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From Apple to Starlink, the first steps of smartphones connected to satellites


Presentation of an iPhone 14, in Cupertino (California, United States), 7 September 2022.

What if phones could connect to the network in white areas, away from mobile antennas or Internet cables? This perspective has caused speculation in the technology and telecommunications sector for several years. In recent weeks, several major market players have simultaneously announced the first agreements that allow smartphones to connect in this way, thanks to satellites. A new possibility for the moment technically limited but which represents an area of ​​further potential activity for new entrants in the telecommunications sector: the constellations of satellites and the leader in the sector, Starlink, launched by Elon Musk.

Read also: Elon Musk wants to connect normal smartphones to Starlink’s satellite internet

On September 7, Apple unveiled the iPhone 14, its first device with some form of satellite connection. This novelty is presented as a way to make emergency calls, for example when hiking in the mountains, going out to sea or in the event of an accident in a very isolated area. This characteristic “It combines tightly integrated components with software to allow antennas to connect directly to a satellite to send a message to emergency services when cellular or Wi-Fi coverage is absent,” Apple explains in a press release.

miniature antenna

However, sending a distress message with the iPhone 14 will be much more complicated than mobile communication: “Satellites are mobile and have limited bandwidth, sending messages can take a few minutes”, warns Apple, specifying that the smartphone will indicate to the user “how to point the phone to a satellite”. This new service will be available in the US and Canada from November and will be free for two years.

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To offer this innovation, Apple had to integrate a miniature antenna into its smartphone: this allows it to capture part of the signal coming from the constellations of the satellites, without having a satellite dish or a specific telephone handset. The iPhone maker has an agreement with Globalstar, one of the operators of “low altitude” constellations, these sets of satellites that fly about 500 kilometers from Earth to cover underserved areas of the globe. Specialist since 2007 in professional satellite messaging, Globalstar explained that it has entered into an agreement for the launch of 17 new satellites for 327 million dollars, of which Apple will finance 95% in exchange for 85% of its bandwidth.

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