Amazon’s Leo Satellite Network Edges Toward Global Internet Service

Amazon says its Leo (formerly Project Kuiper) constellation has surpassed 390 satellites after 29 new spacecraft, moving toward commercial service later this year. The project aims to deliver high-speed, low-latency internet with up to about 7,700 LEO satellites, a major challenge to SpaceX’s Starlink. Launches involve ULA, Arianespace, Blue Origin, and SpaceX, with a shift from Atlas V to Vulcan to enable larger satellite batches. Despite supply chain delays and a Blue Origin test-vehicle explosion, Amazon has built ready-to-fly spacecraft and an integration center to speed deployments, and initial service will roll out in limited geographies while AWS integration could open enterprise use. Expansion is planned to span dozens of countries as the network scales.
- Amazon Says It Will Launch Its New Internet Service Later This Year | Cord Cutters News
- Amazon has deployed enough satellites to launch Leo service later this year CNBC
- ULA launches final Atlas 5 rocket supporting Amazon Leo’s broadband internet satellite constellation Spaceflight Now
- AMZN Stock Gains On Hitting Satellite Milestone to Launch Starlink Internet Rival This Year Yahoo Finance
- Amazon to start initial Leo internet service this year as network nears 400 satellites Reuters
Reading Insights
0
6
4 min
vs 5 min read
87%
871 → 115 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on | Cord Cutters News