TechCrunch News 2024年11月27日
SpaceX gets FCC green light for Starlink direct-to-phone deal with T-Mobile
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美国联邦通信委员会(FCC)批准SpaceX的Starlink卫星互联网服务提供手机直连功能,与T-Mobile合作,为用户提供卫星网络连接。该计划始于2022年夏季,当时SpaceX和T-Mobile宣布合作,预计2023年推出服务,但直到2024年底才获得监管批准。这项批准让Starlink在竞争对手之前抢占了美国市场先机,包括已在轨运行但没有美国商业合作伙伴的卫星通信公司Lynk。SpaceX将与T-Mobile合作,利用特定无线频段,使兼容设备的用户能够通过卫星网络通信。虽然这项技术面临着巨大的工程挑战,例如手机与数百英里外的卫星同步,但SpaceX已展示了其技术可行性,并在飓风期间为受灾地区提供紧急通信服务。FCC认为该服务将带来诸多益处,包括扩大偏远地区的紧急服务覆盖范围。但该服务也受到一些限制,例如必须作为地面网络运营商T-Mobile的扩展服务运行,并且需要确保不干扰地面服务。此外,SpaceX还需要与NASA协调其低于400公里的卫星部署,以避免与国际空间站发生冲突。

🚀 **FCC批准SpaceX Starlink提供手机直连卫星网络服务:**FCC批准了SpaceX与T-Mobile合作,为用户提供手机直连卫星网络服务的计划,这意味着用户可以通过手机直接连接到Starlink卫星网络,获得互联网接入服务。

📱 **与T-Mobile合作,利用特定无线频段:**SpaceX将与T-Mobile合作,利用特定无线频段,使兼容设备的用户能够通过卫星网络通信。这需要解决手机与数百英里外的卫星同步等复杂工程问题,但SpaceX已展示了其技术可行性。

⚠️ **服务需作为地面网络运营商的扩展服务:**目前,Starlink的手机直连卫星网络服务必须作为地面网络运营商T-Mobile的扩展服务运行,因为太空广播的监管与手机广播的监管不同。

🛰️ **卫星高度需协调与NASA:**SpaceX需要将卫星部署高度控制在400公里以上,并与NASA协调低于400公里的卫星部署,以避免与国际空间站发生冲突。

🚫 **竞争对手的阻挠与FCC的考量:**包括亚马逊Kuiper、DISH等多家公司对SpaceX的申请提出了异议,但FCC最终批准了SpaceX的申请,并要求其采取措施解决潜在问题。

The FCC has granted SpaceX permission to go forward with plans to offer a direct-to-phone version of its Starlink satellite internet service, with T-Mobile as its provider and a few provisos in place.

The proposal dates to summer 2022, when SpaceX and T-Mobile first announced that they were pursuing the ability for the mobile provider’s customers to get Starlink access on their phones. At the time, they said they expected the service to start in 2023, but here we are at the end of 2024 and it’s only just now getting regulatory approval.

Still, it’s a coup for Starlink, which will get its foot in the door in the US market before its rivals, including existing direct-to-phone satellite provider Lynk, which is already in orbit but has no US commercial partners. SpaceX will be able to use certain wireless bands, in close partnership with T-Mobile as the terrestrial operator, to allow customers with compatible devices to communicate.

But as the leaders of the companies pointed out at the announcement, it’s more than just getting approval and turning on the service. Non-trivial engineering problems must be solved to sync a phone up with a cell “tower” that’s actually on a satellite hundreds of miles away and going thousands of miles per hour. But they appear to have figured this part out: the company demonstrated a video call six months ago, and as the FCC notes, direct-to-phone connections were allowed during hurricanes Helene and Milton to allow disconnected areas better access to emergency services.

The FCC states in its filing (first reported by Bloomberg) that the upside is clear:

We find that SpaceX and T-Mobile’s SCS operations will yield many benefits, including an increase in access to emergency services in areas where consumers would otherwise not have the capability to access a terrestrial network to call or text 911, as evidenced, for example, through SpaceX’s provision of emergency SCS in areas affected by Hurricanes Helene and Milton.

There are a few limitations on how this type of service (which the FCC calls “supplemental coverage from space,” or SCS) can work. Right now it officially has to operate as an extension of an existing terrestrial provider, in this case T-Mobile. That’s because the regulations on how you broadcast stuff in space are different from those for how you broadcast stuff to and from a phone (as opposed to a base station antenna). AT&T, for its part, is partnering with AST SpaceMobile.

SpaceX must also be sure that its service does not interfere with other services on the ground, while the ground services do not have to worry about whether they might interfere with the satellite signals.

As for latency and signal power, every kilometer of altitude matters — and Starlink is up at the 530 km level. Fortunately for SpaceX, the FCC has authorized it to operate any of the remainder of its 7,500 approved satellites at altitudes of 340, 345, 350, and 360 kilometers. Those in the know will have noticed that this is rather close to the lower limit of the International Space Station’s orbit (370 kilometers) — and indeed, SpaceX will need to coordinate any deployment below 400 km with NASA.

It is notable, reading through the filing, how many notional competitors to Starlink — Amazon’s Kuiper, DISH, Omnispace, TerreStar, and more — filed objections to its applications, no doubt to delay it. This is not to say that their objections are without substance, but the FCC was clearly not convinced by many of them, or was happy to let SpaceX cure its applications with the appropriate remedies.

Before long, “no signal” will be a thing of the past — and fortunately, many of those involved in this space tend to favor universal access for emergencies and the like, rather than privileged access for streaming Netflix at Burning Man. That said, nothing in the filing indicates when SpaceX and T-Mobile will bring the service online or at what cost.

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Starlink 卫星网络 手机直连 SpaceX FCC
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