Close Menu
Chronicle.ng
    Trending Stories
    Owner and president of the Los Angeles Lakers Jeanie Buss attends the game against the Utah Jazz at Crypto.com Arena. File Photo: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

    Buss family to sell Lakers for record $10 billion – ESPN

    June 19, 2025
    Tor Tiv to Tinubu: Benue under genocidal attack by terrorists not farmer-herder clashes

    Tor Tiv to Tinubu: Benue under genocidal attack by terrorists not farmer-herder clashes

    June 19, 2025
    US President Donald Trump has withheld funding from Harvard University over disagreement on international students

    Trump faces backlash from MAGA base over potential Iran strike

    June 18, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Buss family to sell Lakers for record $10 billion – ESPN
    • Tor Tiv to Tinubu: Benue under genocidal attack by terrorists not farmer-herder clashes
    • Trump faces backlash from MAGA base over potential Iran strike
    • Club World Cup: Guardiola lauds new signings as Manchester City secure 2-0 victory
    • Club World Cup: Al Hilal hold Real Madrid in thrilling 1–1 draw
    • $6bn Mambilla Fraud: Liyel Imoke wrote contractor company that FEC did not approve contract – Witness
    • Israeli strikes kill 140 in Gaza as attention shifts to Iran conflict
    • Israel-Iran war: Netanyahu praises Trump’s role in air defense
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Chronicle.ngChronicle.ng
    Subscribe
    Thursday, June 19
    • News
      • Nigeria News
      • World News
      • Headlines News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Sport
    • Entertainment
    • Contact Us
    Chronicle.ng

    Elon Musk now owns one-third of all active satellites in the sky

    Chronicle EditorBy Chronicle EditorFebruary 12, 20211 Comment4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Telegram WhatsApp
    Elon Musk to become world's first trillionaire
    Elon Musk to become world's first trillionaire
    Facebook Twitter WhatsApp
    SpaceX created a swarm of about thousand satellites that is circulating about 340 miles overhead, and building the constellation has put SpaceX in a “deep chasm” of expenses, according to CEO Elon Musk.

    The constellation has also raised concerns about potential in-space collisions and the impact on astronomers’ ability to study the night sky. But for some early customers of the $99-per-month Starlink service, the satellites are already improving how rural communities access the internet.

    With the latest SpaceX launch last week, which carried 60 more internet-beaming satellites into space, the company’s Starlink internet constellation grew to include about 1,000 active satellites — by far the largest array in orbit. SpaceX now owns about one third of all the active satellites in space.

    Read also: ‘Bitcoin will soon be widely accepted’ -Elon Musk

    More Starlink satellites were put in orbit last year than had been launched by all the rocket providers in the world in 2019.

    SpaceX has promised its satellite clusters will bring cheap, high-speed internet to the masses by beaming data to every corner of the globe. The company now says it has roughly 10,000 customers, which proves that Starlink is no longer “theoretical and experimental,” the company said in a February 4 filing with the Federal Communications Commission.

    For comparison, Verizon, one of the most popular fiber-optic internet providers, has more than 6 million customers.

    SpaceX gets almost $900 million in federal subsidies to deliver broadband to rural America

    Whether or not Starlink will become a sustainable business, however, remains to be seen. Musk noted in a tweet Tuesday morning that the company “needs to pass through a deep chasm of negative cash flow over the next year or so to make Starlink financially viable.”

    He also refloated the idea of one day taking SpaceX’s Starlink business public, saying that could happen “once we can predict cash flow reasonably well.” Musk had said last year that the company had “zero thoughts” about a Starlink IPO.

    The Starlink network is the largest and most meaningful attempt in history to build a low-latency, space-based internet service for consumers, and Musk noted Tuesday that several previous attempts to create such a network have been abandoned or endured bankruptcy (latency refers to how much lag time or delay is built into a internet service). Systems that require data to travel longer distances, such as more traditional internet satellites that orbit thousands of miles from Earth, create longer lag times. Low-Earth orbit constellations such as Starlink aim to drastically reduce latency by orbiting massive networks of satellites just a few hundred miles over ground.

    The idea has its critics. Fiber-optic-based internet providers, for example, are pushing back against the federal government’s decision to award SpaceX $885.5 million dollars in subsidies. Professional astronomers are also concerned about light pollution. And the sheer number of satellites that make up the Starlink constellation — and other networks planned by companies such as OneWeb and Amazon — has space experts worried about traffic jams and the risk of collisions that could create plumes of debris.

    Here’s where those controversies stand, and what SpaceX has done to respond to its critics.

    Rural broadband

    SpaceX and the FCC are facing blowback after the company was awarded nearly $900 million in subsidies through the FCC’s Rural Digital Opportunity Fund, despite objections from traditional telecom companies and even some regulators.

    Some beta testers have reported top-of-the-line speeds, but as of late 2020, they were also reportedly experiencing intermittent outages because SpaceX hadn’t launched enough satellites to guarantee continuous coverage. It also remains to be seen how affordable SpaceX’s service will be. CNBC reported in October, citing emails shared with those who expressed interest in becoming Starlink customers, that the service could cost about $99 a month, plus a one-time fee of about $500 for the router and antenna. SpaceX has not yet publicly released Starlink’s price points or terms of service.

    Musk said in a tweet Tuesday that if Starlink doesn’t fail, “the cost to end users will improve every year.” Yet many still argue that the network will, ultimately, be too expensive to provide the type of paradigm-shifting internet coverage that SpaceX has advertised.

    Still, beta testers such as Opfer argue that Starlink is a vast improvement over what many residents of rural areas are used to. Before Starlink, he and his wife relied on HughesNet or ViaSat, a more traditional satellite-based internet provider that has large satellties orbiting thousands of miles from Earth, whose services are known to be bogged down by frustrating lag times, or high latency.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Telegram WhatsApp

    Keep Reading

    US President Donald Trump has withheld funding from Harvard University over disagreement on international students

    Trump faces backlash from MAGA base over potential Iran strike

    US and allies plan more Iran sanctions; Israel war cabinet to meet again

    Israeli strikes kill 140 in Gaza as attention shifts to Iran conflict

    796 babies buried in septic tank at Catholic-run home for unwed mothers

    796 babies buried in septic tank at Catholic-run home for unwed mothers

    JUST IN: Iran’s Khamenei replies Trump, vows not to surrender 

    Iran’s Khamenei replies Trump, vows not to surrender 

    Iran urge recidents to delete WhatsApp, raising fears of nationwide ban

    Iran urges residents to delete WhatsApp, raising fears of nationwide ban

    Iran urge recidents to delete WhatsApp, raising fears of nationwide ban

    lran state TV urges deletion of WhatsApp, sparking fears of possible ban

    View 1 Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Subscribe to News

    Be the first to get the latest news updates from ChronicleNG about world, sports, politics etc

    Owner and president of the Los Angeles Lakers Jeanie Buss attends the game against the Utah Jazz at Crypto.com Arena. File Photo: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

    Buss family to sell Lakers for record $10 billion – ESPN

    June 19, 2025
    Tor Tiv to Tinubu: Benue under genocidal attack by terrorists not farmer-herder clashes

    Tor Tiv to Tinubu: Benue under genocidal attack by terrorists not farmer-herder clashes

    June 19, 2025
    US President Donald Trump has withheld funding from Harvard University over disagreement on international students

    Trump faces backlash from MAGA base over potential Iran strike

    June 18, 2025
    Guardiola celebrates Rodri's Ballon d'Or amid Vinicius boycott

    Club World Cup: Guardiola lauds new signings as Manchester City secure 2-0 victory

    June 18, 2025
    Club World Cup: Al Hilal hold Real Madrid in thrilling 1–1 draw

    Club World Cup: Al Hilal hold Real Madrid in thrilling 1–1 draw

    June 18, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Politics
    • News
    • Sports
    • Business
    • About Us
    © 2025 ChronicleNG

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.