SpaceX launches 28 Starlink satellites
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Starlink appears to have largely recovered from a widespread outage on Thursday afternoon that affected its services across the United States and other parts of the world. Reports of service disruptions flooded outage tracker Down Detector earlier in the afternoon, with users experiencing internet outages and, in some cases, total blackouts.
Soldiers panicked, drones surveilling Russian forces went dark, and long-range artillery units struggled to hit targets.
A rare global interruption in the Starlink satellite Internet network knocked subscribers offline for more than two hours on Thursday, the longest widespread outage since SpaceX opened the service to consumers nearly five years ago.
SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral in Florida early Saturday morning. This latest mission adds 28 more satellites into orbit, according to the company.
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ANU Astrophysicist and Cosmologist Dr Brad Tucker discusses how Starlink aided in the search for a missing tourist in Western Australia. “This is kind of a great example of how this is being implemented,
Caused by a rare internal software glitch, the outage disrupted critical communications, including Ukraine's military operations. Musk and SpaceX have promised corrective action and assured users the issue won't be repeated.
A Chinese satellite has set a new record by transmitting data from 36,000 km using a 2-watt laser, achieving speeds of 1 Gbps. The breakthrough triggered viral claims that it had “pulverized” Starlink satellites.