The rivalry for fast internet from space just entered a new stage. Lynk, a competitor to the much larger SpaceX, plans to offer an experimental 5G cellular base station aboard a mission in December, working alongside an undisclosed cellular partner. The experimental payload will launch on Lynk's second commercial satellite, company officials said.
"This test will demonstrate the ability to send a 5G signal from space to standard mobile devices on Earth," Lynk officials wrote(opens in new tab) in late September.
The test is a shot across the bow to SpaceX,
which has already signed
a deal with T-Mobile for cellular service but, unlike Lynk, does not
yet have Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approval. Lynk received
the prized
FCC thumbs-up just a few weeks ago.
Lynk and SpaceX are jostling for market
access to people living in rural areas who lack access to standard internet
service. SpaceX has a fleet of thousands of Starlink satellites through
which it plans to beam 5G broadband internet service, while Lynk has an
emergency access plan through an orbital
cell tower.
Lynk already tested a satellite-to-phone
service link last year, according to Via Satellite(opens in new tab), and is
ramping up service fast in a bid to keep ahead of the competition.
"We are actively testing satellite-direct-to-phone-services in 12 countries on five continents," Dan Dooley, chief commercial officer of Lynk, said in the same company statement.
The company's patent allows the orbiting
cell tower to link up with standard 5G devices in 55 countries, Lynk
says. 5G service is a next-generation speed boost in cellular access that
offers better network speeds to support the Internet of
things, or the growing fleet of connected devices in industries ranging
from shipping to consumer appliances.
Lynk already offers software-designed radios
that can move between slower, but still viable, 2G and 4G speeds for the mobile
network operators it is trying to attract as customers. SpaceX, meanwhile,
recently complained to the FCC about plans to open up the prized 12 gigahertz
band to another 5G competitor, Dish, arguing that using the frequency
would interfere with existing communications upon Starlink satellites.
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