SpaceX will continue beta testing its satellite-based broadband service Starlink into next year, the company said late Tuesday, indicating commercial service would not likely be offered in 2020 as previously planned.

Hawthorne, California-based SpaceX, Elon Musk’s private space exploration company, has launched nearly 900 Starlink satellites to orbit since 2019 with the goal of offering high-speed Internet to rural locations globally.

Musk has said the Starlink service will be a crucial source of funding for his broader plans, like developing the super heavy-lift Starship rocket to fly paying customers to the moon and eventually trying to colonise Mars.

“At our current pace, we expect to expand our beta in a notable way very early next year, in the late January – February timeframe,” SpaceX engineer Kate Tice said during a livestream on Tuesday, before launching the company’s 16th batch of Starlink satellites.

A SpaceX spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

SpaceX in October invited hundreds of people in rural states like Washington, Wisconsin, and Idaho to partake in its “Better Than Nothing Beta” trial, opening the door to those who signed up to buy and test the company’s $499 (roughly Rs. 36,900) setup kit and pay $99 (roughly Rs. 7,300) per-month for Internet service.

In filings with the US Federal Communications Commission, the company had anticipated offering commercial service by the end of 2020, then “rapidly expand to near global coverage of the populated world in 2021.” 

In November, SpaceX got approval from Canadian authorities to start beta testing Starlink in the country, enabling a “fairly wide public beta” in southern Canada. 

© Thomson Reuters 2020


iPhone 12 Pro Series Is Amazing, but Why Is It So Expensive in India? We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

You May Also Like

NASA Is Inviting You to Name ‘Moonikin’ That Will Fly Around Moon for Artemis 1 Test Flight

NASA has launched a contest for space enthusiasts to name the manikin, a…
Top-cited authors from North America share their tips for boosting research impact – Physics World

Top-cited authors from North America share their tips for boosting research impact – Physics World

Top-cited authors from North America share their tips for boosting research impact…

NASA Shows How Supermassive Black Holes Can Host Largest Tsunami-Like Structures

NASA astrophysicists have used computer simulation to demonstrate that tsunami-like structures may form…

NASA Shares Image of Earth Captured by Its Probe Very Close to Saturn

Astronomers have long observed Saturn and its rings using telescopes that have…