Elon Musk says Starlink should be 'fully mobile' by the end of 2021, allowing customers to use it at any address or in moving vehicles

Authored by businessinsider.com and submitted by speckz

Elon Musk said SpaceX's Starlink satellite internet service should be "fully mobile" this year.

This would let Starlink customers use it at different addresses and in moving vehicles.

Musk also said Friday that Starlink could exit its beta as early as this summer.

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Elon Musk said on Friday that SpaceX's satellite internet service, Starlink, should be "fully mobile" by the end of the year, meaning customers could use it in moving vehicles or at different addresses.

Musk also tweeted that Starlink would "probably" exit its beta "this summer." More than 10,000 people have signed up to Starlink since its "Better Than Nothing Beta" launched in October 2020.

During beta, customers cannot move their hardware from address to address — they can only use it where they registered it.

In March, Musk filed a request to the Federal Communications Commission for Starlink to go mobile, which would allow customers to operate the internet service in ships, planes, RVs, and trucks — but not Tesla cars, which aren't big enough to carry the Starlink terminal.

In the request, David Goldman, SpaceX's director of satellite policy, said the expansion "would serve the public interest" and "allow operators and passengers to access services that enable increased productivity."

Musk also tweeted Friday that Starlink's "service uptime, bandwidth & latency are improving rapidly." In February, Musk promised that Starlink internet speeds would double and latency would drop by the end of 2021. Insider previously reported that Starlink subscribers were getting faster internet than SpaceX said they should expect.

Even in freezing temperatures, high winds, and snow, Starlink has hit speeds of 175 Mbps, users told Insider.

SpaceX has already launched 1,300 Starlink satellites into orbit, and eventually wants up to 42,000 enveloping the Earth.

CmdrSelfEvident on April 19th, 2021 at 17:03 UTC »

This is going to make boating insane. If I can stream HD netflix on sailboat in the middle of the ocean I might never need to go into the office again.

Cellophaneflower89 on April 19th, 2021 at 15:16 UTC »

Honest question: do you get internet access on stormy days, or would this be something to consider if you lived in a stormy rural area?

Baman2113 on April 19th, 2021 at 14:49 UTC »

I have a friend who recently installed this at their home. They had zero access to comcast or any other local internet provider in the rural area they live in and had been previously forced to use verizon mifi devices with like 10 gigs of capped data a month for home internet. the only alternatives around here for them would be other satelite providers that charge similar pricing with hard caps on data monthly. My man was having to drag his playstation to friends houses every week just to download games and updates. The starlink services is pretty spotty when gaming but works well with streaming and gives them the ability to connect without having to worry about data caps. the investment is a bit much, but this could actually benefit a lot of people who are in similar situations.