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The Internet Space

SpaceX Plans To Send the First of Its 4,425 Super-Fast Internet Satellites Into Space in 2019 (cnbc.com) 160

Elon Musk's SpaceX has laid out a plan to create a network of internet-providing satellites around Earth. The company hopes to start launching satellites into space in 2019, and will continue to send them in phases until 2024, when the network is expected to reach capacity. From a report:On Wednesday, Patricia Cooper, SpaceX's vice president of satellite government affairs, said later this year, the company will start testing the satellites themselves, launch one prototype before the end of the year and another during the "early months" of 2018. Following that, SpaceX will begin its satellite launch campaign in 2019. "The remaining satellites in the constellation will be launched in phases through 2024," Cooper said before the Senate's Committee on Commerce, Science and Technology. [...] SpaceX argues that the U.S. lags behind other developed nations in broadband speed and price competitiveness, while many rural areas are not serviced by traditional internet providers. The company's satellites will provide a "mesh network" in space that will be able to deliver high broadband speeds without the need for cables.
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SpaceX Plans To Send the First of Its 4,425 Super-Fast Internet Satellites Into Space in 2019

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  • This will alleviate the challenges such as digging trenches, laying down fiber and dealing with property rights issues

    ...and replace those challenges^Westablished practices with much more interesting challenges, like, wireless mesh networks, unreachable satellites, space debris, etc.

    • My understanding was that mesh networks are largely a solved problem, just one without much economic incentive outside places where traditional infrastructure is essentially nonexistent.

  • First thoughts (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Thursday May 04, 2017 @01:00PM (#54355299)

    I like the idea of more or less global Internet access. I mean, once I've paid Musk's fee... is he going to care if I talk to his satellites from Australia instead of Canada? No matter where I go, if I have power and a dish I should be able to get access.

    On the other hand... if the NSA doesn't have a tap on this, I'll be very much surprised. And that bothers me on an ideological level even if it is unlikely to have an immediate and significant effect on me.

    • Now those people who are allergic to Wifi will have no where to hide.
      • by haruchai ( 17472 )

        Now those people who are allergic to Wifi will have no where to hide.

        Tinfoil hats will be the fashion of the future

    • by mspohr ( 589790 )

      Hard to tap this since there will be many (? hundreds) of downlink points scattered all over the world. Not saying that it couldn't be done but it's a non-trivial problem.

    • by Guspaz ( 556486 )

      He's going to care, because even if he may have a spectrum license in Canada, he may not in Australia, and even if he does, it may not be the same spectrum.

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Thursday May 04, 2017 @01:25PM (#54355485)
    If anyone doubted that the average Slashdot IQ was dropping, let Exhibit A be the fact that we're told these are "super fast" rather than a bitrate or other SLA. Also:

    >> The company's satellites...without the need for cables.

    I thought "wireless" was understood...in space. :)
    • I prefer my satellites wired and monster cable said that with theirs the audio and video from movies I watch are much warmer and crispier!
  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Thursday May 04, 2017 @01:33PM (#54355531)
    I get enough astrophotoes of space junk now, I don't need 4,425 more objects to avoid taking pictures of.
  • Soon, once there's a few competitors doing this, we'll have enough satellites surrounding the planet that it'll cut down the incoming sunlight enough to reverse global warming.

  • But MAYBE he's got a better cost model that makes this financially viable? Iridium didn't work out too well.

    I suppose his launch costs will be lower, but I have a feeling that this won't work out as cheaply as he thinks. It will be viable in places where there are no providers now, but usually those are the same places that don't have the 2 things this scheme needs... 1. People who need/want internet access and 2. People who have money to pay for it. You got to have all that to make this work out, unless r

    • by joh ( 27088 ) on Thursday May 04, 2017 @05:01PM (#54357073)

      Iridium was/is about satellite phones. This isn't. You will need a rather big phased array antenna and this is not a mobile setup.

      It's about replacing the last mile (or the last 10/100/1000 miles) with satellite links. It's about getting WiFi/LTE backhaul everywhere with just a small device to buy and set up instead of digging in cables or whatever.

      It's like the airplane eating railways and the airplane ate railways. Cables and everything you have set up on the ground is expensive because it's different everywhere and you have to buy real estate and do research and actually get your hands dirty. Setting up a satellite terminal is convenient and easy and it's just the same everywhere.

      I mean, this does not mean that it will work out as a business, but the logic behind it is quite convincing.

      • My biggest complaint about this is it eats spectrum space, high data rates require very large bandwidths. I'm trying to imagine how you can do this spectrum wise and it's starting to look pretty difficult to me. Even if you think of the satellites as mini-Cell towers that move around on you, you are going to need some pretty complicated phased array things on the satellites to keep all this in any kind of reasonable amount of spectrum space and still be able to keep data flowing to any reasonable number of

    • I suppose his launch costs will be lower, but I have a feeling that this won't work out as cheaply as he thinks. It will be viable in places where there are no providers now, but usually those are the same places that don't have the 2 things this scheme needs... 1. People who need/want internet access and 2. People who have money to pay for it. You got to have all that to make this work out...

      A surprisingly large number of people in North America have money and no decent ISP. The US is big but people still live in the wide open spaces, and Canada is even bigger. My parents are less than 30 minutes from a major metro area and can't get either cable or even crappy DSL for any price. Offer to pay for the cable run for a few miles and the local monopolies still aren't interested. So yeah, SpaceX has a market for this. A market in the millions if they can avoid Iridium's mistake in pricing.

      • by Guspaz ( 556486 )

        Xplornet has a quarter million subscribers in Canada alone, and they're extremely expensive and extremely slow. There's a huge potential market in rural and even sparse suburban areas.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."

    Thomas Watson, president of IBM, 1943

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