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Satellite Internet Is Driving the Global Space Economy (infoq.com)

InfoQ got some interesting insights from their interview with Christophe de Hauwer, the chief strategy and development officer at the communications satellite company SES: According to Morgan Stanly, the global space economy is predicted to grow from $350 billion in revenues today to more than $1.1 trillion by 2040. This impressive growth is driven by an exploding demand for connectivity... On one hand, satellite will be key to satisfy consumers' demand for always-on, high-performance connectivity. On the other hand, it will play an essential role in providing connectivity to populations in underserved and unserved areas...

[A]irlines are facing growing demands for inflight connectivity: market studies have shown that 63% of travelers think more flights should offer Wi-Fi, and 48% think Wi-Fi in the air should be as fast as it is on the ground. We are shaping and scaling our satellite fleet in order to deliver both the performance and economics needed to take these services mainstream. Whether a plane is travelling along densely populated routes or vast areas of deserts, we want to have them covered with the right kind of connectivity, always on, everywhere.

He also points out that SpaceX's re-usable rockets are just one of the ways space technology is making telecommunications cheaper.

"Electric propulsion means satellites can achieve a 40-50% reduction in their mass; high-throughput spot beams deliver a significantly higher amount of bandwidth than traditional satellites and can reduce cost per bit; fully new digitized payloads enable increased efficiency, full flexibility in global coverage and further optimization of spectrum use."

4 of 29 comments (clear)

  1. But will they pay by alvinrod · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How much are the 48% who want this fast WiFi actually willing to pay for it though. I suspect that because the answer is something not much more than they pay for the ground-based services, we will not see these services become rapidly available anytime soon.

    Also, if satellite internet is the least expensive option for anything that is anything short of the most remote among remote places, I worry more about what is making more traditional infrastructure impossible there more than anything else.

    1. Re:But will they pay by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How much are the 48% who want this fast WiFi actually willing to pay for it though.

      The first secret to getting the poll results you want is knowing how to phrase the question.

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  2. Freedom of Speech by Bolkar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Having ability to connect internet, regardless of your geographical location and country will also allow Billions of suppressed people to have free internet access that is not censored by their despot/fascist/communist/dictatorial governments. I believe this is going to be the biggest social positive of these new commercial satellite internet services.

    1. Re:Freedom of Speech by Kjella · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Having ability to connect internet, regardless of your geographical location and country will also allow Billions of suppressed people to have free internet access that is not censored by their despot/fascist/communist/dictatorial governments. I believe this is going to be the biggest social positive of these new commercial satellite internet services.

      If they want to collect payment they'll probably have to follow local law. Also you must get uplink equipment to the people. And if it gets banned due to non-compliance you can just start rounding up everyone with an antenna. Technically everything you just said is possible today with the old satellites in GEO, it's just very uncommon in practice. I think the best scenario is if there is an official censored service so you can deploy the hardware legally, but that it's easy to get a second account from an uncensored country.

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