That was
a different vehicle. In fairness, you can't gainsay the magnificent progress in space exploration since the landing of Apollo 11 on the moon, which was the fifth Apollo mission.
A correction to the above (a bit late when I posted Scott's and Marcus' observations) the Starship - as per Manley - inexplicably vented a portion of its remaining oxygen prior to its detonation. He speculated that the flight computer calculated that it would not reach its insertion point so activated the flight termination system. We've yet to hear of details from Space X and it'll probably be a while before they provide anything.
This flight termination system system is very important safety component to the FAA and the demonstration that it operated effectively is an enormous portion of whether the test was successful or not - it opens up further testing without the long delays experienced after the first launch. Starship was probably bound to burn up on re-entry due to the loss of heat shield tiles during launch.
They have a bunch of Boosters and Starships ready to go - although there may be a bit of tinkering before the next system is ready. Space X and Musk is to the C21st what Isambard Kingdom Brunel was to the C19th. We still haven't seen Blue Origin do anything other than play with a phallic toy - Bezos needs to
do something. Space X has put America an order of magnitude in front of its competitors in launch cadence and capacity and complements NASA's other extraordinarily successful off-world science missions like the astonishing James Webb telescope and Mars rovers.
It would be nice to displace a nuclear arms race with a space exploration and resource race.