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Mobile Syrup

Amazon aims to take on Elon Musk’s Starlink with upcoming satellite internet service

Amazon has finally revealed the hardware that will be used by the first customers of its Project Kuiper internet-from-space service.

The service, similar to Elon Musk’s Starlink, aims to provide broadband to communities around the world that are unserved or underserved by current internet technologies.

The service will use a constellation of small satellites in low Eart orbit to deliver the broadband signal. Further, customers will require a terminal to receive signals from the satellites. Amazon has touted the design of its terminals, and says that it has been working to create something that’s “smaller, more affordable, and more capable” than the terminals offered by SpaceX’s Starlink service.

“Project Kuiper’s standard customer terminal measures less than 11 inches square and 1 inch thick. It weighs less than five pounds without its mounting bracket. Despite this modest footprint, the device will be one of the most powerful commercially available customer terminals of its size, delivering speeds up to 400 megabits per second (Mbps),” writes Amazon in its blog post detailing the service and the device.

According to estimates, Amazon aims to produce the terminals for less than $400 each, but we’re still uncertain how much the company will sell them for.

The company also has a second “ultra-compact” design terminal that has a 7-inch-square footprint and will be Project Kuiper’s smallest and most affordable customer terminal. As a drawback, it will only be able to provide speeds up to 100 Mbps.

Finally, Amazon will offer a high-bandwidth design for what it describes as “demanding needs,” which include enterprise, government, and telecommunications applications. This terminal would measure 19 inches by 30 inches and will deliver speeds of up to 1 gigabit per second (Gbps).

 

The Project Kuiper terminals will be powered by an Amazon-designed baseband chip developed under the name “Prometheus.” According to the company, the chip features the processing power a 5G modem chip found in modern smartphones, and acts as a cellular base station to handle traffic from thousands of customers at once. “In addition to being in Project Kuiper’s customer terminals, Prometheus is also used in Project Kuiper’s satellites and ground gateway antennas, allowing the system to process up to 1 terabit per second (Tbps) of traffic on board each satellite,” writes Amazon.

Amazon aims to deploy its first two prototype satellites on the maiden flight of United Launch Alliance’s Vulcan Centaur rocket. If the satellites perform as expected, Amazon plans for mass deployments to begin in early 2024, with the Project Kuiper service coming online for the first customers later that year.

Image credit: Amazon

Source: Amazon

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Amazon’s satellite internet service could be coming to Canada

Amazon wants Project Kuiper to service Canadians.

Kuiper Systems, also known as Project Kuiper, is a set of satellites Amazon plans to launch to provide broadband internet connectivity to people all over the world.

Project Kuiper is on the Canadian Radion-television and Telecommunications Commission’s (CRTC) current list of proceedings open for comment.

The CRTC governs telecom companies and their access to the Canadian market and submitting a proceeding for comment is an early step to getting regulatory approval.

Announced in 2019, Project Kuiper has yet to officially launch the satellites. But that hasn’t stopped the company from gaining regulatory approval from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in the U.S. or announcing a partnership with Verizon.

The project is directly competing against SpaceX’s Starlink service, which is already available to Canadians. Starlink started launching satellites in 2019, the same year Amazon announced Project Kuiper.

Amazon has already signed deals for 83 launches under the project over the next five years.

Canadians have until July 18th to provide a comment.

Image credit: Amazon

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Cottage Life

Cottagers won’t miss out on mobile speeds if connected to 5G or 4G

This article first appeared on MobileSyrup and it has been shared with permission. To see the original article, click here.

While visiting cottage country is a summer staple for many Canadians, it’s seldom that people leave all of their electronic devices behind.

Opensignal examined what cottage dwellers can expect when accessing services through their mobile network this summer.

Download speeds were reported at an impressive 113.7Mbps — but only when connected to 5G. Those connected with 4G could only get download speeds of 52.9Mbps.

It goes without surprise that both of these download speeds were slower when compared to the national average. Nationally, 5G download speeds were over nine percent faster, and 4G speeds were almost 12 percent faster.

A similar trend was recorded for upload speeds, but the gap between speeds nationally compared to cottage country was smaller. 5G users in cottage country saw uploads at 17.6Mbps, and 4G users saw 10Mbps. Comparatively, national users saw an upload speed of 19.8Mbps with 5G and 11.8Mbps with 4G.

The report notes the differences in mobile networks between cottage country users and national users begin and end with mobile upload and download speeds.

Examining streaming video over mobile, there was no “statistically significant difference” in the experience when connected to 5G. A small difference when comparing the 4G experience was reported.

A graphic showing that video, game and voice app experience in cottage country is on par with the national experience
Photo by Opensignal Limited/MobileSyrup

There was also no difference while gaming or using over-the-top (OTT) voice app services, including WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger.

“The quality of users’ experience in cottage country regions while streaming videos, playing multiplayer mobile games and using voice app services, was on par with the national experience, with very little or no significant difference in scores on both 4G and 5G,” the study says.

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Starlink available for immediate shipping to 32 countries

Starlink is now available in 32 countries.

The satellite internet service by SpaceX is available to be “shipped immediately,” a tweet from SpaceX states.

It’s available in parts of Canada, the U.S., and Mexico. According to an interactive map posted on the company’s website, the same goes for parts of Europe, South America, Australia, and New Zealand.

Starlink lists the service as ‘coming soon for the entire content of Africa,’ with the starting year of 2023. The same goes for several countries across Asia, including Kazakhstan, Cambodia, and Indonesia.

Starlink provides a more specific date for the remaining parts of Canada, saying the service will be available in the first quarter of 2023. The service is already available in parts of the Prairies, Ontario, and Quebec. The Government of Quebec is also using the service to provide internet access to 10,000 homes in the province.

Many countries in Asia, including Russia, China, and Afghanistan, are coloured black instead of a shade of blue on the map, indicating SpaceX has no public plans to bring the service to these countries at present.

You can view the map here.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Starlink’s ‘Snow Melt Mode’ seems to be really good at attracting cats

Starlink’s satellites have an unintended purpose.

The satellite internet company that aims to offer internet services to rural and remote communities around the world with its dishes has a knack for attracting cats with its warmth.

Starlink user Aaron Taylor snapped a photo of a Starlink dish covered in cats enjoying its warmth with the device set to ‘Snow Melt Mode.’

The feature “produces additional heat to mitigate signal attenuation caused by snow build-up on the face of the user terminal,” and apparently, also attracts felines looking to keep warm in cold winter weather.

Starlink currently has 140,000 subscribers worldwide and is available in 20 countries, including Canada.

In late 2021, the SpaceX-owned company confirmed that it was delaying the delivery timeline of Starlink dishes to 2022 for some customers due to the ongoing worldwide silicon shortage.

Source: @Tippen22 Via: Tesmanian