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Home / Technology / Satellite Internet Wars: The Next Frontier

Satellite Internet Wars: The Next Frontier

20 Dec

•

Summary

  • Starlink doubled users to 8 million, reaching smartphones in dead zones.
  • Amazon's Leo and AST SpaceMobile aim to launch services in 2026.
  • Launch supply bottlenecks may delay competitors' services until late 2027.
Satellite Internet Wars: The Next Frontier

Five years since its inception, Starlink has evolved into a global satellite internet leader, surpassing 8 million users by 2025 and offering smartphone connectivity in cellular dead zones. Traditional satellite providers have seen subscriber losses, with even HughesNet partnering with SpaceX.

Competition is expected to intensify in 2026 with the anticipated launch of Amazon's Leo and AST SpaceMobile's cellular satellite service. Amazon is currently beta-testing Leo for enterprise clients, aiming for a wider rollout next year, while AST plans nationwide intermittent service. However, significant delays have plagued both companies; Amazon's Leo constellation needs over 578 satellites for service, and AST aims for 45-60 by the end of 2026.

The primary obstacle for competitors is the "launch supply bottleneck," as many launch providers are unavailable, with both Amazon and AST contracting SpaceX's Falcon 9. Analysts predict that robust services from these challengers might not materialize until late 2027. Meanwhile, SpaceX continues its aggressive global expansion and is exploring space-based data centers, preparing for an IPO.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Starlink began serving its first customers five years ago and currently has over 8 million users.
Amazon's Leo is preparing for a commercial rollout in 2026, and AST SpaceMobile aims to offer cellular satellite connectivity, targeting nationwide intermittent service early next year.
The main challenge is the "launch supply bottleneck," as there are limited launch providers available, potentially delaying their services.

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