Skip to main content

Starlink of Elon Musk's SpaceX is Now in The Philippines

According on the latest Speedtest® Global Index report from internet analysis firm Ookla, the Philippines ranks as having 5th fastest internet in Southeast Asia. Could you believe that? Yes, the internet connectivity in our country is having great progress over the years.

Before we get so deep into this, just so you know, there are four different types of residential internet connections in the Philippines; the mobile connection or the cellular data, the dial up, the Digital Subscriber Line or the DSL and the Fiber Optic.


Now, having said that, let’s enumerate the “Providers” in our country, you’ll be surprised how many they are really:

·               PLDT Home

·         One Sky

·         Converge

·         Globe at Home

·         Eastern Communications

·         Cheetah Broadband

·         Kabayan Broadband

·         StreamTech

·         Integranet

·         Net1

·         Red Powered by Cignal

·         Royal Cable

DITO Telecommunications have the promise to be of great competition and provide wide access of the Internet, well, that’s probably another story.


What we’ll be talking about here is the Starlink, which the Billionaire Elon Musk’s company SpaceX has announced last February (2023) that it will be available here in the Philippines.

Starlink is a satellite internet constellation operated by SpaceX, providing satellite Internet access coverage to a lot of countries around the world. It provides satellite-based internet connectivity to underserved areas of the planet, as well as competitively priced service in more urbanized areas. In August 2022 SpaceX lowered monthly service costs for users in select countries. For example, users in Brazil and Chile saw monthly fee decreases of about 50%.

As of December 2022, Starlink has over one million active subscribers. In February 2023 it was reported that Starlink had 95,000 subscribers in Australia alone.

Starlink operates on a satellite internet service technology that has existed for decades. Instead of using cable technology, such as fiber optics to transmit internet data, a satellite system uses radio signals through the vacuum of space. Ground stations broadcast signals to satellites in orbits, which in turn relay the data back to the Starlink users on Earth. Each satellite in the Starlink constellation weighs 573 pounds and has a flat body. One SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket can fit up to 60 satellites.

The goal of Starlink is to create a low latency network in space that facilitates edge computing on Earth. The challenge of creating a global network in outer space isn't a small one, especially because low latency is an important demand. SpaceX has proposed a constellation of almost 42,000 tablet-size satellites circling the globe in low orbit to meet this demand. The CubeSats -- miniature satellites commonly used in LEO -- create tight network coverage, and their low Earth orbit produces low latency.

Starlink offers unlimited high-speed data through an array of small satellites that deliver up to 150 Megabits per second (Mbps) of internet speed. SpaceX plans to double this rate in the coming months.

According to a recent Speedtest by Ookla, Starlink recorded its fastest median download speed in the first quarter of 2022 at 160 Mbps in Lithuania. Starlink also clocked in at 91 Mbps in the U.S., 97 Mbps in Canada and 124 Mbps in Australia. Starlink in Mexico was the fastest satellite internet in North America, with a median download speed of 105.91 Mbps. The Speedtest further revealed that upload speeds have seen a downward curve of at least 33% in the U.S. -- from 16.29 Mbps in the first quarter of 2021 to 9.33 Mbps in the second quarter of 2022.

The Department of Information and Communications Technology or DICT here in the Philippines have agreed with Elon Musk's SpaceX to launch the Starlink Philippines. Elon Musk’s SpaceX tweeted, in Tagalog, our local dialect here in the Philippines, on 22nd of February, 2023 that its satellite internet service, Starlink, is now live in the country.


Accessing the Internet using a satellite? Well it might be really fast, but it will not come cheap. Keeping our fingers crossed, let’s hope these prices will drop soon enough. As of this writing, early days of March 2023, Starlink will charge you as follows:

Starlink Enterprise KIT

  • PHP 176,176.00 (starter kit plus taxes)
  • PHP 3,824.00 (Data Lake and local handling fees)
  • PHP 21,600.00 (VAT)
  • TOTAL: PHP 201,600.00

 Starlink Maritime KIT

  •  Php 644,376.99 (starter kit plus taxes)
  •  Php 5,624.00 (Data Lake and local handling fees)
  •  Php 78,000.00 (VAT)
  •  TOTAL: Php 728,000.00


Let’s just hope that the DICT will attract some competition to make those prices more affordable.

Cheerio!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Most Expensive Philippine Coin Ever Sold

I personally am fond of collecting old coins. I have an ample collection, and decent if I may add, of Philippine old coins. Though I collect coins for a hobby, some people kept on asking me how I acquire those coins and if I’m selling one. So in some cases, when I visit the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (Central Bank of the Philippines), I always try to order an additional from my own to sell or give it as a gift to my friends. I always wonder, what Philippine coin is the most expensive ever sold, and how much. Priced at $22, 000 or Php 1,038,136.00 as of this writing ($1 = Php 47.19), the 1903 San Francisco Mint fifty centavos is perhaps the most expensive United States-Philippines coin ever sold. Only 2 specimens have reported and only one formally auctioned for the price mentioned. Do not mistake this one for the common 1903 Philadelphia Mint fifty centavos. This coin is an absolute rarity. How this coin surfaced? The story behind that incident is still a myste

The Great Badjang or Giant Taro

As we try to come up with things to do to make our days productive this Pandemic, a lot of people are leaning towards Gardening. Here in the Philippines, people are becoming crazy with a certain plant. It has large leaves which resembles an Elephant’s ear. Badjang, as we call it here in the Philippines, scientifically called Alocasia macrorrhizos, is a species of flowering plant in the arum family that it is native to rainforests of Island Southeast Asia, New Guinea, and Queensland and has long been cultivated here in the Philippines, many Pacific islands, and elsewhere in the tropics. It is also famous as Giant Taro. The giant taro was originally domesticated in the Philippines, but are known from wild specimens to early Austronesians in Taiwan. From the Philippines, they spread outwards to the rest of Island Southeast Asia and eastward to Oceania where it became one of the staple crops of Pacific Islanders. They are one of the four main species of aroids (taros) cultivated by Austron

Hanamichi Sakuragi: In Real Life

I am not that young, though I am not that old to have watched the Manga Series Slum Dunk. A lot of people is being fascinated with the game of basketball. Almost everyone knows how to play the game. Maybe, just maybe, NBA really popularized the sports. Apparently, one story caught my attention, and surely, it is really worth to tell ;-) Slam Dunk (スラムダンク Suramu Danku?) is a sports-themed manga series written by Takehiko Inoue about a basketball team from Shōhoku High School. It was first serialized in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump in Japan from 1990 to 1996 and had also been adapted into an anime series by Toei Animation which had been broadcast worldwide, enjoying much popularity particularly in Japan, several other Asian countries and Europe. Inoue later used basketball as a central theme in two subsequent manga titles: Buzzer Beater and Real. In 2010, Inoue received special commendations from the Japan Basketball Association for helping popularize basketball in Japan.