 The James Webb Space Telescope is currently fully deployed and in orbit around the L2 Lagrange point. It started with 344 single points of failure when it left the Earth on December 25, 2021. Today just 49 single points of failure remain. They are common to most spacecraft, such as the propulsion systems, and will remain throughout the lifetime of the telescope. The current operation is adjusting the primary and secondary mirrors to provide a single sharp image instead of 18 fuzzy ones. Each of the primary mirror's 18 gold-plated hexagons has seven actuators on its back to change the shape. The current estimate is that the process of aligning the mirrors will take three and a half months. The next year's review should have a wealth of new astronomical discoveries. The James Webb Space Telescope webpage is outstanding. I recommend visiting it anytime you want to know how things are going.