatory (clean editorial science-museum), or Launchpad (bold, mission-poster energy).; How often should it refresh — daily or weekly?.
The same Synorb MCP connects to every major coding agent. Pick yours.
Generate credentials, connect Lovable, and ship something with live, cited intelligence.