June 21, 2020

1606 words 8 mins read

SpaceX Starlink Is on a Roll

SpaceX Starlink Is on a Roll

Why Elon is smiling captured from an interview during the virtual convention of the Mars Society, Oct 16, 2020.

This is an impressive list of achievements, but bear in mind that we are still in the early days of a yet-unproven technology and market in a complex geopolitical environment.

The last two months have seen a flurry of Starlink activity, including the following:

Bill Gates has a his

tory of interest in satellite Internet and in September, Microsoft announced their Azure Obrital ground station service, which enables satellite access to its Azure cloud services. SES, Viasat, and Intelsat were announced as initial partners and SpaceX just signed up. Starlink+Azure Orbital will compete with Amazon’s satellite constellation and its ground-station service. (For more on Azure Orbital, check out this podcast interview and transcript of product manager Nora Zhan).

SpaceX did some good and got good publicity by providing seven user terminals to the Washington State Emergency Management Division for deployment in at least one region hit hard by summer wildfires. Richard Hall, the emergency telecommunications leader of the Washington State Military Department’s IT division, said he had “never set up any tactical satellite equipment that has been as quick to set up, and anywhere near as reliable” as Starlink.

This month, SpaceX provided connectivity to the Hoh Indian tribe west of Seattle. I don’t know how many terminals were provided or the speed and latency of the service, but the response and publicity have been positive.

SpaceX has been running beta tests in the US at latitudes between 44 and 52 degrees north. SpaceX reported that it has observed a median latency of approximately 30 ms and a 95th percentile latency of 42 ms in over a million observations.

The FCC will award up to $16 billion over ten years to support fixed broadband service in unserved rural areas. They were initially skeptical of satellite service providers, saying they had not proved that they could meet the low-latency requirement under 100ms bidding tier. However, this month, after considering beta test results, the FCC invited SpaceX to bid in the rural broadband funding auction.

After receiving over 700,000 expressions of interest from all 50 states, SpaceX requested an increase in the number of authorized user terminals from one million to five million. They also announced that they are able to manufacture 120 satellites per month, keeping up with their target launch rate.

The capital cities of 17 relatively affluent European nations fall between 44 and 52 degrees north and SpaceX has applied for 3 internet gateway ground stations in France and is said to be looking for roof space on European datacenter roofs.

While the current beta test is in the US, several European capitals are between 44 and 52 degrees north, and SpaceX is able to serve them as well as the northern US.

SpaceX has begun the process of being able to offer service in Canada, but the final approval will not be considered for around 130 days.

SpaceX has registered 14 shell companies in 13 foreign nations (click here and enter entity number 10143028). I checked the street address of one, and it seems to be a postal box rather than an office, but I have been assured that establishing shell companies is common practice. Eight of them are named “TIBRO” (orbit spelled backward), so I assume they are at an earlier development stage than the others.

SpaceX successfully tested a laser link between two satellites, but, as far as I know, did not reveal details like transmission rate or time to establish a connection. I assume that the links were between two satellites in the same plane. (They initially planned five lasers per satellite and are now committed to having four forward and backward in the same plane and two others linking to adjacent planes).

In an interview at the Mars Society Convention, Elon Musk spelled out a timetable for an unmanned Mars landing that included high volume Starship flights, each capable of launching up to 400 Starlink satellites, in 2022.

Perhaps as a result of the above, Morgan Stanley just raised its valuation of SpaceX from $52 billion in July to over $100 billion and speculated that it might be as high as $200 billion.

The above is an impressive list of achievements, but bear in mind that we are still in the early days of a yet-unproven technology and market in a complex geopolitical environment. Furthermore, we lack the sort of regulation and harmonization that has evolved over the years to govern the seas, and global problems like space debris and collision avoidance remain unsolved. Written by Larry Press, Professor of Information Systems at California State UniversityFollow CircleID on TwitterMore under: Access Providers, Broadband, Mobile Internet, Wireless

Author: Larry Press

Date: 2020-10-24

URL: http://www.circleid.com/posts/20201024-spacex-starlink-is-on-a-roll/

circleid.com

Reaching Critical Mass for Gigabit Connections (2020-10-27) Overall percentage of subscribers provisioned for gigabit speed increased 133% to nearly 5% in the second quarter of 2020 Source: 2Q20 OpenVault Broadband Insights The statistics concerning the number of gigabit fiber customers in the US is eye-opening OpenVault tracks the percentage of customers provisioned at various broadband speeds At the end of 2019 the company reported that 281% of all house.. Reaching Critical Mass for Gigabit Connections
ICT in Agriculture: A Travel to Australia’s Outback Queensland (2020-10-28) The Darling Downs Photo: Paul Budde In October 2020 I went on a two-week tour into Queenslands Outback traveling through various landscapes from pastoral and agricultural lands to savanna and the desert Leaving Brisbane past Toowoomba you enter the Darling Downs This is one of the richest agricultural areas in Australia British Botanist Alan Cunningham first explored it in 1827 However only after .. ICT in Agriculture: A Travel to Australia’s Outback Queensland
Network Outages Go Global (2020-11-13) On August 30 CenturyLink experienced a major network outage that lasted for over five hours and disrupted CenturyLink customers nationwide as well as many other networks What was unique about the outage was the scope of the disruptions as the outage affected video streaming services game platforms and even webcasts of European soccer This is an example of how telecom network outages have expanded .. Network Outages Go Global
Brand Abuse and IP Infringements – Part 1: Brand Impact (2020-11-10) In this two-part blog series we take a closer look at brand abuse and intellectual property IP infringements In this first article we explore the components making up a companys IP and how online content can affect a brands value both actual and perceived IP and brand value The IP held by an organization ie the portfolio of brands trademarks and other intangible assets that provide it with its dis..
What Does an Administration Change Mean for the FCC? (2020-11-17) Just as the last change in administration changed the course of the FCC so will the swing back to a Democratic administration If youve been reading me for a few years you know I am a big believer in the regulatory pendulum Inevitably when a regulatory agency like the FCC swings too far in any direction its inevitable that it will eventually swing back the other way If I had to characterize the cur.. What Does an Administration Change Mean for the FCC?
Going Postal (2020-10-20) When a service is constructed using diverse components then the way in which service revenues are distributed to the various suppliers of the components of the service can follow a number of quite distinct models There are various forms of revenue redistribution models where the revenue per transaction is distributed to the various suppliers according to their inputs to support each transaction An.. Going Postal
The Magnitude of the Urban Digital Divide (2020-10-19) The web is full of stories of rural areas with no broadband options and Ive spent a lot of time in the last few decades helping rural areas get better broadband There has not been nearly as much coverage of the huge broadband gap in urban areas There are a lot of urban homes that cant afford broadband and in many cases got bypassed when the telcos and/or cable companies built their networks I just.. The Magnitude of the Urban Digital Divide
The End of Broadband Networks as We Know Them (2020-11-24) A group of major telecommunications companies Vodafone BT Telefonica and Deutsche Telekom recently announced something a bit unexpected In the Open BNG Operator Position Paper they call for a fundamental industry-wide change to the way broadband networks are built Specifically they advocate for collaboration throughout the telco world with a convergence around open broadband network gateways BNGs .. The End of Broadband Networks as We Know Them
Another ICANN Meeting Concluded With No Action on DNS Abuse or Privacy/Proxy Policy (2020-11-04) Co-authored by Russell Pangborn and Syed Abedi of Seed IP Law Group The ICANN 69 meeting has come to a close with no progress on DNS abuse or implementation of the Privacy/Proxy Services Accreditation policy PPSAI While ICANN is uniquely positioned to do so it refuses to do anything proactive about DNS abuse with its executives overtly attempting to limit its role to data collection Moreover its r..
US Election-Related Web Properties Prone to Fraud and Misinformation Due to Lack of Domain Security (2020-10-15) Co-authored by CSCs Sue Watts and Quinn Taggart The risks of fraud and disinformation in the US election process have been hiding in plain sight CSCs new research finds that a large majority of web domains closely linked to the campaign websites for Joe Biden and Donald Trump lack basic domain security protocols and are prone to domain spoofing tactics This makes them a potential target for hacker..