SpaceX's Starlink Project will start next month, Elon Musk announced

SpaceX's Starlink Project will start next month, Elon Musk announced


SpaceX founder Elon Musk has made a big announcement regarding the Starlink project. Musk has said that the start of the Starlink project will start from next month i.e. October. Users will get high-speed data under this service. This broadband service will be improved in the coming days.

The Starlink project of SpaceX is going to start next month i.e. from October. It is a broadband service and internet will be delivered to the people through satellite. This information has been shared by the company's founder Elon Musk on his official Twitter account.

Elon Mask tweeted that the company has received a good response from users for Starlink Beta 10. Beta 10.1 will be rolled out from this Friday. After this, Starlink will be launched globally from next month i.e. October. Let us tell you that at present the Starlink project is being tested in 11 different countries.


SpaceX is underserved as part of beta services. Users can get data from 50Mbps to 150Mbps in most locations over the next several months. Its latency can be from 20ms to 40ms. Starlink's services will also be improved in the coming time.

SpaceX says that the company provided its services to 1 lakh users in August. During that time, Musk did not get licenses from telecom companies of many countries.

For your information, let us tell you that SpaceX's first private crew mission has been successful. After orbiting the Earth at an altitude of 590 km above the Earth's surface for three days, the Crew Dragon spacecraft landed off the coast of Florida on September 18, 2021 at 7.06 pm. The mission included Shift4 Payments founder and CEO Jared Issakman, cancer survivor Hayley Arsinaux, geoscientist Sean Proctor and aerospace employee Chris Sambrowski. Everyone was trained for six months before the launch.

During the multi-day voyage, the crew conducted scientific research to improve human health on Earth and during future long-duration space flights. Some of the research involved measuring speed, sleep, heart-rate and rhythm, blood oxygen, cabin noise, and light intensity. The Inspiration4 Mission also raised more than $210 million in funding to help children with cancer at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.