SpaceX is working on making its satellite internet network Starlink a provider of that fast in-flight internet connectivity you so desire.
While speaking at a panel at the Connected Aviation Intelligence Summit on Wednesday, SpaceX’s VP of Starlink and commercial Sales Jonathan Hofeller said the company is already in talks with “several” airlines, The Verge reported.
“We have our own aviation product in development…we’ve already done some demonstrations to date, and looking to get that product finalized to be put on aircraft in the very near future,” he said.
Starlink is currently offered as a beta service in select areas (mostly in the U.S. and Canada) for $99 per month (after a one-time $499 equipment fee). The company currently has about 1,800 satellites in orbit and is steadily launching new batches, with the goal of reaching “near-global coverage” in 2021.
However, airline connectivity is a bit of a different beast, as it cannot always rely on ground stations (for example, when the airplane is flying over the ocean). To provide connectivity there, Starlink’s satellites will have to be able to connect to each other using laser links. Hofeller said this will be possible on the next generation of Starlink’s constellation, which is currently being developed.
In-flight Wi-Fi is notoriously pricy, and typically quite slow. Hofeller says that Starlink will be able to provide a “great experience,” something which current, geostationary systems cannot do. However, he did not say when, exactly, this could launch. “To be determined […..] Hopefully sooner rather than later,” he said.
Notably, Ben Griffin, VP of mobility services for Starlink’s competitor OneWeb, was also there at the panel, and he said the company is targeting a similar service in the “middle part of next year, maybe sooner.”