Americans to get high speed broadband services through satellite technology

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Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approves the commands of five operators including Space X, Telesat Canada, Kepler Communications and LeoSat MA
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approves the commands of five operators including Space X, Telesat Canada, Kepler Communications and LeoSat MA

New Delhi : Here's now the United States will get new satellite-based broadband services as the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approves the commands of five operators including Space X, Telesat Canada, Kepler Communications and LeoSat MA. The new broadband services are expected to offer high-speed internet service and connectivity for sensors and other intelligence devices, Reuters reports.

Lately, the FCC which had approved SpaceX’s initial plans in March, approved the company’s request for access to additional frequencies and to operate an additional 7,500 satellites at very low-Earth altitudes.

To remind, the chief executive officer of Tesla, Elon Musk won approval to deploy 4,425 satellites, but won approval on November 15 to operate some of those at lower altitudes.

The FCC mentioned that the order approving the Tesla application, the revisions would provide SpaceX with additional flexibility to provide both diverse geographic coverage and the capacity to support a range of proposed broadband and communications services in the United States and globally.

"Satellite technology can provide high-speed internet for Americans who live in rural or hard-to-serve places where fiber optic cables and cell towers do not reach", FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said.

Elon Musk in his 2015 speech, said that SpaceX planned to launch a satellite-internet business that would help fund a future city on Mars. SpaceX wanted to create a communications system that Musk compared to rebuilding the internet in space. It would be faster than traditional internet connections.

Telesat Canada plans to use a network of 117 satellites to offer communication services in the US.

FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr said at the meeting that the new satellites are “smaller and less expensive to launch than the traditional geostationary satellites that have been going up since the 1960s.”