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SpaceX launches satellites for cell service for first time

Elon Musk's SpaceX successfully carried six Direct to Cell satellites that will be used by T-Mobile and other carriers into Earth’s orbit earlier this week. It will offer text messaging to start.

SpaceX successfully carried six Direct to Cell satellites that will be used by T-Mobile and other carriers into Earth’s orbit earlier this week.

The Elon Musk-led aerospace company said the Starlink Direct to Cell satellites have technology that "acts as a cellphone tower in space" and helps get rid of cell service dead zones.

They launched late Tuesday from California onboard a Falcon 9 rocket along with 15 other Starlink satellites, according to SpaceX.

T-Mobile said it will start field testing the service "soon." To start, customers will have only text messaging coverage with it, the company said.

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T-Mobile Marketing, Strategy and Products President Mike Katz called the launch a "pivotal moment for this groundbreaking alliance with SpaceX and our global partners around the world, as we work to make dead zones a thing of the past."

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The wireless provider first partnered with SpaceX for Direct to Cell back in August of last year. 

SpaceX said six other companies have plans to use the technology too. They include Rogers in Canada, KDDI in Japan, Optus in Australia, One NZ in New Zealand, Salt in Switzerland and Entel in Chile and Peru, according to the company.

Those utilizing it "have access to reciprocal global access in all partner nations," SpaceX said on its website.

"This [technology] will allow for mobile phone connectivity anywhere on Earth," Musk wrote on his social media platform X. "Note, this only supports ~7Mb per beam and the beams are very big, so while this is a great solution for locations with no cellular connectivity, it is not meaningfully competitive with existing terrestrial cellular networks."

SpaceX will bring voice, data and other services to Direct to Cell next year.

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It will eventually use its reusable Starship rocket for Direct to Cell satellites, according to the aerospace company.

SpaceX has conducted 297 launches of various kinds to date. Its most recent, its Ovzon 3 mission, took place Wednesday in Florida.

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