Did you know Space Just Got Crowded? The U.S. just approved SpaceX to launch 7,500 more Starlink satellites, pushing its network to 15,000 in orbit. With up to 1 Gbps space internet and direct-to-cell coverage, approved by the Federal Communications Commission, this isn’t just faster Wi-Fi — it’s a shift in who controls global connectivity. #SpaceTech #Starlink #FutureInternet #TechNews #GlobalConnectivity
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Did you know Space Just Got Crowded? The U.S. just approved SpaceX to launch 7,500 more Starlink satellites, pushing its network to 15,000 in orbit. With up to 1 Gbps space internet and direct-to-cell coverage, approved by the Federal Communications Commission, this isn’t just faster Wi-Fi — it’s a shift in who controls global connectivity. #SpaceTech #Starlink #FutureInternet #TechNews #GlobalConnectivity
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The Kessler Syndrome Kessler in 1991, which claims that the volume of space debris in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) will be so great in the near future that it will become increasingly likely that these objects will bump into each other, thereby creating even more debris in space. , "Bezos' Blue Origin announces satellite rival to Musk's Starlink TeraWave project plans to deploy over 5,400 satellites to build a global communications network for businesses and governments" https://lnkd.in/eyGz26Rx
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How SpaceX’s Starlink is building the world’s first space internet, using thousands of satellites to deliver fast, global, low-latency connectivity. https://lnkd.in/gVcdDYbr #starlink #spacex #space_internet #elon_musk #satellite_internet #low_earth_orbit #internet_connectivity #global_internet
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The FCC has officially granted clearance to a potential Starlink competitor to launch a constellation of 4,000 low-earth orbit satellites, a regulatory approval that marks the most significant challenge yet to SpaceX’s dominance in the satellite internet market. The new player wants to target the enterprise and government sectors with a focus on high-security and low-latency data links. This expansion of the low-earth orbit satellites market is expected to drive down global satellite data costs but also intensifies concerns regarding orbital congestion and space traffic management. #SpaceTech #FCC #SatelliteInternet #Starlink #Innovation #Connectivity #Tech #Regulation #Telecoms #TechnologyNews https://lnkd.in/dpS7rf_F
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“It’s a signal of how much responsibility is now being placed on commercial space operators for security, connectivity, and long-term resilience from orbit.” Fenix Space is designed to launch from 8000 runways anywhere on the planet. Our tow aircraft is piloted and returns to the airport. Our autonomous towed winged booster is propelled to 60,000 Ft where it releases the top-carried rocket that carries orbital, suborbital, or hypersonic mission payloads. This will unlock the value of this space economy that supports commercial and national infrastructure capabilities.
Empowering the Future of Space & Defence Innovation 🚀| Recruitment Lead | TECHNE Connect Podcast Host 🎧
Something I keep noticing in U.S. space lately: the lines between commercial capability and national infrastructure are disappearing. SpaceX winning new U.S. Space Force launch contracts, while continuing to scale Starlink, isn’t just another headline. It’s a signal of how much responsibility is now being placed on commercial space operators for security, connectivity, and long-term resilience from orbit. What’s interesting is how quickly this shift has happened. A few years ago, these were “new space” companies. Today, they’re delivering mission-critical services at a national level. It feels like we’re entering a phase where reliability, scale, and operational maturity matter just as much as innovation, and where commercial space is no longer adjacent to government priorities, but central to them. The space ecosystem is growing fast. #Space #USSpace #CommercialSpace #SpaceEconomy #NewSpace #SpaceX
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SpaceX has asked for permission to launch as many as 1 million satellites into space to function as a massive orbital data center, according to a company filing with the Federal Communications Commission. The filing outlines a plan for a satellite system that would be far larger than has ever been publicly detailed by SpaceX or any other company. Only about 25,000 satellites have ever been launched into orbit in history, according to the European Space Agency. “By directly harnessing near-constant solar power with little operating or maintenance cost, these satellites will achieve transformative cost and energy efficiency while significantly reducing the environmental impact associated with terrestrial data centers,” SpaceX said in the filing from late Friday. The SpaceX filing did not include details such as the size of the satellites, their cost, or when they would be launched. Space firms sometimes ask for permission to launch more satellites than they actually wind up releasing. Musk has said that space-based data centers will be more economical than those on Earth due to more abundant solar energy and cheaper cooling. https://lnkd.in/d928PK3k
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FCC Approves 4,500 More Satellites for Amazon’s Leo Internet Network The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on Tuesday approved Amazon’s request to deploy 4,500 additional low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites, expanding the company’s space-based internet network as it competes with SpaceX’s Starlink. For More Details: https://lnkd.in/dBQrr8Vc #FCC #Amazon #ProjectKuiper #LEOSatellites #SatelliteInternet #SpaceTechnology #NewSpace #AerospaceIndustry
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SpaceX Launched 25 New Starlink Satellites. SpaceX has successfully launched 25 new Starlink satellites into space from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on January 22, 2026. These #satellites are part of the “Group 17-30” mission and were carried into orbit by a #Falcon9 rocket before being released into low Earth orbit. The significance of this launch : Is another step toward expanding #Starlink ’s global internet network, bringing high-speed and more reliable #internet to places where traditional broadband is hard to reach — like remote villages, farms, ships at sea, and emergency regions. - Written by Joseph Alu Appendix: Falcon 9 is a reusable rocket built by SpaceX (Elon Musk’s space company). It’s one of the most used rockets in the world today. Read more: https://lnkd.in/gRgssT7p
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Globalstar is planning on launching a new constellation, doubling its current fleet to 54 satellites, including 6 in-orbit spares, and operating in the same 1,414-kilometer orbit by 2026. However, the company has remained vague about what services its new C-3 constellation will offer. Read the full article from Space Intel Report here: https://lnkd.in/eSHfYS6C #ConstellationsSatellites #Satellites #Space
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Yesterday, SpaceX quietly made one of the most consequential space-safety announcements of the decade. With Stargaze, SpaceX has effectively transformed Starlink into a planetary-scale sensor network. By repurposing nearly 30,000 on-board star trackers—hardware originally built for attitude determination—SpaceX is now continuously monitoring everything moving through Low Earth Orbit: active satellites, orbital debris, and unannounced maneuvers. The result is roughly 30 million observations per day, fused in near real time to generate highly accurate orbital states and conjunction warnings within minutes rather than hours. The real breakthrough is precision through frequency: continuous observations collapse orbital uncertainty in ways legacy, sparse-measurement systems simply can’t. This represents a several-orders-of-magnitude improvement over traditional, ground-based space situational awareness systems. Most notably, SpaceX is removing cost and access barriers by offering real-time conjunction data freely to all satellite operators.
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