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![]() Starlink data is starting to trickle in, despite NDAs on Beta Testers. https://arstechnica.com/information-...acex-starlink- beta-tests-show-speeds-up-to-60mbps-latency-as-low-as-31ms/ Bandwidth numbers from above: Beta users of SpaceX's Starlink satellite-broadband service are getting download speeds ranging from 11Mbps to 60Mbps, according to tests conducted using Ookla's speedtest.net tool. Speed tests showed upload speeds ranging from 5Mbps to 18Mbps. Latency numbers from above: The same tests, conducted over the past two weeks, showed latencies or ping rates ranging from 31ms to 94ms. .... Update at 11:18pm ET: A new Reddit post listing more speed tests shows some Starlink users getting even lower latency of 21ms and 20ms. Those are some decent numbers that will almost certainly blow rural DSL providers out of the water. Unfortunately, this Administration's FCC has been hostile towards Starlink. From the article: FCC Chairman Ajit Pai doubted Musk's latency claims and in May 2020 proposed to classify SpaceX and all other satellite operators as high-latency providers?i.e. above 100ms?for purposes of a rural- broadband funding distribution. The FCC backed off that plan but said companies like SpaceX will have to prove they can offer low latencies, and it continued to express "serious doubts" that SpaceX and other similar providers will be able to deliver latencies of less than 100ms. Beta Testers are confirming that SpaceX's Starlink is *not* a "high latency provider" like traditional geosynchronous satellite Internet providers. Jeff -- All opinions posted by me on Usenet News are mine, and mine alone. These posts do not reflect the opinions of my family, friends, employer, or any organization that I am a member of. |
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#3
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On Wednesday, August 19, 2020 at 5:28:55 PM UTC-4, JF Mezei wrote:
On 2020-08-19 16:13, Jeff Findley wrote: Since when? It's pretty bog standard to run a speedtest like ookla. It tests the bandwidth of your Internet connection, measured in Mbps over a short span of time. A beta with a couple of users is not representative of what it will be like in production because it does not represent the level of oversubscription that Starlink intends to have to make the service profitable. Which is why users will no doubt be running speed tests periodically to see what they're getting. Obviously SpaceX already tracks all that information. A fixed number of beta testers in a region with fixed number of base station(1) will yield the same results and show stable service. They already know how many periuods during the day there would be interruptions in service and already know how each launch will reduce that. But this beta allows Starlink to tests the residential base station hardware and software that tracks satellites to orient antenna and impact of westher. So Starlink is far more interested in signal strength vs weather radar images than it would be of a speed test. Note also that Starlink allowed base statiosn to connect to satellites far lower above horizon in order to decreate the numebr of gaps in service between satellite passes. So Starlink will be very interested in knowing about signal strength at variious elevation of staellite vs residential base station as this may help determine the eventual true limit of how low above horizon a base station will attempt to look for a staellite. Also, my cable Internet service is shared with everyone else in the area that's also using that same service. And the cable company has extact statistics on node traffic for your neighbourhood and when it reaches a certain level, begins process of splitting the node into 2 nodes so that this happens before se5vice on the 1 node degrades below its service standards. Some cable companies have better standards than others. Complaints from customers on slow speed tests do nothing since the cableco has exact statistics on node usage taken at the CMTS port and they know very well once customers start to see service degradation. Latency to servers users actually use (e.g. a gaming server) will get better when the laser interlinks between satellites come online. Since the current fleet of satellites do not have the lasers physically installed, it will be a long while before inter satellite links are of use. And this will not really change latency. It is very doubtful that a user in Port Henry NY connecting to a game server will have satellites be aware that the destination is in Seattle and use intersatellite links to bounde to a satellite that has view of the Seattle ground station whyere it can had short ground hop to gaming server. Such optmizations will likely be possible for permanent visrtual circuits for enterprise customers (point to poing connections that provide layer 2 connectivity) compared to normal Internet serfvice at layer 3 which would require Satellites to have full Internet BGP routing table and understand the concept of anycast to know where the nearest servre is. That's still going to be a *lot* better than satellite Internet from a geosynchronous satellite. These services are grossly oversubscribed in order to make them profitable. And like with Starlink, they are limited in capacity of ground ulink to statellite which is shared by all users. This is why the numebr of ground stations that Starlink will deploy will be the determining factor of how much capacity the system has. And if you are in Port Henry and you are directed to a ground station in Albany, you then travel via ground fibre to Seattle and will have worse service than ground based Internet from your home which doesn't have the roughly 1000km hop up/down from satellite. There is no question that LEO can theoretically beat the pants off a GEO satellite service. But when you introduce the business aspect of how much revenue you get and how much its costs, the question is still not clear. There are goo reasons why Starlink or any other satellite service publish the uplink capacity for for their service. It is a key component of how much oversubscription is needed to make service profitable and how terrible the service will be. Have you considered starting your own group "I Hate Elon Musk and Everything He is Affiliated With"? |
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On 8/18/2020 10:24 AM, Jeff Findley wrote:
Starlink data is starting to trickle in, despite NDAs on Beta Testers. https://arstechnica.com/information-...acex-starlink- beta-tests-show-speeds-up-to-60mbps-latency-as-low-as-31ms/ Bandwidth numbers from above: Beta users of SpaceX's Starlink satellite-broadband service are getting download speeds ranging from 11Mbps to 60Mbps, according to tests conducted using Ookla's speedtest.net tool. Speed tests showed upload speeds ranging from 5Mbps to 18Mbps. Latency numbers from above: The same tests, conducted over the past two weeks, showed latencies or ping rates ranging from 31ms to 94ms. ... Update at 11:18pm ET: A new Reddit post listing more speed tests shows some Starlink users getting even lower latency of 21ms and 20ms. Those are some decent numbers that will almost certainly blow rural DSL providers out of the water. Late to this thread but I can give some perspective vis my old geosynchronous satellite service whom shall remain nameless but was the biggest sat Internet provider of that time and is still a major player today. Now this data is no doubt far behind what is available today. But back in the year 2000 my satellite service was able to provide about 400kbps with a latency from 400 to 600ms. IIRC closer to 400 most of the time. Then I learned a neat hack. The down-link servers in those days would not limit the number of simultaneous connections you could have across multiple ports. Thus using a Linux download program like wget and specifying up to 5 simultaneous connections I was able to achieve (in practice not theory) up to 1.5 Mbps of download capacity. Running in the dead of night. Now in those days there was a hard download cap of 500MB. Exceed that and your account got throttled back to 47kbps for a period of 24 hours. Just lending some perspective. Dave |
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Oh yeah sorry I forgot uplink speed. Uplink was 28.8kbps all day long,
since it was provided by a dial-up provider.... Dave |
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