The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Elon Musk’s Internet from the sky

- Julia Mugadzawet­a Correspond­ent

ELON MUSK’S SpaceX deployed an additional 60 Starlink satellites into orbit on Monday November 11, 2019. SpaceX confirmed the launch on Twitter. In another tweet, the company shared a video clip of the Falcon 9 rocket and explained that, “Falcon 9 first stage supporting this mission previously launched Iridium-7, SAOCOM-1A, and Nusantara Satu.”

As a Zimbabwean watching this live on the Internet, I was excited and here is why.

First of all, it is always good to watch history in the making.

Recently, there has been a hype in the “Internet from the sky” business.

Space X a privately owned company founded in 2002, which designs, manufactur­es and launches advanced rockets and spacecraft, is well ahead of its industry rivals like OneWeb, which will launch its network up with Amazon’s Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin rockets starting in 2020.

Facebook has its own work with Internet satellite networks to deliver Internet services to Africa and other areas with few broadband options.

It is now apparent that we will be getting Internet from space in a few months/years. And it’s exciting to stick around and see what happens.

With SpaceX leading the way, it looks like fast, low-latency Internet from the stars may not be far in our future.

On the other hand Zimbabwe, according to the Africa Alliance for Affordable Internet’s (A4AI) 2019 Affordabil­ity Report, has the second most expensive mobile data in Africa, and the cost just keeps on rising.

The same report also goes on to give several reasons why the cost to access the Internet is high.

Among them is the fact that Zimbabwe is landlocked.

“Landlocked countries incur additional costs because of the need to lease internatio­nal transit capacity,” says the report.

“To connect, we need to pay transit costs and the premiums are worse off if you do not have a choice or the flexibilit­y offered by being a coastal nation.”

Another reason for the expensive cost of the Internet is that if you want fast Internet, your choices are, well, your cable provider, and that’s about it.

The competitiv­e advantage has always been missing. However, things are about to change.

SpaceX president and chief operating officer Gwynne Shotwell said she’s sure that SpaceX’s Starlink satellite Internet service can start offering broadband services in the US by mid-2020.

This year, on October 22, Elon Musk made the first tweet using this revolution­ised technology sending his tweet through space via Starlink satellite saying “Whoa it worked!” Less dramatical­ly, but a better proof point to the network’s usefulness.

The best thing about this project is that in the long run, it will best benefit African nations.

In a statement released by space X, it said that their goal was to provide affordable Internet services around the world,

“As demand escalates for fast, reliable Internet around the world, especially for those where connectivi­ty is non-existent, too expensive or unreliable, SpaceX is taking steps to responsibl­y scale Starlink’s total network capacity and data density to meet the growth in users’ anticipate­d needs,” read the statement. Satellite Internet not a new concept

In the ’90s another US-based company HughesNet developed the idea and has been delivering the Internet from space since then.

However, the problem with this traditiona­l method has been its awful latency(which is the time between when you start an activity over the Internet and when you get a response back).

Compared to good Earth-bound broadband gives you latency of about 8ms to 20ms while traditiona­l satellite Internet, due to its geosynchro­nous nature, sticks with you with a latency of over 600ms.

That makes it effectivel­y impossible, to do much. In order to understand the exciting part behind SpaceX’s Starlink project, one has to comprehend the apparent limitation­s of our current internet infrastruc­ture.

The Internet, in its simplest form, is a series of connected computers.

Users pay service providers for routing data to and from a web of devices.

A lot of our data is sent in pulses of light through fibre-optic cables.

However, fibre is fairly expensive and tedious to lay, especially between locations on opposite sides of the Earth and also cables have a speed limit too, mostly with internatio­nal distances, which leads to high latency or lag as explained before.

SpaceX promises to cut that long-distance lag while also providing Internet access almost anywhere in the world.

According to wireless and satellite solutions provider Q-Kon, SpaceX’s 60 Starlink satellites will aid in meeting the demand for reliable Internet services in Africa.

Q-Kon says given the expected technical speed and latency performanc­e advantages of the SpaceX StarLink service, the benefits to connect all “off-grid” users as well as providing a high-reliable, easy to deploy fibre-alternativ­e service, SpaceX Starlink builds a compelling case that Africa can’t ignore.

“It can, thus, be expected that a new generation of highly-focused, niche satellite service providers will target this opportunit­y.

◆ Full article on www.herald.co.zw

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