On Mon, 2022-02-28 at 16:17 -0800, Michael Thomas wrote:
As a practical matter how does this help? You need to have base stations/dishes, right?
Anyone with a dish and power can connect to the Internet. That's it. If a dish owner chooses to allow too many people to share their uplink, then they will run into capacity problems - the Starlink systems are designed more for households than towns. There are beefy uplinks, but they are Starlink's, not consumer-owned. Without them, Starlink would be an isolated network. Here in rural Oz I know quite a few people who are early adopters of Starlink and they have been very happy with it. Of course, as the network starts supporting millions instead of thousands, that may change. And I'm guessing the number of beefy uplinks will increase, though they would I imagine be placed in stable geopolitical areas. Regards, K. -- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Karl Auer (kauer@biplane.com.au) http://www.biplane.com.au/kauer GPG fingerprint: 61A0 99A9 8823 3A75 871E 5D90 BADB B237 260C 9C58 Old fingerprint: 2561 E9EC D868 E73C 8AF1 49CF EE50 4B1D CCA1 5170