Hacker News
Amazon has enough satellites to launch its Starlink competitor
BonerWiener
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https://www.independent.co.uk/tech/amazon-leo-space-internet...
xnx
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gonzalohm
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Plus I think we should be invested in installing more optic fiber. The US is laughably behind other countries on that
wenc
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https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/satellit...
But I also think that focusing on residential internet as the only market might be thinking too small.
There's aviation, maritime, defense, telecom/enterprise backhaul, remote industrial (oil rigs, mines, etc.), and those guys are are not paying $135/month.
This might unlock new applications, like remote sensors and autonomous devices that are out of coverage areas today.
John Deere's farming equipment for instance is already on Starlink, and those things are basically computers on wheels.
The only issue is that satellite internet needs line of sight to the sky. Underground/undersea applicatons are basically out.
3stacks
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The typical solution is called Fixed Wireless which is essentially the same as 5G or traditional satellite internet.
I’ve used Starlink for years and aside from the exorbitant price I wouldn’t consider switching. The dish is very low voltage so I have a failover system for during power outages to keep my server and work connection going.
Space junk aside I’m glad to see Space X being challenged because some downward pressure on price would be nice
gonzalohm
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xdertz
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Then there are remote places that either have no other option or would like a backup solution.
fhdkweig
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l1n
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verzali
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The military demand is real enough, though.
m463
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right now at&t is actively trying to get people onto their wisp products.
tapvt
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Zero competition. No fiber. No cable. 5G coverage isn't sufficient for my daily needs, but okay for a failover.
the_real_cher
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Its the only innovation in the space (literally and metaphorically.)
thegrim33
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"Starlink is SpaceX's primary revenue driver, generating $11.39 billion in 2025 and accounting for roughly 61% of the company's total sales. The satellite connectivity unit is the only highly profitable division of the company, generating an operating income of $4.42 billion"
bill_mcgonigle
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It would be a huge selling point over the competition which is allegedly being used in terroristic attacks.
Algorithm: one (or a group of) terminals reaches altitude headed from one warring region to another. Disable its transit data, keep watching telemetry. A single modest modern CPU could process the data stream from millions of devices, though it probably makes sense to have a coprocessor at each downlink location, with minimum handoff data near hextile boundaries.