Beschermen tegen 5G? Ik zou het niet weten. Het 5G-satelietnetwerk wordt versneld uitgerold. Niet alleen door SpaceX, maar ook door OneWeb, Amazon etc. UbiquitiLink wil van alle telefoons sateliettelefoons maken (de nieuwste modems zijn ook 5G-zenders!) en zo hebben we dadelijk een wereldwijd 5G-netwerk op aarde en in de ruimte. Geen ontsnapping mogelijk?
Elon Musk:
'When the satellites are first launched, they are tumbling a little bit, and haven’t stabilized. Now, they are on orbit, I would be impressed if someone could tell me where all of them are. It can’t be that big of a deal.” (...)
The firm’s hardware-based occupied bandwidth measurement methodology and results were reviewed by the U.S. Naval Information Warfare Center (NIWC) prior to entering a Special Purpose Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA), which was executed in early February.
"Through this contract, Orbit Fab identified multiple DOD stakeholders that could benefit from a refueling service in space,” says Jeremy Schiel, Orbit Fab CMO. “It will enable an entirely new capability for the military.”
“It will serve the hardest to serve customers. 5G is great for high density situations, but it is not great for the countryside. So, any kind of sparse environment, 5G is not well suited. Starlink will serve the 3% to 4% hardest to reach customers for telcos. … So, I think it will be actually helpful and take a significant load off the traditional telcos. We won’t have a lot of customers in [Los Angeles], for example,” he said. “We are targeting latency of below 20 milliseconds. Bandwidth is a very complex question. Somebody will be able to do all the things they want to do without noticing anything. The ground equipment looks like a UFO on a stick. It will have actuators on it, so it can improve the pointing accuracy. You don’t need a specialist to install it. Point at sky and then plug in.”
'The package is the product of a startup called UbiquitiLink, the latest company to propose putting a mega-constellation of satellites into low orbit above Earth. But unlike many of these other proposed satellite projects — such as those of SpaceX, OneWeb, or Amazon — UbiquitiLink is not hoping to beam specialized internet connections from space. Instead, the company is solely focused on cellphone service, with the goal of placing small satellites into orbit that any mobile phone can connect to seamlessly, without any changes being made to the phones themselves. “There are 5.2 billion phone users on the planet,” Charles Miller, co-founder and CEO of UbiquitiLink, tells The Verge. “We’re going to turn all their phones into satellite phones.”'