India, April 13 -- Through the looking glass, the satellite shines gold and silver. At its final testing stage it sits in what the industry calls a clean room, a massive warehouse the size of five badminton courts side to side, with a tall ceiling and a crane looming on top. Two technicians hover in white-overalls, adding in last minute work to its carbon fibre panels that open up like an elephant's ears. A cylinder attached to one side is a seven-band multispectral imager while an antenna is its synthetic aperture radar (SAR) sensor. This tiny, single box, called Mission Drishti, weighs 180kg and has been consuming the time, effort and creativity of 100+ employees of GalaxEye for the last three years. It's also India's first multi-sensor E...