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Communications Space The Internet

Amazon Signs Multibillion-dollar Project Kuiper Launch Contracts (spacenews.com) 54

schwit1 shares a report from SpaceNews: In the largest commercial launch deal ever, Amazon is purchasing up to 83 launches from Arianespace, Blue Origin and United Launch Alliance to deploy most of its 3,236-satellite Project Kuiper broadband megaconstellation, contracts worth several billion dollars. Amazon announced April 5 the agreements to launch an unspecified number of satellites on Ariane 6, New Glenn and Vulcan Centaur rockets over five years. The launches are in addition to nine Atlas 5 launches it purchased from ULA a year ago. Amazon did not disclose financial terms but said it is spending billions of dollars on these contracts as part of the constellation's $10 billion overall cost.

Amazon is buying 38 Vulcan launches from ULA. The agreement includes additional investments in launch infrastructure to support a higher flight rate, such as a dedicated launch platform for Vulcan launches of Kuiper satellites. ULA will make its own investments to support processing two launch vehicles in parallel. "With a total of 47 launches between our Atlas and Vulcan vehicles, we are proud to launch the majority of this important constellation," Tory Bruno, chief executive of ULA, said in a company statement. "Amazon's investments in launch infrastructure and capability upgrades will benefit both commercial and government customers." The Arianespace deal includes 18 Ariane 6 launches, a contract that Stephane Israel, chief executive of Arianespace, described in a statement as the largest contract in his company's history. Blue Origin is selling 12 New Glenn launches with an option for 15 more. Notably absent is SpaceX, which in addition to its Falcon and Future Starship vehicles is developing its Starlink broadband constellation that will compete with Kuiper.

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Amazon Signs Multibillion-dollar Project Kuiper Launch Contracts

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  • "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."... Well, five Internet via satellite delivery companies... well, five rocket launch companies... well...
    One would say Starlink is great, except for the fact that availability (at least for some) gets pushed again and again.
    Could Amazon do better? That's a resounding maybe, with Amazon fails at least as significant as its successes.

    • "I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."... Well, five Internet via satellite delivery companies... well, five rocket launch companies... well... One would say Starlink is great, except for the fact that availability (at least for some) gets pushed again and again. Could Amazon do better? That's a resounding maybe, with Amazon fails at least as significant as its successes.

      Musk has his own failures. And comparing the Satellite delivered internet to previous mistaken notions about how many computers are needed, the amount of RAM and other embarrassing statements is missing one point. This isn't some new invention. There are already very nicely performing internet delivery services out there.

      There is a numbers issue. Where Satellite delivery of Internet make sense is where there is no other delivery service. If we take my area of the world, (PA) we have population centers, vi

      • It seems like you're making an argument that Musk and Bezos haven't really thought this through or forgot to account for the fact that terrestrial infrastructure will get "better".

        Have you noticed that Starlink is pretty useful in warzones? It's also generally very useful for the military, for ships, and for people who are technically served by terrestrial but who are stuck being served by incompetent monopolies. Also, they can provide lower latency than even terrestrial microwave links, which is importan

      • by Whibla ( 210729 )

        You do make some good points, but I wonder if you're not thinking a little short term and 'parochially'.

        If we take my area of the world...

        If instead we take areas of the world that jumped straight over POTS lines to every house and went with mobile phones, areas that are predicted to grow in population over the next two decades then most of your points are somewhat irrelevant.

        Strange business model.

        Maybe. Or maybe having the ability to serve internet to the entire world in a decade's time, ~one third of which live in currently developing countries that aren't cur

        • You do make some good points, but I wonder if you're not thinking a little short term and 'parochially'.

          If we take my area of the world...

          If instead we take areas of the world that jumped straight over POTS lines to every house and went with mobile phones, areas that are predicted to grow in population over the next two decades then most of your points are somewhat irrelevant.

          So irrelevant that you now need to make a case for switching to Starlink with their mobile phones instead of the existing architecture? School me on irrelevant.

          Now make the case that Starlink will be superior to the Cellular system. and that it will be the dominant system for smartphones.

          • by Whibla ( 210729 )

            Now make the case that Starlink will be superior to the Cellular system. and that it will be the dominant system for smartphones.

            Gosh, maybe this 'point' was the very reason I wrote "there are both serious technical issues to overcome here, as well as existing infrastructure (e.g. cell towers) that would seem to provide a ready solution for ~95%+ of this market."

            That said, I wasn't aware that mobile phones were the only devices that connected to the internet. Thanks for 'schooling me'...

            • Now make the case that Starlink will be superior to the Cellular system. and that it will be the dominant system for smartphones.

              Gosh, maybe this 'point' was the very reason I wrote "there are both serious technical issues to overcome here, as well as existing infrastructure (e.g. cell towers) that would seem to provide a ready solution for ~95%+ of this market."

              That said, I wasn't aware that mobile phones were the only devices that connected to the internet. Thanks for 'schooling me'...

              My bad - I missed your last line. Mea Culpa's for certain.

              But yeah - many people today don't even have a desktop. They have a smartphone. And that is where they get their internet access.

              The best example to see this is on Youtube. I watch some vids on Machinists in Pakistan. Here are guys working on old worn out equipment in seriously primitive conditions. It is like early industrial revolution looking except for the dust and dirt.

              But they have iPhones and Androids, and are videoing in 4G and uploa

  • by Ecuador ( 740021 ) on Thursday April 07, 2022 @05:49AM (#62424814) Homepage

    Kuipet belt is about the worst orbit for satellite internet! Lag will be like 4 hours, what are they thinking?

    • They will be able to offer a cheaper service than Starlink. Just like their S3 Glacier AWS service has a lag of 3-5 hours.
  • Musk needs rockets to get humanity to Mars. But that objective will also take money - a lot of it, so that's why he launched Starlink (besides, satellites and rockets go together like peanut butter and jam). Bezos is going to copy (more or less) the satellite thing, but what is he going to do with all the money it generates? Buy another boat?

    • Musk needs rockets to get humanity to Mars. But that objective will also take money - a lot of it, so that's why he launched Starlink (besides, satellites and rockets go together like peanut butter and jam). Bezos is going to copy (more or less) the satellite thing, but what is he going to do with all the money it generates? Buy another boat?

      Do you really think that Starlink is going to generate the money to go to Mars? Have the business model of internet service funding those hundreds of Rockets to Mars?

      I've beat this drum too much in here already - but the tl;dr response is:

      The places with the needed population have better options.

      The places where Starlink makes sense don't have enough people

      The maintenance costs are incredible compared to the other and better delivery systems.

      It just doesn't add up that Starlink is the key to human

  • So Amazon is launching Kuiper on 3 rockets that don't yet exist. Vulcan is close, but without those engines from Blue Origin their rocket isn't flying any higher than the vaporware that is New Glenn. Cool to see Ariane getting some commercial contracts though.
    • Now we know where our $10B is going

    • Ariane 6 is supposed to launch this year and all its components exist. What is the third rocket aside from Vulcan-Centaur and New Glenn that isn't finished yet?
    • So Amazon is launching Kuiper on 3 rockets that don't yet exist. Vulcan is close, but without those engines from Blue Origin their rocket isn't flying any higher than the vaporware that is New Glenn. Cool to see Ariane getting some commercial contracts though.

      And? Starship is going to put a million people on Mars in 2050 https://futurism.com/the-byte/... [futurism.com]

      And on a Rocket that's never been to orbit yet.

      Honestly, y'all are like the rednecks at the corner gas, arguing about Fords and Chevys.

      In real life, I like the competition. But I think both Musk and Bezos are backing a loser project here. I don't think there is a critical mass of potential customers to make this extremely high maintenance internet delivery service profitable.

      • I also wonder about the feasibility. We've had experience sat phones for a while now, and that never really materialized. While my internet totally sucks due to lack of local competition, it is true that if the local duopoly feels a threat from satcoms they can very easily up the bandwidth, lay a little more fiber, give me a $10 off coupon, etc. Also while I have similar reservations on the awesomeness of 5g, I'll bet that becomes a preferred rural alternative. Sure if you are really, really in the boo

        • I also wonder about the feasibility. We've had experience sat phones for a while now, and that never really materialized. While my internet totally sucks due to lack of local competition, it is true that if the local duopoly feels a threat from satcoms they can very easily up the bandwidth, lay a little more fiber, give me a $10 off coupon, etc. Also while I have similar reservations on the awesomeness of 5g, I'll bet that becomes a preferred rural alternative. Sure if you are really, really in the boonies you might not even have a cell tower nearby, and you'll want to get satellite internet. But 1.) There aren't that many of you and 2.) alt least based on /. you aren't willing to pay all that much for internet. Combined that does not make for a great market for one sat provider let alone two.

          I think same thing applies to international, 3rd world as well.. Still easier and cheaper to build out cell towers and string up cable

          We are up against a cadre of people that might have been MAGAs if they were more conservative. Musk can say it, and they will believe him. I was convinced that they worshipped him as a god when we watched his semi tractor accelerate hella faster than a regular diesel semi. They screamed, they yelled, the stood up and clapped and waved their arms in an ecstasy that made me wonder if they would be speaking in tongues next.

          Their trigger for this display of worship? An animation that looked like something I

  • They better also be funding future space telescopes now that ground based astronomy will pretty much be rendered useless.
  • I am in awe of their diabolically clever scheme to outwit their competitors.

    "*cackle* Now here's how we're going to outwit them. [turns to face screen and grins]. We're going to hire everyone but the least expensive place--even the one that has never reached orbit! Bwahahaha!"

"Hello again, Peabody here..." -- Mister Peabody

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