SpaceX StarLink satellite internet [UPDATES]


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"Connectivity Above and Beyond"

 

Starlink Gen 2 satellites will include a much larger antenna, one which will be able to connect directly to cell phones in areas without coverage.

 

The T-Mobile CEO mentioned that it would be included in basic service, and if they are pursuing International reciprocal roaming.

 

I think the satellite phone people are going to have a really bad day.

 

https://www.theverge.com/2022/8/25/23320722/spacex-starlink-t-mobile-satellite-internet-mobile-messaging

 

 

 

Edited by DocM
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Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force may use Starlink 

 

https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2022/08/22/national/sdf-starlink-communications/

 

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Defense Ministry considering adopting Starlink communications system for SDF

 

The Defense Ministry is considering adopting the Starlink high-speed internet communications system, informed sources have said.

 

The ministry hopes to equip Maritime Self-Defense Force vessels engaged in long-term voyages with the system offered by U.S. aerospace company Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, to boost their telecommunications capabilities.

 

It aims to resolve the issue of manpower shortages in the MSDF by enabling crew members to communicate with their families using Starlink and hopefully reduce their stress while on voyages.

Related expenses will be included in the ministry’s budget request for fiscal 2023. The ministry will seek a swift implementation of the system.

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FCC has granted approval for SpaceX to deploy 7,500 Starlink Gen 2's of the requested 29,988, and adding V-band to Ka-, Ku-, and E-band. The rest are deferred until orbital hand other objections have been dealt with.

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/12/01/fcc-authorizes-spacex-gen2-starlink-up-to-7500-satellites.html

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KEY POINTS

• The FCC issued a key authorization to Elon Musk’s SpaceX, granting approval to launch up to 7,500 of its next-generation Starlink internet satellites.

• “Our action will allow SpaceX to begin deployment of Gen 2 Starlink,” the FCC wrote in the order.

• The decision is crucial to SpaceX’s plans to expand its satellite network.

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SpaceX is also required to coordinate with other satellite operators, as well as with NASA and the National Science Foundation to protect science missions and radioastronomy, respectively.

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Starlink Gen 2 starts launches December 28 with Starlink 5-1. Much larger satellites, nearly an order of magnitude more bandwidth and extended capabilities.

https://spacenews.com/spacex-preparing-to-start-starlink-gen2-launches-this-month/

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SpaceX preparing to start Starlink Gen2 launches this month

TAMPA, Fla. — SpaceX could start launching second-generation Starlink satellites in the coming weeks to add more capacity to its increasingly congested broadband network. 

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SpaceX told the FCC. 

Starlink has more than one million “active subscribers,” SpaceX tweeted Dec. 19, up from 250,000 the company said it had in March.

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SpaceX has plans to use Falcon 9 rockets and its upcoming Starship heavy-launch vehicle to deploy Gen2.

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Edited by DocM
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On 15/01/2023 at 01:01, DocM said:

Starlink wants to open service in South Korea, which probably has NK's  Kim family concerned...

https://en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20230113008600320?section=k-biz/index

That would be good if Starlink unofficially worked in North Korea, hardware would eventually be smuggled in to make use of it I suspect.

I watched a documentary a few years ago that showed it was possible to use 3g internet from South Korea in certain places in the North, some North Koreans likely do have have uncensored internet access with that in mind.

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Third generation StarLink antennas in testing

https://uk.pcmag.com/networking/145204/spacex-prepares-to-test-next-generation-starlink-dishes

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On Tuesday, the FCC granted SpaceX a temporary license to test “new user-terminal hardware.” A document from the company adds the test will cover “next-generation phased array antennas” designed to connect to Starlink satellites.


The hardware will include both fixed position Starlink dishes and those that can be used in motion, such as on a car, boat, or plane. The company plans on testing up to 200 models, featuring dimensions “not to exceed 0.586 by 0.385" meters in size (23 inches by 15.1 inches).

That means hardware will be slightly larger than the second-gen Starlink dish for residential customers, which was introduced in November 2021. It too has a rectangular shape, but with the dimensions at 0.513 by 0.303 meters (20 inches by 11.9 inches). Meanwhile, the first-generation Starlink dish adopted a circular shape with a 23.2-inch diameter.

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Starlink + OZ's Royal Flying Doctors Service

https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/spacexs-starlink-signs-deals-with-flying-doctor-service-and-tototheo-maritime/

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SpaceX’s satellite unit Starlink has signed new deals with Australia’s Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS) and maritime communications provider Tototheo Maritime.

The RFDS will use Starlink’s Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite communications services to provide connectivity to healthcare providers in rural Queensland, while Tototheo will resell services to ship operators within the merchant shipping, offshore, yachting, and fishing industries.

 

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Posted (edited)

USAF using Starlink in indo-Pacific

https://www.stripes.com/branches/air_force/2023-03-21/starlink-spacex-air-force-communications-9558606.html

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Starlink satellites are boosting Air Force communication across the Indo-Pacific

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A Starlink terminal set up inside a C-130J Super Hercules airlifter at Yokota allowed [Maj. Gen. John] Klein to video conference with an airman who was using a Starlink terminal on Diego Garcia, an island more than 5,000 miles away in the Indian Ocean.

The system could be used by contingency response forces such as those who deployed to Afghanistan to evacuate U.S. troops and civilians in August 2021, Klein said after the demonstration.

“I was extremely impressed with the capability,” he told Stars and Stripes on Tuesday as he prepared to depart Yokota. “We are looking to give our units throughout the Pacific the ability to communicate with command-and-control entities. They are evolving to do that in support of agile combat employment.”

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The Air Force has its own satellite internet system called Hawkeye that’s a lot more expensive and slower, Flores added. A Hawkeye dish costs $250,000 and provides internet speeds of 4 megabytes per second, he said.

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