Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Communications The Almighty Buck

SpaceX President Says Starlink Doesn't Plan To Offer Tiered Pricing (gizmodo.com) 122

Starlink opened up pre-orders for its service in February for a $99 deposit, but it doesn't appear that the company plans to offer any kind of tiered plan to folks who were hoping for some options. Gizmodo reports: SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell, speaking during a Satellite 2021 LEO Digital Forum panel on Tuesday, said that she doesn't "think we're going to do tiered pricing to consumers" for Starlink's satellite internet service. Shotwell added that the company was "going to try to keep it as simple as possible and transparent as possible, so right now there are no plans to tier for consumers."

That could be a make-or-break for potential subscribers who were hoping for a discounted -- or for that matter, even more premium -- version of the service than the one it's currently offering. The $99 refundable security deposit offering that rolled in February does not cover the total cost for the service. The Starlink installation kit costs $499 and includes a power supply, a wifi router, and a mountable dish antenna. Shipping and handling will add at least another $50 to that price. And then there's the service itself, which costs $99 per month.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

SpaceX President Says Starlink Doesn't Plan To Offer Tiered Pricing

Comments Filter:
  • dish antenna (Score:4, Informative)

    by quenda ( 644621 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @03:14AM (#61245842)

    "dish antenna"? Gizmodo should know better. With those satellites zipping around in low orbit, a dish antenna is completely useless.
    Rather, they use a phased array antenna, which can be aimed electronically at a moving target, but no moving parts.

    Is there no per-GB data charge then? So if you want to save money, I guess you install a pringle-can relay up on the ridge, and share a service with your neighbour. Split 2 ways, you'll be paying about the same as urban broadband. Not bad!

    • "Gizmodo should know better."

      I assume this is sarcasm. I gave up reading Gizmodo because of the nonsense they put in their stories.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It is a dish.

      https://www.spaceitbridge.com/... [spaceitbridge.com]

    • Re:dish antenna (Score:5, Interesting)

      by willy_me ( 212994 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @04:06AM (#61245910)
      How soon before those phased array antenna are preinstalled on the roof of every Tesla? Tesla currently relies on cell providers and consumes a not-insignificant amount of bandwidth. It would be interesting to know what sort of deal then get with the cell providers and if it would ever be worth switching to Starlink.
      • WOuldnt it just be easier to stay home and be on the internet there ?
        • WOuldnt it just be easier to stay home and be on the internet there ?

          But then how will people know you drive a Tesla?

          • But the roads are anonymous nobody knows anyone?
            • These aren't the sharpest people.
            • the roads are anonymous

              No they're not. Haven't been for 20-plus years. Some of your TLAs might lie to you that they are, but who would believe a spook?

              • > No they're not. Haven't been for 20-plus years. Some of your TLAs might lie to you that they are, but who would believe a spook?
                Really so your telling me with a straight face, that over half the cars on the road today, know over half the other cars that pass by them ?
                Im talking about ordinary people here, not police with a computer etc to lookup number plates.
        • > WOuldnt it just be easier to stay home and be on the internet there ?

          The point would be to get your screentime in while your car brings you somewhere.

      • by flux ( 5274 )

        I posit: not soon, and most likely not ever.

        1) The cell provider deal is probably still way cheaper than the profits to make from other paying customers
        2) It is probably technically very difficult to put such an antenna to the car roof and still maintain e.g. minimal air resistance
        3) At present SpaceX prefers to keep units stationary; in fact, they don't support moving the units outside the installation zone at all. This allows them to plan coverage.
        4) Even after all is planned and done, the reception won't

        • They'll definitely go after boats once the satellite backhaul is up and running: the fleet of ocean-going freighters is much bigger than passenger-carrying aircraft. And those freighters have crew on board that would love to make video calls with their families and watch Netflix.For ship owners/lessors, the expense of Starlink is minimal for the quality-of-life improvement for their crews. That's not to mention cruise ships that would probably use multiple terminals, or those cruising in small craft who cur

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Wouldn't work in a city. No clear view of the sky and too many other vehicles overloading the system.

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        Unlikely to happen.

        There are tons of places where you are unlikely to get a satellite uplink from street level. Tunnels, dense forests, downtown cities with skyscrapers, downtown cities with multi-level street layouts, etc.

        Cell providers can put their antennas where they are needed. Most subways these days have mobile connectivity, in case you didn't notice.

      • How soon before those phased array antenna are preinstalled on the roof of every Tesla? Tesla currently relies on cell providers and consumes a not-insignificant amount of bandwidth. It would be interesting to know what sort of deal then get with the cell providers and if it would ever be worth switching to Starlink.

        The terminal would need to be much smaller. [twitter.com] So not anytime soon.

        Not connecting Tesla cars to Starlink, as our terminal is much too big.

    • no overage but after X GB you get/may slow down?

    • Umm...the starlink antenna moves and has moving parts, mate.

      • by quenda ( 644621 )

        Umm...the starlink antenna moves and has moving parts, mate.

        Only for install, same as any antenna. In operation, it steers electronically.
          And I'm not your mate, cobber.

    • by GoRK ( 10018 )

      > Rather, they use a phased array antenna, which can be aimed electronically at a moving target, but no moving parts.

      Starlink's phased array is mounted on an Alt/Az gimbal driven by two DC motors. It is both electronically and mechanically steered. If you are going to criticize the thing on a technicality, you better damn well better be technically correct in your criticism.

      It's also worth noting that you can steer a proper "dish" antenna rapidly enough for LEO tracking in a similar way by using a spheri

    • A phased array antenna has no technical reason to be round. It's likely that SpaceX deliberately chose to make the Starlink antenna resemble the familiar DBS television antennas (DirecTV, DISH Network, etc) so people could put them up without being challenged by building owners and neighborhood organizations. Here in the US, federal law protects the right of homeowners and tenants to install DBS dishes in most cases, preempting any local laws or HOA agreements that might attempt to ban or restrict them; the
  • The goal is to serve unserved and underserved areas. They don't need to offer special competitive packages when they're not competing with anyone, and KISS is a good principle. If you really want cheaper service, get together with others and share the link. If you want faster service, get a second one and bridge them.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The real goal is to provide SpaceX with business. Volume pushes launch costs down.

      They aren't doing it out of altruism, to help unserved or under-served areas. The price is set based on what the market can stand and what the maximum capacity of the system is.

      • > They aren't doing it out of altruism, to help unserved or under-served areas.

        The folks I know there know exactly what the humanitarian benefits of their work are. Not 'altruistic' in the Aristotelian sense, but in the colloquial sense. They "want to help".

        > The price is set based on what the market can stand and what the maximum capacity of the system is.

        Correct. The real company mission is the preservation of consciousness - other projects are in service to the mission, but they can sure do some

      • The real goal is to provide SpaceX with business. Volume pushes launch costs down.

        I think it's a little more complicated than that. Almost every launch, if not every one, has been on heavily used rockets. Rockets which have already paid for themselves. That's a step beyond a volume discount. However, a lot of customers would not be willing to put their cargo on a rocket that's been to orbit and back several times, or if they are willing, they aren't willing to pay a lot to do it. (Universities, start-ups, tech demos, etc.)

        They have old rockets and want to squeeze more profits out of them

        • They also get to prove those "Old" rockets are still flight worthy and this allows them to sell services on such rockets easier to other parties.

          Starlink launches are showing the world just what a fast paced reusable launch cadence can look like and what it could cost. With slow downs in the fall hurricane season I still expect 30+ launches of resuable rockets this year. The majority will be starlink. That by itself sets a tone that was laughed at 4 years ago.

      • by fermion ( 181285 )
        They need customers to support the costs, but a some point adding a customer might cost more than the the revenue generated. Bandwidth is limited.

        Also, with tiered pricing, there are service guarantees, especially at the top tier. Right now the service is just this is what you get, be grateful. It is a solution to those who chose where service is e pensive to deliver

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Hard to see how they could have much of a service guarantee with satellite. All kinds of stuff beyond their control can interfere with it. With a hard line they can at least send someone to go fix it and give you a guaranteed response time.

    • > get together with others and share the link

      Violates ToS.

      • by pacinpm ( 631330 )

        Who cares? It should be like "first sale" with physical objects. I buy bandwidth and it's my business what I do with it. I already payed for it.

        • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @06:44AM (#61246108) Homepage Journal

          > Who cares? It should be like "first sale" with physical objects. I buy bandwidth and it's my business what I do with it. I already payed for it.

          It remains to be seen if SpaceX implements data caps or not.

          If they don't then you're buying a connection, which seems to be what
          Gwen is saying here.

          Upstream bandwidth isn't free, so analogize with electricity and if you want to pay your neighbor's electric bill I don't have a problem with that. If the atomic-future scenario had played out where you pay $100 a month for unmetered power, then the economics would be different.

          Overall the ISP market would work better with reasonable per-byte pricing, but for so many bad reasons that's very unlikely.

          • by Anonymous Coward
            The "atomic-future" scenario is real for upstream bandwidth. A megabit/s of dedicated global transit, the most expensive class of traffic there is, costs less than ten cents per month at scale. That bandwidth is unmetered, i.e. nobody cares if you use it or lose it. Ten megabit/s, for less than a dollar a month, is good for up to 3.2 TB per month. Nobody at SpaceX will lose any sleep over upstream bandwidth. It's a negligible cost.
          • Overall the ISP market would work better with reasonable per-byte pricing, but for so many bad reasons that's very unlikely.

            Who cares about the bad reasons? There's one very good reason: DDoS and the fundamental nature of the Internet Protocol. Anybody who has your IP address can send you traffic, if you have a publicly routable IP, and if you don't have a publicly routable IP, you are a second class citizen on the Internet, so in order to be a proper Internet peer, you will always have to deal with unsolicited traffic.

            Given the reality of DDoS, which can use up every bit per second of your downstream throughput indefinitely,

    • Right now theyâ(TM)ll actually be filling a market gap, because incubent ISPs didnâ(TM)t want to compete. In the future when SpaceX had woken up the incumbents, then maybe we will start seeing different offerings.

      • The nice thing about satellites is that you can shift them around as needed. They'll be able to do whatever is going to be more profitable - adjust plans, or adjust service areas.

        • You can't shift them around a whole lot, due to orbital mechanics, and you wouldn't want to either. The orbits are arranged so as to ensure that there's always a satellite passing overhead (eventually, as for now there are still occasional dropouts), and moving some of them will create a moving hole in this pattern. It also uses up station-keeping fuel, leading to an earlier deorbit.
        • The nice thing about satellites is that you can shift them around as needed. They'll be able to do whatever is going to be more profitable - adjust plans, or adjust service areas.

          Adjusting the orbit of a satellite is costly in terms of energy and would have to be with the approval of the FAA. On the other hand, since the lifetime of a single Starlink satellite is 3-4 years, before being de-orbited, they will be replaced far more often than your typical geo-stationary satellite. Being replaced more frequently means that they will benefit from new technology that will allow them to be more capable in terms of communication bandwidth.

  • private companies and individuals vs Public government users

    great PR though

  • by kyoko21 ( 198413 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @03:30AM (#61245862)

    I think for what you pay for in terms of equipment cost it is a fair price. If you buy a decent cable modem it is on average about $80 to $120. If you get one of those all-in-one cable modem with a router then the prices starts to go up. Of course you are always more than welcome to rent one from your cable company but Starlink isn't into all that. Yeah, shipping is going to cost some money and given that is a big ass box with a dish and all, $50 for shipping isn't terrible.

    For the time being, while customers can't roam out of their zone/area, for $99 a month for the speeds that you get it is crazy cheap. There are places in Washington DC where Verizon consider "high speed FIOS" to be 10mbps down and 3mpbs up and you pay a $70/month and their equipment is $300 to buy outright. If you tell these people that you can get service that is 10x to 20x faster, for $300 more for equipment, and $30 more, heck, you and your neighbors can probably put up a single dish and just run yourself a small wifi mesh network and split the cost that way and you are good to go.

    Keep it stupid simple.

    • You are dead on. He could charge $300 a month and still saturate the available bandwidth he has for any given block.
    • Depends on the isp, some you get free modem and no monthly fee on it. combo ones generally have fee's. Not best to assume you have to buy one.
      • I haven't had to pay for a modem since I had 56.6kbs dialup modem. Maybe US Internet companies are a bit different? Most companies here give you a modem at not extra cost and you can do whatever you want with it. They are usually crap modems and I end up installing my own network infrastructure.
        • by Entrope ( 68843 )

          I live in a DC suburb and have Verizon FiOS, so my experience is broadly like the one up-thread. Verizon doesn't charge me for a basic MoCA/Ethernet/WiFi modem/router, but they would happily rent a nicer one to me. They did charge me a monthly fee ($3/mo, I think) when I had a really ancient model that was no longer supported by the manufacturer; they let me trade that in for a new modem at no cost, and then stopped charging me that fee.

          Some US ISPs might require you to rent a modem as part of an Internet

    • by jlar ( 584848 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @04:37AM (#61245960)

      For the time being, while customers can't roam out of their zone/area, for $99 a month for the speeds that you get it is crazy cheap. There are places in Washington DC where Verizon consider "high speed FIOS" to be 10mbps down and 3mpbs up and you pay a $70/month and their equipment is $300 to buy outright.

      And if you compare with other satellite internet providers it is at least an order of magnitude cheaper and you get more than an order of magnitude higher bandwidth. This is also the reason why Starlink is going to revolutionize internet access at sea.

      • Definitely! Was working on cruise ships with those satellite systems and you're absolutely right. I would even say that equipment on those ships is several orders of magnitude more expensive as it ran into millions of dollars. That one Starlink dish is orders of magnitude smaller than those huge C-band and Ku-band dishes and bandwidth is higher. Install two or three of those on each ship and you have ten times better and at least hundred times cheaper internet. I'm sure that most of those satellite internet

        • by jlar ( 584848 )

          Definitely! Was working on cruise ships with those satellite systems and you're absolutely right. I would even say that equipment on those ships is several orders of magnitude more expensive as it ran into millions of dollars. That one Starlink dish is orders of magnitude smaller than those huge C-band and Ku-band dishes and bandwidth is higher. Install two or three of those on each ship and you have ten times better and at least hundred times cheaper internet. I'm sure that most of those satellite internet providers are scared shitless. Also you can have those dishes on much smaller vessels and it is still much cheaper and simpler compared what they have now. It will revolutionize the maritime satellite internet access.

          One remaining issue is that the satellites need lasers for inter-satellite communication to provide internet at sea since there will not be a ground station nearby in most cases. But SpaceX has just started launching those as well: https://www.satellitetoday.com... [satellitetoday.com]

          I know from friends in the business that many of the companies producing high tech stuff for vessels are preparing for a future where ships enjoy reasonably cheap (Starlink may charge more at sea due to the lack om competition), reliable and plen

    • > If you buy a decent cable modem it is on average about $80 to $120. If you get one of those all-in-one cable modem with a router then the prices starts to go up.

      The difference is a cable modem costs $20 to make and they sell it for $100.

      Dishy costs ~$2400 to make and they sell it for $500. Phased array antennas were $40,000 a few years ago.

      The $99 a month will take a couple years to hit breakeven. Until they get manufacturing going in Austin they aren't going to be making any money on this for a long

      • by RevDisk ( 740008 )
        I have no doubt the ROI is several years (which is insanely fast for infrastructure projects). However, I highly suspect the existing userbase is a beta test. Hence the "Better than Nothing Beta". Assuming the phased antenna arrays are under $10k per, and service is under grand or two, I'd happily order 40 or more of them once the service is stable to replace LTE backups for my locations. For service that will hopefully only be used under a couple of hours a few times a year, tops.

        Businesses will pay sig
    • by fred911 ( 83970 )

      ''I think for what you pay for in terms of equipment cost it is a fair price.''

      Absolutely, currently they can't subvent the cost of the equipment with the service fee. They may never have to because over populating a locale with users currently is beyond the system ability.

      ''Verizon consider "high speed FIOS" to be 10mbps down and 3mpbs up and you pay a $70/month'''

      Not quite correct. All Fios is symmetrical. And actually I think their slowest plan is 200/200. As soon as Xfinity up their ''promo'' rate, I d

    • by Syberz ( 1170343 )

      >"for $99 a month for the speeds that you get it is crazy cheap."

      Maybe in the USA it is, but not here in Europe. I get 200mbps down, 10mbps up for 35€ (~40$). At that price you get the equipment for free, but I spent 120$ for a better modem that gave me a more consistent performance.

  • I seriously doubt SpaceX will be able to accommodate 60 million subscribers in the U.S. alone on its network. Not at 200 Mb / s they won't.

    That would translate into $6 billion of revenue per month and more than $72 billion per year! And that's just the U.S.!!

    If they can really pull this off Starlink will be the biggest cash-cow in history, more profitable even than Google or Amazon.
    • You're forgetting how much it costs to implement, manage and maintain.
      • It costs billions to put up, but once that's done the maintenance costs are relatively minor. Therefore, after the initial investment it's almost pure profit.

        Once SpaceX starts raking in the profits, we'll see a lot more constellations being sent up. Everyone will want a piece of the action.

        It seems Elon is going to be able to fund his Mars colonization dream after all.
        • by Hodr ( 219920 )

          Minor? Once they have completely built-up they will still have to put up hundreds of satellites a year to maintain their constellation.

        • by RevDisk ( 740008 )
          No, it's not relatively minor. Ground stations will need to be continuously serviced. Fiber servicing. Peering arrangements. New and replacement satellites. Engineers to keep the network of satellites running. Customer service. Development of software for all of the above. You have all the complexity of a ground telco, and then you have the ADDITIONAL complexity of putting it into space. None of that is cheap.

          And no, I don't see a "lot" more constellations being sent up. I suspect we'll see three additio
    • 60 million people aren't going to pay $99/month for internet access even if it's unlimited. If that would have worked, Speakeasy wouldn't have gone out of business.

      • by Hodr ( 219920 )

        Why would you say that? Surely more than 60 million people and companies pay > $100 a month right now for various cable companies, telecoms, WISPs, or cell-phone based internet plans. I pay $120 for 100mbit internet, and I have a work provided cell spot that costs well over $100 a month. So just one person but I count for two of those 60 million.

        Convincing that many people to switch might be difficult, but the market is probably there.

    • by fred911 ( 83970 )

      ''If they can really pull this off Starlink will be the biggest cash-cow in history,''

      When I read the performance data, I was very skeptical, but there are reports from users verifying the data. It might even have been understated. The if part of the statement, that cats out of the bag. As far as the design and ability to increase the network, do want to bet against that guy [Elon] when even Alphabet has pull the plug on their project?

      • I don't see how anyone can get excited just yet its not like they have millions of customers just yet. The network is not really being used/pushed at this point don't ya think? a short search says they have 10,000 paying customers but want 5 million..hardly testing the network IMO.
        • You are right about capacity but people are getting latency of 40 ms. That absolutely destroys even the best case for all other satellite services.

          Even Iridium, despite being much lower than geostationary orbit: "Latency for data connections averages 1800 ms round-trip, with a mode of 1300 to 1400 ms and a minimum around 980 ms"

          • They are now sure "40ms" as i said the network is void lacking a better word. I know whats its like to live in the sticks and have very poor service i hope it all works out for them but in this case im just not sold just yet. 40 ms now with an empty network whats it going to be like when its pushed..I don't see anyone using it in places where cable is available, i sure wouldn't.
            • But that's sorta the point - it's not a given that starlink will be overwhelmed and performance will plummet, because anywhere there's that much demand would justify running a fiber instead. Whereas with previous satellite services, they were dog slow even if you're the only vessel within 400 miles.
  • SUPER DUMB IDEA:

    What if Starlink deployed so many nodes and satellites that it would start to make sense to put data centers in space? If all your customers were just these ground stations and Netflix had installed one of its OpenConnect appliance into orbit that sat (no pun intended) as part of its fleet? If you re-imagined the "last mile" network with Starlink and somehow they were able to have such a foothold that it's cheaper to deploy these units than to go through the dumb state/local bureaucracy of l

    • by Admiral Krunch ( 6177530 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @06:42AM (#61246106)

      But if Microsoft can run a data center in the ocean, why can't Starlink run one in space?

      Mostly because water is a good conductor of heat and space isn't.

      • Space, OTOH, is very cold and it should therefore be easy to cool such a data-center. Power is also cheap and easy to get since the Sun always shines in space.

        And for the brief periods in darkness you can use battery power. They'll need durable Iron-Cobalt batteries since maintenance will be an issue.
        • by flux ( 5274 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @08:17AM (#61246330) Homepage

          You may find that it's very difficult to exchange thermal energy with the so-called "cold" vacuum. You can only radiate it away, which is very inefficient compared to thermal conductivity.

        • Space may be cold, but not in a particularly usable way.

          https://science.nasa.gov/scien... [nasa.gov]

          "The Station's outstretched radiators are made of honeycomb aluminum panels. There are 14 panels, each measuring 6 by 10 feet (1.8 by 3 meters), for a total of 1680 square feet (156 square meters) of ammonia-tubing-filled heat exchange area. Compare that majestic radiator with the 3-square-foot grid of coils found in typical home air conditioners and you can begin to appreciate the scope and challenge of doing "routine"

          • https://science.nasa.gov/scien... [nasa.gov] Listen to this story Link to story audio (requires RealPlayer)

            After 20 years we lost the soundtrack. The audio is packaged as .ram file which linked internally to another .rm file in nasa web server. And of course, that original genuine .rm file has disappeared, probably due to website maintainers couldn't notice that .rm file is required. A historic example of why "streaming" technology is bad most of the time (archival failure)

        • by RevDisk ( 740008 )
          Here's a better way to visualize it. Take a vacuum thermos from around your house. Put a Raspberry Pi in it. Program it to calculate pi or whatever to peg out the CPU. Seal it up, leave it for an hour. Crack it open and check the temperature, if it's not already liquid state.

          The vacuum in your thermos is the same 'temperature' as space vacuum (engineers, yeah I know not really, but you get the idea).

          The same vacuum that keeps your coffee warm for hours will do the same thing for a server in orbit. And
    • Your idea is not really crazy, the problem would be the implementation. Datacenters need a lot of energy that would need to be supplied by a unreasonable large number of solar panels, heat dissipation would be a problem and maintenance would be practically impossible with the existing means. Maybe in the future it will be feasible
    • by RevDisk ( 740008 )
      Because it'd be uneconomical except for minor niche circumstances. I could see Starlink putting in CDN satellites in orbit to reduce traffic. Latency wouldn't be the priority. One satellite with space grade SSD's that could stream that to other satellites would save quite a bit of your downlink and increase network performance. A couple tens of millions of dollars for the cost might be justified if it shaves more than that off peering costs or groundstation hardware.

      But general servers, explain the use-c
  • Starlink are talking about putting internet in boats, trucks and remote locations and there is no way they're going to let that captive audience get internet for the same price as someone in a populated area with multiple technologies and providers to choose from.

    To put it in context, if you want internet on a boat which is out at sea then you're looking at $3000 for a dish/terminal and the cheapest plans might cost $80 a month for 20Mb of data. Barely enough for email. If you were a gazillionaire on your

    • > there is no way they're going to let that captive audience get internet for the same price as someone in a populated area with multiple technologies and providers to choose from.

      SpaceX's entire target market is people who have no consumer-market FCC-broadband options.

      "Better than Nothing Beta"

    • by pavon ( 30274 )

      I think you have it completely backwards. SpaceX can't provide service to a significant number of people in highly populated areas, so it has to have some way of picking the small fraction of those potential customers it will serve. Could be lottery, or first come first serve, or merit based (backup service for critical needs), or they could let the market decide and auction off service in areas of high demand. I think that is way more likely than trying to gouge their primary market of service in sparsely

  • by sugar and acid ( 88555 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @06:32AM (#61246092)

    Starlink have put out their first product, lets see how the business model evolves. The real advantage is the constellation at low earth orbit vs geostationary satellites that serve a continent or country only. The method is more costly overall simply due to how many satellites need to be put up, but increases possible throughput as there is effectively more base stations in the sky, and low latency simply because the satellites are closer to the ground. The real trick and risky part with this business model is getting full coverage to start with and selling it all to cover ongoing costs and expansion, adding in capacity is then less expensive than other models as you can keep adding in single cheap to launch low orbit satellites to match demand, which de-risks further investment in launches and system capacity.

    I suspect this is actually priced about right for middle class, digital self-employed or remote workers looking to move to more rural and remote properties. Seen an increase in demand now I suspect because of covid-19. Low latency reasonably reliable internet anywhere combined with Tesla powerwalls and solar cells, looks like Elon Musk is aiming to enable off-grid log cabin in the woods digital workers... Interesting that if this is the only viable internet available with the bandwidth and latency required, it's a captive market in a few years time once enough people have changed their lives for it.

    As another example, cost of putting this on a farm as a central service for the business is easily swallowed by all the other running costs of a farm that easily dwarf this cost. Add in mining operations who can take massive amounts of data if available, and may even run a cell network at the site with the data provided, but their demands would be much higher than available from a single subscription. Wealthy yacht and RV owners will also be all over this.

    • To the point of allowing pricing to evolve, for how long are the terms fixed when you plonk down your $500?

      Cell companies got into trouble offering "xyz For Life."

      • To the point of allowing pricing to evolve, for how long are the terms fixed when you plonk down your $500?

        Zero months. There's no contract, so no price guarantee. You pay month to month, cancel any time, and SpaceX can change the price at any time, subject to what little advanced notice regulations remain after the usual suspects asked for and got the regulations gutted.

        It remains to be seen how ethical SpaceX is concerning their dealings with retail customers. So far at least, they've been very straightforward, even admitting in email this week that they had to fix a bug that would hang a process in their r

  • I bet if it was $10 there would be people demanding it to be $5. It is a unique solution for a very specific problem. Launching and operating satellites cost money, it is not like a cable lying in the ground you know.
    • There's always people asking for it to be cheaper. Good thing that SpaceX is ignoring their calls.

      $99 a month for high-speed, low-latency internet almost ANYWHERE on the planet is an amazing deal, as far as I'm concerned.
  • my remote clients would love to get the kind of speeds starlink provides - which costs about 1/10th the price they are paying now for their site satellite internet.

  • They aren't trying to compete with other broadband suppliers (and people were hoping they would have a better option to than what they already had). They are trying to give internet access to those who don't have it and Starlink will be the only option.

    Satellite internet will never be competitive with ground based internet, because of the infrastructure costs and because of the cost of bandwidth. The satellites are expensive but a greater expense is acquiring radio spectrum, and it's bandwidth limited. The

  • by erp_consultant ( 2614861 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2021 @09:37AM (#61246600)

    As the article notes, Spacex was never intended to be a cheap way to get internet access. It is intended as a way for under served rural customers to get fast reliable internet access. $500 just for the dish itself is a bit expensive to be honest but moving to true high speed internet is literally a game changer. It is by far the best options currently and is priced accordingly.

    Maybe the price will come down eventually but they don't want to make that announcement yet, as potential customers will simply wait and they want to get as many signed up as possible. My hope is that if the price doesn't come down the government will step in and offer credits to rural customers that can't afford the high prices. Or competitors like Amazon will offer some options that might help drive down the price for everyone.

    On a good day I get 40MB, which is pretty good for what I need. The problem is the outages, which occur weekly on average and sometimes more frequently. I know that Spacex is still in Beta but once it stabilizes it should be pretty solid. The higher speeds are just a bonus. The cost will be a bit higher for me but not by much so I'm willing to take the gamble. Worst case I can always go back to my current provider.

  • Yes, the monthly cost is higher than typical (for internet service in the US) and the up-front costs are almost unheard of for residential service ($499 vs $49 or similar that used to be not uncommon). That said, many folks in rural areas will jump on this option. I know people outside of our little city that are already on the waiting list and they know the costs involved.
  • For once, the price is being driven by cost. Gwen Shotwell has publicly stated that it was costing SpaceX $3000 to build each dish for a while. They supposedly have the manufacturing cost down to $1300 now. For the moment at least, they're following the classic console model of selling the hardware at a loss and making it up on the back end with the monthly fee. They're pursuing automated assembly as fast as they can, but as Tesla has found out the hard way (among many others), automation isn't easy. I

  • They're waiting until they have satellites at notably different altitudes ...

  • While it wouldn't be faster service to one user, I wonder if service for multiple users could be funneled through the same terrestrial antenna. I'm thinking of situations like boats in remote locations that have multiple crew members but limited space for antennas, or situations like the single spot in a large forest where a rock outcropping or a community tower permits a link to the sky. If the bandwidth is limited by the antenna hardware, this would be impossible, but if the limit is by fiat, then there c

Our OS who art in CPU, UNIX be thy name. Thy programs run, thy syscalls done, In kernel as it is in user!

Working...