Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Starry: high-speed Internet without the cables”.
Hey it’s been popper with the Virg, I’m here at the debut of starry, a new company that is promising to bring you super high speed internet over the air. So star says that can deliver you gigabit speed. Internet we’ve seen this before from Google and Comcast and Verizon, but that was delivered through fibre under the ground. Star II is promising to do it over the air. No construction, no big wires coming into your house just beamed to you like it was Wi-Fi they’re using a part of the spectrum known as millimeter wave up till now it’s been extremely difficult to broadcast internet signal over that with distance and accuracy they say, they’ve come Up with some crazy new technology that can do it and they want to sell you a very fancy, Wi-Fi router to grab that signal that Wi-Fi router would work with ordinary Internet to become your ISP. They also have to build out a network all across the city. They’Re, starting in Boston, this March, they’re, going to put these giant phased array stations in and they’re also going to sell consumers a two-part system that sits outside their house to grab the signal and inside to broadcast into your station. So you had a really ambitious start up an area taking on big TV. Now you have a really ambitious start up in the broadband internet world and I think one of the things you talked about was that there are some real issues with robbing access in the country.
Maybe talk to me a little about what was the motivation here? You know globally, there’s going to be ever increasing desire for broadband and right now their efforts going on from a coverage perspective, but in dense metropolitan areas you have to build a broadband system if you’re going to keep up with it. So so we decided that this made a lot of sense. I think in the u.s. there’s tremendous opportunity because of the competitive dynamics and how difficult it is to do actually build out a broadband system right.
So this is far easier right than digging up the ground to put in fiber or flying a fleet of drones, overhead that are beaming down the internet. The issue was like true: that’s a good idea, yeah. What you’re welcome to use drones as well? Maybe you know redundant technology, but the issue was that for a millimeter wave, which is what you guys are using, nobody had figured out how to make it go far enough and be able to penetrate walls.
Those are the kind of the two problems that you had to solve, but far enough is. It is a complex problem, because it’s not just you can make anything go far enough. It’S a question of how much power you want to put through it.
I mean just to put it in context right, a satellite when it communicates where they down makes roughly in the millimeter, but not roughly. Well, it falls in the millimeter wave bands. It’S just a ton of power. That’S coming down.
Power is expensive and I don’t mean, like you know: wattage is expensive the technology to create our powers, so the challenge is to solve. How do you do far enough with low-cost, which is commercially viable gosh? It’S a very ambitious kind of wild plan to take on big broadband. They don’t actually own the spectrum they want to use yet they’re, just testing it from the suc you’re hoping to either win it in the upcoming auction or license it from the person.
Who does this is a company that tried to take on and revolutionize the way we watch TV they ended up losing, but it went all the way to the Supreme Court now they’re trying to radically rethink the way we get Internet high-speed Internet a lot to see How it turns out this type, .