Elon musk starlink satellite

  1. Elon Musk to provide Florida with Starlink satellites in response to Hurricane Ian
  2. Starlink: 14 things to know about the satellite internet provider
  3. How to Get Starlink Satellite Internet and Set It Up the Right Way
  4. How Elon Musk's 42,000 Starlink Satellites Could Change Earth


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Elon Musk to provide Florida with Starlink satellites in response to Hurricane Ian

WASHINGTON, Oct 1 (Reuters) - Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said SpaceX Chief Executive Elon Musk agreed to provide the company's satellite internet service, Starlink, for help in response to Hurricane Ian in areas of Southwest Florida still without connectivity. "We are working with Elon Musk and Starlink satellite. They are positioning those Starlink satellites to provide good coverage in Southwest Florida and other affected areas," DeSantis told reporters on Saturday. "We are expecting 120 additional large Starlink units to deploy to Southwest Florida." (This story has been refiled to restore Musk's surname in first paragraph) Information you can trust Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world’s largest multimedia news provider, reaching billions of people worldwide every day. Reuters provides business, financial, national and international news to professionals via desktop terminals, the world's media organizations, industry events and directly to consumers. • Advertise With Us , opens new tab • Advertising Guidelines , opens new tab • Coupons , opens new tab • Cookies , opens new tab • Terms of Use , opens new tab • Privacy , opens new tab • Digital Accessibility , opens new tab • Corrections , opens new tab • Site Feedback , opens new tab All quotes delayed a minimum of 15 minutes. © 2023 Reuters.

Starlink: 14 things to know about the satellite internet provider

SpaceX The company owned by Here's a few answers to questions about Starlink. What is Starlink? Starlink is the satellite network developed by private spaceflight company SpaceX to provide low-cost internet around the world. How many customers does Starlink have? SpaceX announced reaching more than 1.5 million subscribers in May 2023. How does Starlink work? Most satellite internet services come from single geostationary satellites that orbit the planet at 35,786 kilometers. As a result, the round trip data time between the user and satellite — known as latency — is high, making it nearly impossible to support streaming, online gaming, video calls or other high data rate activities. Starlink is a constellation of thousands of satellites that orbit the planet much closer to Earth, at about 550 kilometers, and cover the entire globe. Because Starlink satellites are in a low orbit, latency is significantly lower — around 25 milliseconds vs more than 600 milliseconds. Starlink satellites visible: How much does Starlink cost? The equipment cost runs $599 for residential service with a $110 monthly subscription fee, according to Also, you can get a refund on your equipment fee if you cancel within 30 days and return the equipment in good shape and with the original packaging. There is no cancellation fee. What kind of speed do you get with Starlink? Starlink offers unlimited high-speed internet speeds up to 500 megabits per second. There are three internet plans to choose from: ...

How to Get Starlink Satellite Internet and Set It Up the Right Way

If you live in rural America, you know firsthand that millions of people don't have cable or fiber internet options, let alone access to the gigabit offerings available in some parts of the country. As a result, many people are stuck with a connection between 25Mbps and 40Mbps through DSL or a similar service. Even (Opens in a new window) on the fact that 35% of Americans in rural areas don’t have access to high-speed internet. And according to the (Opens in a new window), more than a quarter-million Americans still use a dial-up connection. Even worse, 13 million people don’t have internet access at all. Although 25Mbps is fine for one or two people to check email and social media, it’s not sufficient for online gaming or 4K When I moved recently from a well-connected Utah city to a far more rural area in Idaho, I faced this exact problem. But there was another wrinkle: My job—remotely working for one of the leading tech review sites in the world—places higher demands on my home connectivity than simply checking email or streaming the occasional YouTube video. For instance, the process of testing laptops often involves downloading as much as 70GB of data in a day! Obviously, the 40Mbps speeds (at best) that local DSL providers in southeast Idaho quoted me wasn’t going to cut it. Thankfully, there’s a new alternative on the market: How Can You Get Starlink? Getting Starlink for your home isn’t difficult. It’s simply a matter of visiting (Opens in a new window) and confirmi...

How Elon Musk's 42,000 Starlink Satellites Could Change Earth

Twitter icon A stylized bird with an open mouth, tweeting. Twitter LinkedIn icon The word "in". LinkedIn Fliboard icon A stylized letter F. Flipboard Link icon An image of a chain link. It symobilizes a website link url. Copy Link Facebook Icon The letter F. Email icon An envelope. It indicates the ability to send an email. Following is a transcript of the video. You're looking at 60 satellites hurtling into the sky. And over the next few decades, Elon Musk is hoping to send 42,000 of these satellites to space, 15 times the number of operational satellites in orbit today. It's part of Starlink, the expansive constellation from Musk and SpaceX that hopes to bring the world low-latency high-speed internet, promising no more buffering and nearly instantaneous internet in every corner of the world. But experts worry it may come at a hefty cost for space exploration. Nearly half of the world's population does not have access to the internet, because most internet options require an extensive track of costly underground cables, leaving many rural locations offline. And while satellite internet can reach those areas... Dave Mosher: Traditional satellite internet is provided by a bus-sized spacecraft that is launched 22,236 miles into space in orbit around Earth. Narrator: That distance means the satellite can reach places that cables can't. But since that one satellite is meant to service a lot of people, its data capability is limited, which then limits connection speeds. And th...