The Rapidly Changing Pace Of Communication

When we say things are moving at a fast pace, probably no field exemplifies that more than communications. We are embarking upon an age where a number of different technologies are coming together to speed up how we communicate. Actually, it mostly will not be us communicating, rather, machines. It is closing in on the Internet of Things.

Over the past few months, I wrote a great deal about 5G technology. By this time, most are aware of it. In the developed countries, it is already being rolled out, although will still take a few years before we see much if a "built out" network.

This is just one of the arenas we are seeing rapid change.

Another project that I follow is Starlink, which is being put up by SpaceX. This system seeks to provide global internet to ensure all 7.5 billion people can get online. We are about to see a lot more people joining the web and accessing the world's knowledge base.

The system is in beta right now with just enough satellites to cover part of the northern part of the United States. The service is going to start at $99 a month with a $499 charge for the set up equipment.

Some are already starting to receive this.

One Tesla owner took his dish out in the wild to test it out. One of the key selling features is bringing high speed internet to rural areas that are presently under served. This will be a trial for those countries where there is great distance among people.

Here is what the results were:

Thanks to Reddit user wander-coder’s intrepid testing, we now know that even in its buggy infancy, Starlink is more than capable of realizing that promise. Connected to a large battery pack and sat on the muddy ground in the forests of Hayden, Idaho, the small Starlink antenna was able to deliver download speeds of more than 120 megabits per second (Mbps) and latency under 40 milliseconds tens of miles from any kind of cell service or wired connectivity. While latency did jump to ~140 ms under load, the reality is that in the same location, current satellite providers would be able to offer latency of ~600 milliseconds at best.

Source

This is a good beginning. It appears the company is on the right track with providing the speeds that it promised.

It is not the only technology that is being developed. Earlier, I mentioned 5G. This is the next phase of communication evolution. There are some, however, who are looking to the next stage, 6G.

This system looks to make Musks Starlink obsolete. Granted 6G will not be seen for another decade but there are satellite projects starting.

Here is a very interesting video discussing what Chinese researchers are doing with 6G and how its greatest benefit might actually be in space.

The race is heating up to provide faster speeds, less latency, and to be able to connect more devices. When we think of the "global brain" that many futurists talked about, this is all part of it.

To achieve that end, we need a communication system that connects everyone on the planet to the global knowledge base.

It is happening quicker than we think.


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Bang, I did it again... I just rehived your post!
Week 30 of my contest just started...you can now check the winners of the previous week!
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Change is obviously coming in rapidly and technology is seeing fast evolution and advancement. Never even heard about the possibility of 6G coming in because 5G hasn't fully arrived in developing countries. This is to show that all aspect of technology we may see unimaginable change far more than we envisage

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Well it will take about a decade to develop 6G so do not expect it anytime soon. They havent even set the standards for it yet.

This is how it works in the communication arena. The process starts even before the previous generation is rolled out.

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Well I guess even a decade is not far from us anymore, 5G isn't even in major African countries yet

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5G is being rolled out in the states and some of the telcom companies claim to have nationwide coverage but it is bs. Their pretty coverage maps mean nothing. It is going to take a couple years to be fully in place.

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Hahaha nationwide coverage my ass! Lol it takes time I see these companies sometimes can be way over their heads

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To support your work, I also upvoted your post!

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Starlink is going to be one epic upgrade for humanity, I think. Especially if we push for Mars and Moon colonies, it's highly likely SpaceX's Starlink will expand there too.

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Definitely, the "everything connected" narrative will merge perfectly with the "Tokenize all" megatrend :-)
What it blew my mind is the incredible jump in the quality of the offering by Starlink vs legacy satellite vendors:
Starlink satellite plan : $99 a month for a 16.1 /1.6 Mbps upload/download versus
traditional sat connection: $150 a month gives 4.5 / 0.9 Mbps upload/download

And Elon just commented that "Latency will improve significantly soon. Bandwidth too." #Bullish

PS.- Sorry for the lack of voting! Im still at 0 LEO, I will be able to vote in less than a week ^_^

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Don't worry about your voting. Commenting is worth as much, if not more, to the platform than upvotes.

As for Musk, yes he is forging ahead. It is amazing to watch significant upgrades before our eyes.

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Eventually the price will come down to an acceptable level. Even now in developing countries, a group of people can share one connection or an office or a school can, for instance.

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(Edited)

Yes, with Starlink, I am sure the US is the ones footing the bill to get more of the system installed. Then, as it hits other areas, the price will come down.

That is what Musk did with Tesla. He had the Roadstar fund the Model S and so on.

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The product seems so good that that I think consumers in other parts of the developed world are going to be interested in it, too.

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It's now that we will have HIVE nodes running on forests... true decentralizations at last!

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