Starlink speeds drop as customer base for Elon Musk's satellite internet grows | Mashable.
Elon Musk's Starlink satellite internet might be a victim of its own success
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Starlink's journey continues down its winding road. Credit: Joan Cros/NurPhoto Via Getty Images |
Elon Muskās satellite internet service has hit a bump in the road after building up momentum for the first half of the year.
Starlink, the ISP arm of SpaceX, saw its speeds worldwide slow down as the service gains in popularity, according to internet speed measurement company Ooklaās latest quarterly report. (Note: Ookla and Mashable are both owned by the same parent company, Ziff Davis.) In every country Ookla tracks (such as Canada, the U.K., the U.S., and New Zealand), Starlinkās median download speeds have dropped, year-over-year, from the second quarter of 2021 until now.

The drops ranged from 9 percent to 54 percent, depending on the country, but the news isnāt entirely bad for Musk and his satellite internet project. For instance, the median download speed for Starlink users in the U.S. at its lowest point in the last year was around 60Mbps, which is more than enough for the average personās daily internet diet. That said, itās still a good deal lower than the 90Mbps figure that was recorded in June. The U.S. speed was the lowest in these latest measurements, as other countries like New Zealand and France recorded median speeds of around 100Mbps, an excellent figure by satellite internet standards.
The easiest explanation is that the service is likely buckling a bit under the pressure of a user base thatās getting bigger over time, as noted in Ookla's report. Starlink surpassed 400,000 global users in May and recently started rolling out service on Royal Caribbean cruise ships. A bunch of users reported surprise price drops back in August, too, which could somewhat account for the uptick in subscribers. The system will be put under even more stress in late 2023 when some T-Mobile customers get the ability to connect to Starlinkās satellites via their mobile devices.
If Starlink can maintain decent speeds under that much growing pressure, itāll be one of Muskās most successful ventures in years.
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Yeahā¦ thatās kind of how it works!
ReplyDeleteWhy am i not surprised š¤£
ReplyDeleteAnother challenge, this is life.
ReplyDeleteThen launch the missile!
ReplyDeleteReally wasn't that fast in the first place
ReplyDeleteTo be fair that's not really the point the point is to get internet anywhere in the world.
DeleteIt's space garbage from the owner of an apartheid emerald mine.
ReplyDeleteyou are my favorite person
DeleteIf only we knew of some activity that hogs a lot of bandwidth at one time
ReplyDeleteEdhar aaiyon Chaman chutiyon
ReplyDeletešš¤£š¤Aag dekh Chaman chutiye š¤š§š¦ š„š„š„š„š„š„š„ššÆ
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Stop studying what man does or doesn't do, leave man alone
ReplyDelete"Speeds are slowing down as more people sign up."
ReplyDeletejust don't sign up
Tesla is a Ponzi scheme....
ReplyDeleteAnd heās still launching more satellites. Speeds will continue
ReplyDeleteHopefully this mad mam would not get whole sky for himself...
ReplyDeletedo you use one? Whatās the speed? Thinking about to switch but not with these numbersā¦.
ReplyDeleteI did for a while and initially speeds where good but these days I use a GSM connect that is compatible in speed but half the cost. Still keep it to reactivate if I need it but could not recommend for day to day use.
DeleteHe just wanted to make a quick buckš¤£š¤£š¤£š¤£
ReplyDeleteThe more people get it the more satellites hrs gonna launch.
ReplyDeleteHe is the first to do it, everything will be fine
ReplyDeleteit would have to drop to below 1/12th of what it is now to match the fastest speeds we were getting on the nbn. That's the fastest we were getting on nbn as well, not what we were averaging. That doesn't even take into account the nbn dropouts, which were up to 10+ per day.
ReplyDeleteas long as it doesn't drop to the nbn speed
Deleteš
considering more satellites are being added it won't. I was talking to a mate in Sydney and they can't even get telstra 5g at the address they wanted internet for ffs. The internet in Australia is a joke.
Deletehave to agree with you on this one !
Deleteš¤¬