Somehow they passed a first review from US DOD... Can't be all smoke and mirrors in space...

On 01/21/2020 12:18 PM, Ryan Ray wrote:
I'm still very wary of this. There seems to be a lot of over-promising under delivering. In typical Elon fashion, no details but the world runs with it and puts out all these data models that make it seem like the second coming of christ. Customer CPE is a pizza box ufo <$200 and they are starting in 2020, but there's no pictures or details. How is that even possible? We're buying 450b at a more expensive cost and there ain't no phased antenna with motors in it.

Then all you read online is the cult following of spaceslax who takes a twitter post as gospel and just keeps perpetuating the same tired information.



On Mon, Jan 20, 2020 at 10:02 AM Bill Prince <part15...@gmail.com <mailto:part15...@gmail.com>> wrote:

    If the SpaceX Starlink system works at 50% of what it's hyped, it will
    become the future of rural internet. Urban is still going to be
    dominated (eventually) by fiber for the foreseeable future. Higher
    speed
    wireless will be very, very local.


    bp
    <part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>

    On 1/19/2020 6:29 PM, Matt Hoppes wrote:
     > I don’t know why, but this evening got me thinking about
    broadband delivery over the past 30 years and the future of broadband.
     >
     > First we had nothing, then along came dial-up and that was
    amazing and many companies sprung up offering the service. Giants
    like AOL and Prodigy.
     >
     > Then DSL and Cable came along as well as wireless and dial-up has
    all but died.
     >
     > Now DSL is basically dead, cable and wireless have gone through
    several iterations and we are seeing a push to fiber.
     >
     > What’s the possibility in the next 10 years cable and wireless
    will be dead technologies with fiber at the fore front?  Possibly.
     >
     > But then..... is fiber really future proof?  We are talking about
    investing hundreds of millions into fiber infrastructure, because
    it’s “the future”. But is it?
     >
     > So far every technology delivery mechanism to date has become
    obsolete in as little as 6-10 years.

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