The fight over the internet, under the sea | CNBC Explains

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  • Опубликовано: 28 окт 2020
  • The ocean is home to more than 700,000 miles of submarine cables that carry the internet worldwide. This crucial infrastructure is at the center of a development race between the big tech companies amidst geopolitical rivalries between the world’s most powerful nations. CNBC’s Tom Chitty explains.
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Комментарии • 379

  • @thomaslam8448
    @thomaslam8448 3 года назад +329

    I've worked in a Tier 1 ISPs for years and that Georgian woman scavenging for copper is still my favorite internet outage story

    • @jaybariya9
      @jaybariya9 3 года назад +3

      Do Huawei routers pose a security threat me i.e stealing my internet traffc?

    • @jaybariya9
      @jaybariya9 3 года назад +15

      Mr X Just asking a question, stop being childish.

    • @taikoboda
      @taikoboda 3 года назад +13

      @@jaybariya9 It's possible, but there has not been any concrete evidence of it. Mr X is not wrong either, they would not risk their business reputation to monitor insignificant individuals. Also they cannot "steal" any of it, they could possibly be tapping it, like what the US is doing with PRISM.

    • @ngedwin6174
      @ngedwin6174 3 года назад

      Hi Thomas, genuine question... From what we know, 3G, 4G and 5G basically revolves on which frequency the data travel through transmission to us. (Base station to user). But in terms of transocean transmission, is there any significant differences?

    • @jungleballs5593
      @jungleballs5593 3 года назад +3

      @Michael Chater 5g is not doing anything bad but giving you a faster internet connection. Just chill and stay off twitter and facebook read some relevant articles written by actual scientist

  • @jdub7771
    @jdub7771 3 года назад +69

    I used to work for AT&T and would visit one of these stations in Rhode Island on the coast. The building was 4 stories underground and was nuclear blast protected. It was like something out of a movie.

    • @tokofora8783
      @tokofora8783 3 года назад +3

      My prof once told me that once something crazy happening like nuke blast, u can rely on grid. It must be what is embedded on the soil or deep seawater. No i understood the reason behind it. Thx for ur sharing.

    • @lairdriver
      @lairdriver 3 года назад

      Have you ever been to Samsung city?

  • @BrandonshanesProductions
    @BrandonshanesProductions 3 года назад +106

    This video talking about undersea internet cables has been sent through and undersea internet cable to us.

    • @Jumptohistory
      @Jumptohistory 3 года назад +2

      Wait, aren't internets connected via satelites!?

    • @BrandonshanesProductions
      @BrandonshanesProductions 3 года назад +4

      @@Jumptohistory Some but the majority goes through Fiber Optic Cables under the sea to different countries. Search the submarine cable map online to see them.

    • @aht925
      @aht925 3 года назад +2

      Wow mind is blown. So cable is actually undersea. Meanjng we never went to space to install satellites, like what some conspiracy theories suggest

    • @atrudokht
      @atrudokht 3 года назад +1

      We still rely on cable after all

  • @ceeril
    @ceeril 3 года назад +67

    In Vietnam, whenever there's an interruption with the transmission, our ISPs always blame those sharks.

    • @madmax4174
      @madmax4174 2 года назад +1

      poor sharks..

    • @MrBrauza
      @MrBrauza 2 года назад +1

      shark attack but the gamers

  • @sehuntiagosenor6104
    @sehuntiagosenor6104 3 года назад +54

    What an enlightenment.. I thought all this time it's the satellite that does all the works. Thanks CNBC!

    • @Testequip
      @Testequip 3 года назад +3

      Yep, and prior to 1990 satellites did all the work and the undersea analogue coaxial cable was predominantly for redudndancy

    • @netosan-sen8388
      @netosan-sen8388 10 месяцев назад

      Satellite 🛰️ are powered by helium balloons.

  • @TVJackBox
    @TVJackBox 3 года назад +64

    Starlink: Where we're going we don't need cables

    • @doggodoggo3000
      @doggodoggo3000 3 года назад +1

      @gaming site A project like starlink will be the next big change for humanity. Not self driving cars, not traveling to mars, not amazon. Widespread access to information will redistribute people and wealth and allow greater widespread opportunity and education than the world has ever known. Thats my guess. Lot of rich people moving to remote places that previously had little communication infrastructure.
      Think about how much the internet and cellphones have already changed the world. Imagine once EVERY ONE is connected.

    • @jeanfrancoisdutremble9022
      @jeanfrancoisdutremble9022 3 года назад +2

      @@doggodoggo3000 everyone connected for nothing is awesome ..equality like

    • @jambajukebox
      @jambajukebox 2 года назад +1

      you do know that ground stations that relay signals to the satellites also use Fibre optic cables. Where do you think datacenters that host the servers are ? In the cloud? LOL

    • @mattparsons1588
      @mattparsons1588 Год назад

      Starlink uses Level 3 ground cables lol

  • @economicsinaction
    @economicsinaction 3 года назад +27

    Tom enjoying reporting from the seaside

  • @aviefern
    @aviefern 3 года назад +69

    I'm surprised you didn't mention Tata Communications which owns 500,000 kilometres (310,000 mi) of subsea fibre and more than 210,000 kilometres (130,000 mi) of terrestrial fibre. They carry 30% of the world's internet routes. I think that makes their network bigger than Google, Facebook, and Microsoft combined.

    • @ANIRUDHVYAS1990
      @ANIRUDHVYAS1990 3 года назад +9

      Wow! Didn't knew about that... Now I can relate to the high valued stock prices of Tata communications!

    • @nishant54
      @nishant54 3 года назад +12

      Didn't you hear properly that google and facebook owns 50% of the cable so it means tata is smaller than they combined fool

    • @prashanthb6521
      @prashanthb6521 3 года назад +1

      @@nishant54 right 50 > 30 !

    • @mountainslopes
      @mountainslopes 3 года назад +6

      Owning is different than "investing in" which is what most of this is for all large tech companies.

    • @ranabirghosh8889
      @ranabirghosh8889 3 года назад +1

      Maybe these tech giants have a stake in tata thus partially owning it. Thus not mentioning. Also, this video is focused on US vs China, thus everything else is a backdrop!

  • @bluedeath4888
    @bluedeath4888 3 года назад +4

    Thank you! Very informative video and very well presented!

  • @Phlegethon
    @Phlegethon 3 года назад +82

    US: oh no you can’t do bad things to us only we do it to other people

    • @mariacheebandidos7183
      @mariacheebandidos7183 3 года назад +5

      US: we invented all these, so we kinda reserver the right to make and change the rules

    • @ramdev7939
      @ramdev7939 3 года назад

      World with out US , our lives will be entirely different.

    • @canaldofred2366
      @canaldofred2366 3 года назад

      Half of the technology you use was created in America.

    • @davidharte4703
      @davidharte4703 3 года назад

      Too true

    • @bojackbutterscotchhorseman3091
      @bojackbutterscotchhorseman3091 3 года назад +1

      @@canaldofred2366 and made in China, including your iPhone

  • @sreerajr6470
    @sreerajr6470 3 года назад +13

    Why there is no mention of starlink in this video if you can talked about google balloon

    • @ltaylor9704
      @ltaylor9704 3 года назад

      Starlink, or any satellite system for that matter, will never be able to compete with the low latency and high bandwidth offered by fibre-optic cables.

    • @cardboardpackage
      @cardboardpackage 3 года назад

      @@ltaylor9704 wooosh

    • @headhunter895
      @headhunter895 3 года назад

      @@ltaylor9704 that's why they are launching 42,000 Sattelites.

  • @robithevampire
    @robithevampire 3 года назад +17

    The title sounds like the introduction song of SpongeBob

  • @shubhamkumbhalwar4526
    @shubhamkumbhalwar4526 3 года назад +3

    Great information 👍

  • @deepshah6287
    @deepshah6287 3 года назад +6

    Clearly CNBC hasn't updated itself on the Internet usage in India. Reliance JIO has covered almost the entire population.

  • @dutmoraes
    @dutmoraes 3 года назад +1

    Excelent your videos! Congratulations 👏

  • @f1l1pp09
    @f1l1pp09 3 года назад +65

    That’s what starlink project is for.

    • @ltaylor9704
      @ltaylor9704 3 года назад +5

      Starlink, or any satellite system for that matter, will never be able to compete with the low latency and high bandwidth offered by fibre-optic cables.

    • @rogersmith1408
      @rogersmith1408 3 года назад +12

      @@ltaylor9704 Starlink uses Lasers in a vacuum. Thats True Speed of light. Light in fiber optics is considerably slower. Thats why they are talking about far faster speeds, and better ping times..Starlink already reporting ping times under 30 m/s, and 100mbs speeds, and say it's only going to get faster when more Sats are launched.

    • @ltaylor9704
      @ltaylor9704 3 года назад

      @@rogersmith1408 Satellites are great for one to many connections but can't deal with millions of individual requests. I'm still very sceptical.

    • @rogersmith1408
      @rogersmith1408 3 года назад +1

      @@ltaylor9704 It has limits. You are not wrong, but how many customers do current satellite internet providers support? Don't take my word for it. Search starlink bete tester data and see what you get. Better you ask them yourself what they think of the system. I am sure some limits will have to be in place for heavy density areas, but Elon said out at sea you should have no issues, when questioned about using it on boats

    • @mwanikimwaniki6801
      @mwanikimwaniki6801 3 года назад

      @@rogersmith1408 Space isn't a vaccum. Newers studies are showing.

  • @j.trulyrandom
    @j.trulyrandom 3 года назад +1

    Informative 👍

  • @Megasunami
    @Megasunami 3 года назад +9

    Keep fighting. The genius of our times is going beyond the stratosphere.

  • @Cynane27
    @Cynane27 2 года назад +1

    Finally a video that answers my question about the shark thing lol

  • @ajitpaul1408
    @ajitpaul1408 3 года назад

    Can you please tell were did find the details of Indian unconnected areas.
    I think it's not the updated one

  • @jifa17
    @jifa17 3 года назад +43

    Man, this comment is monitored by the US government because it ran through a US submarine cable.

  • @SuperSaiyan3985
    @SuperSaiyan3985 2 года назад +1

    Imagine if someone went across the ocean bed cutting all the cables 😂

  • @djwang1863
    @djwang1863 3 года назад +31

    Me: watching shows on a foreign website
    Shark: 3:35

    • @Denzilb55
      @Denzilb55 3 года назад +3

      Me: Video conferencing with an important overseas client
      Shark: 3:35

    • @PunxTV123
      @PunxTV123 3 года назад +2

      Me: 3:59 Complaining for slow internet

  • @arjunnair7443
    @arjunnair7443 3 года назад +1

    After reading the title,
    Me: ATLANTIS?!?!

  • @ratiebareeng
    @ratiebareeng 3 года назад +10

    Great video, please consider adding metric units, too.

    • @SlofSi
      @SlofSi 3 года назад +1

      My 4G Internet is able to traverse 80 yards per second

  • @AdityaAgrawal04
    @AdityaAgrawal04 3 года назад +47

    un-affordable cost in India, India has cheapest internet

    • @TheIcyhydra
      @TheIcyhydra 3 года назад +2

      @@krateproductions4872 that's a broken wikipedia link, buddy en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_Internet_connection_speeds ..u added a ) at the end of the link

    • @krateproductions4872
      @krateproductions4872 3 года назад

      @@TheIcyhydra oh sorry mate 😞. Here are another two links
      www.speedtest.net/global-index/india#mobile
      timesofindia.indiatimes.com/gadgets-news/india-ranks-131-in-global-mobile-internet-speeds-heres-why-unlimited-mobile-data-is-of-little-help/articleshow/78839714.cms

    • @raghavendrasinghchauhan7704
      @raghavendrasinghchauhan7704 3 года назад +6

      Also the fact that 645m indians are unconnected seems shady

    • @sasmalprasanjit2764
      @sasmalprasanjit2764 3 года назад +6

      700 million user are Internet user in India among 876 million phone user..can Google for facts.
      This CNBC over underestimated as usual.

    • @Tilak-Chatterjee
      @Tilak-Chatterjee 3 года назад +2

      Aditya , its western media what do u expect from them , they lov to portrait and highlight negative facts about India and ignore the good facts ,
      but love to portrays and highlight positive about them glorify their company's and nations shows more good facts about them hide negative sides ,
      that the simple phycological tactics to make Brand India or anything related to India less and indirectly its effects the values and make global citizens and also Indians citizens a very negative bias opinions about India,

  • @smooth2477
    @smooth2477 2 года назад

    Very informative video

  • @Photosynthjesus
    @Photosynthjesus 3 года назад +3

    when people talk about hardline connections being outdated ima send em this.

    • @user-jh6vt8vx4v
      @user-jh6vt8vx4v 3 года назад

      Hard connection is always more reliable and more secure. It is lot easier to tap into broadcast signal than physicaly tap into the network.

  • @alparslankorkmaz2964
    @alparslankorkmaz2964 3 года назад +1

    Nice video.

  • @chrismv102
    @chrismv102 3 года назад +9

    He failed to mention that the advantage of subsea cabling over satellite was speed. The speed of light is a delay in transmitting data to and from orbit. This hamstrings datarates.

  • @sachin2842
    @sachin2842 3 года назад +3

    hi from India 🇮🇳☺️❤️

  • @Addictedtocollecting01
    @Addictedtocollecting01 3 года назад +22

    Me: Tries to post a comment..
    Shark: Tasty 😋

  • @jacobreuter
    @jacobreuter 2 года назад

    @2:15 when you convince your boss its a two-man job

  • @justrandomthings319
    @justrandomthings319 3 года назад +2

    1:02 He said "rooter". 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @saynotop2w
      @saynotop2w 3 года назад

      Yes, a British person spoke English the British way 🤔

    • @dann5480
      @dann5480 3 года назад

      @@saynotop2w 🐷🤔

  • @jedics1
    @jedics1 3 года назад

    How can you release a video in late 2020 on this subject and not mention starlink?

  • @Dhavalshah
    @Dhavalshah 3 года назад +2

    Starlink is a last mile delivery type of network

  • @lazarusblackwell6988
    @lazarusblackwell6988 3 года назад +3

    The Shark scene is at 3:35

  • @jayyzee5708
    @jayyzee5708 3 года назад

    ‘Amazin’

  • @sarutchayanupatkul9590
    @sarutchayanupatkul9590 3 года назад +8

    SpaceX’s Starlink is the alternative

    • @omoba3000
      @omoba3000 3 года назад

      Terrible alternative

    • @strawdemindset
      @strawdemindset 3 года назад

      @@omoba3000 whats wrong with it?

    • @n3gi_
      @n3gi_ 3 года назад +3

      @@strawdemindset too expensive. It's not an alternative but rather an addition for remote areas.

    • @kelvinpac
      @kelvinpac 3 года назад +1

      Starlink is not an alternative to undersea cable

    • @jmc4935
      @jmc4935 3 года назад +1

      Lol. In what fantasy land? You mean the space trash that'll cause a rocket or shuttle explosion (if we restart the program)? Please!
      The prime real estate for satellites is already saturated and it'll get worse with time. Running underwater cables is much easier and you don't have the constraints of flying over a particular area in space at all times. Besides, you ever heard of orbit? Those satellites move and while the "link" is a noble idea, it's not a reliable and steady source of data transfer.
      Finally, light travels faster than any other manmade form, hence fiber optics are and will always be superior.
      Don't be a tesla fan person and do some research.

  • @vampirehunterd4192
    @vampirehunterd4192 3 года назад +4

    I wonder how much the cable crossing the ocean weighs?!

    • @bakihanma7705
      @bakihanma7705 Год назад +1

      it's amazing how someone came up with an idea to put this under ocean o..o 🤩

  • @SaltyNomad
    @SaltyNomad 3 года назад +3

    So if the fiber optic cables transmit at 100,000 miles per second and radio waves transmit at 186,000 miles per second. Will wireless tech be where we end up when it comes to connecting the world? And will the cables just be more junk eventually?

    • @jambajukebox
      @jambajukebox 2 года назад

      no, radio waves can be altered or jammed. You cannot jam a fibre optic cable without physical access to it.

  • @sanjaysprasad8528
    @sanjaysprasad8528 3 года назад +8

    70% of Indians have internet access. that's twice as much as the entire population of America, also cost of internet is very cheap in India.
    roughly you get 168gb of data for 3 month's for $9.

  • @my0.02cents
    @my0.02cents 3 года назад

    Africa's population needs revising, they are underserved and undercounted and under represented. They are over a billion.

  • @TruthSeeker8717
    @TruthSeeker8717 3 года назад

    Satellites??? You mean weather balloons... which is 1% data, while 99.9% is undersea cables lol...

  • @stevenschulak170
    @stevenschulak170 3 года назад

    what's the fight exactly?

  • @d3spis3m3
    @d3spis3m3 2 года назад

    Rooter? Or route r?

  • @ayushshukla9_
    @ayushshukla9_ 3 года назад +1

    Do you know that about 25% of world's undersea internet cables are owned by Tata, an Indian giant?

  • @jameshuke354
    @jameshuke354 3 года назад

    The thumbnail is from a cenote in Mexico, not the sea :)

  • @mrpratster
    @mrpratster 3 года назад +11

    I wished you talk about Space X’s Starlink. An alternative to the over the sea cabling and provide the “last mile” access to EVERYONE and anywhere. Services should be globally available in a couple of years.. 2022?

    • @alok.01
      @alok.01 3 года назад +3

      but its way too much costly than any regular internet. At the cost of its 1 month plan. I can get at least 2.5 years of Internet at 4gb per day with weekly data roll over plan.

    • @bstnbsch9917
      @bstnbsch9917 3 года назад

      3:27 would’ve been a nice “but” moment

    • @ohioalarms8364
      @ohioalarms8364 3 года назад

      It was my understanding that satellite data has latency due to the distance?

  • @seldomseen9367
    @seldomseen9367 3 года назад +1

    How do those cables cross the deep trenches under sea?

  • @user-ru7ex3mi3o
    @user-ru7ex3mi3o 3 года назад

    Security concerns concern to the ones who most breach security of others. Is that how every advance in technology is viewed in each progress?

  • @Mr-.Facts.
    @Mr-.Facts. 3 года назад +23

    Fact: Back in 1958, NASA had a secret plan to nuke the moon
    This is humanity in a nutshell.

    • @Hamzahyn4
      @Hamzahyn4 3 года назад +1

      What?

    • @stormsurge1850
      @stormsurge1850 3 года назад +2

      @Remo Gaggi It was to learn more about planetary astronomy, it’s not like it was the military industrial complex.

  • @GauravKumar-jx9xg
    @GauravKumar-jx9xg Год назад +1

    Tata communications owns 30% undersea cable

  • @Dhavalshah
    @Dhavalshah 3 года назад

    To all the people talking about starlink they need fiber connected base stations on ground from where the internet is sent to the sattllites then to the peoples home dish antenna

    • @habibaghasafari2237
      @habibaghasafari2237 3 года назад

      You can build data centres right next to the base stations or build base stations right next to the existing data centres. This obviously will take some time and will not happen overnight. But slowly, the connection between data centres and people will be mostly over Startling or cellular networks. This means it will not be economical to lay new cables and fibre and they will eventually become obsolete.

  • @elgs1980
    @elgs1980 3 года назад

    I thought the first A of AT&A is Atlantic, or am I wrong?

  • @challengerdrakava1198
    @challengerdrakava1198 3 года назад +4

    What's this Rooter you speak of...

  • @stephanieguilbert6694
    @stephanieguilbert6694 2 года назад

    i’m here because of brittany lmao

  • @allyourcode
    @allyourcode 3 года назад

    @3:33 You're gonna need a bigger cable.

  • @MrBrauza
    @MrBrauza 2 года назад +1

    shark attack the gamers

  • @jackmiller8851
    @jackmiller8851 3 года назад +1

    These signals are sent to a ROOTER or cellphone tower

  • @edythkeyloremdllcsheidythk3575
    @edythkeyloremdllcsheidythk3575 3 года назад

    It's already happened. My neighborhood has been hacked. Everything is suddenly funneling to SF...

  • @Professor-Scientist
    @Professor-Scientist 3 года назад

    it would take 4-6 days to walk the distance of the shortest cable!

  • @soamjena
    @soamjena 3 года назад +3

    Internet needs to be expensive to be respected like in the USA. We have horrible pricing in India. End customers feel like internet is free for the providers lol.

    • @BangaloreTrafficMadness
      @BangaloreTrafficMadness 3 года назад

      First of all its is expensive there. 2nd its stupid cheap here. In cities its actually pretty good where I am its just in parts of the city its bad. Partly because its so cheap. Needs to be a balance

    • @koilamaoh4238
      @koilamaoh4238 3 года назад

      Internet can be cheap the real issue is, infrastructure and "density" of human population, the better dense area of humans, = cheaper internet, while you do need competitors, as well as your government pitching in their own internet.
      Different countries offer offer 10gpbs under 30$ due to better density/infrastructure. ..
      While 1gbps unlimited would cost me about $300 a month from comcast(USA)which I had, I didn't use it much, thought I need it. Now I pay 100$ month, which is still expensive but speedy as hell. While there are cheaper plans for slower internet, which I avoid tho hehe.
      Plus countries still need to "modernize" with the times, as a lot of countries still need to even out in their economy, as "capitalism" tends to help out these poorer countries or what you call globalism. As india itself has its own silicon valley just as Cali has, while outskirts of india can be very poor, just as to china is poor, while mainland can be very rich.

  • @TMHonfire102
    @TMHonfire102 2 года назад +1

    satellites are real yet Google wants to use balloons @ 4:09?

  • @TanmaySrivastava53
    @TanmaySrivastava53 3 года назад +6

    Learned nothing new from this report, what was the point?

  • @malgorzatamiroslawakim7187
    @malgorzatamiroslawakim7187 3 года назад

    So is possible thy stilling Internet ,

  • @christopheryoung2368
    @christopheryoung2368 3 года назад

    Generator's are substantial.

  • @kartikchauhan3382
    @kartikchauhan3382 3 года назад

    I really thought Amazon would be way ahead of Google or any other company in laying cables because of their share in Cloud Storage services.

  • @Hunter-nr5iu
    @Hunter-nr5iu 3 года назад +1

    Vote!

  • @vinnychoff
    @vinnychoff 3 года назад

    Very interesting story. CNBC maybe you could also show how repairs are made when a cable is cut by mistake?

  • @BishnuMahali
    @BishnuMahali 3 года назад +5

    I'm from India and I've never seen a fibre optic internet cable. Because I just got 4G this year which works like hybrid 2G 😁😂

    • @AshikJonathan
      @AshikJonathan 3 года назад +3

      I'm from India too and that too a town and we have LTE, fibre and high-speed broadband well before 4 years ago.

    • @BishnuMahali
      @BishnuMahali 3 года назад

      @@AshikJonathan Privileged I Guess ❤️ Humare paas bhi hogi kabhi na kabhi... Kosish jaari hai!

    • @AshikJonathan
      @AshikJonathan 3 года назад +1

      @@BishnuMahali didnt get the non english part. Anyways cool!

  • @hassanrasheid4618
    @hassanrasheid4618 3 года назад

    Never mentioned the Starlink project

  • @harveyface
    @harveyface 3 года назад

    Erm.... No mention of starlink?

  • @5PuaAloha
    @5PuaAloha 3 года назад

    Thankyou for debunking satellites;
    it's ALL fiber optic cables and balloons, haha!

  • @susamsahu694
    @susamsahu694 3 года назад

    Please take an update about India as the information given in the video is pretty old so get the update and make further changes

  • @user-zw4mz2gx5w
    @user-zw4mz2gx5w 3 года назад +2

    Jokes on you. we use satellite DSL.

  • @brauliofernandesss
    @brauliofernandesss 3 года назад

    .Asia America Gateway: 12.427 miles = 19.999,318 km.

  • @Typhy7
    @Typhy7 3 года назад

    Fight over the internet under the sea... Spongebob Squarepants!!

  • @mgully
    @mgully 3 года назад

    amazing they didn't even mention Starlink, which will change everything.

    • @user-jh6vt8vx4v
      @user-jh6vt8vx4v 3 года назад

      Where is Tesla hyper loop? The virgin rip off is under test right now.

  • @vampirehunterd4192
    @vampirehunterd4192 3 года назад

    So if aliens shoot our satellites down we will still be able to watch youtube!! yes!!

  • @saifsohailkhan
    @saifsohailkhan 3 года назад

    What about spacex internet?

  • @christopheryoung2368
    @christopheryoung2368 3 года назад

    Preserve the natural element's.

  • @Bantamawuah
    @Bantamawuah 3 года назад +1

    Then what about satellites 📡?

  • @mayureshgawade3842
    @mayureshgawade3842 3 года назад

    I think CNBC is not aware of Starlink

  • @jeanfrancoisdutremble9022
    @jeanfrancoisdutremble9022 3 года назад

    2021 starlink ;)

  • @tonysolar284
    @tonysolar284 3 года назад

    Googles' internet balloon is nothing compared to Starlink.

  • @latenightlogic
    @latenightlogic Год назад

    0:44 that is a ridiculous statement. And why is a Brit using miles instead of kilometres?!?

  • @marryson123
    @marryson123 3 года назад

    Im waiting for Starlink.

  • @danieltan1040
    @danieltan1040 3 года назад

    Young ones, can you believe in abstract art?

  • @malgorzatamiroslawakim7187
    @malgorzatamiroslawakim7187 3 года назад

    The hugest communication ship 🚢 is relly huge is the one HOW control Internet , all my best personal regards,

  • @heiselblock
    @heiselblock 3 года назад

    Never heard of starlink i guess

  • @stukagamerxtreme
    @stukagamerxtreme 3 года назад

    👍🏻

  • @36chethan
    @36chethan 3 года назад +1

    You guys sure about number on India

  • @jrv_chaos4329
    @jrv_chaos4329 3 года назад

    SpaceX StarLink

  • @DeepakKumar-db9is
    @DeepakKumar-db9is 3 года назад

    DONT we

  • @PhotoboothTO
    @PhotoboothTO 3 года назад

    Y’all didn’t do your research... it’s called starlink

    • @kelvinpac
      @kelvinpac 3 года назад +2

      Jeez. Why do people seem to think Starlink is an alternative to an undersea cable.? Starlink is satellite technology meant to serve remote areas. Kindly do your research

    • @PhotoboothTO
      @PhotoboothTO 3 года назад

      @@kelvinpac starlink will replace old big tech/finance monopoly owned cables

  • @JS-xr9ri
    @JS-xr9ri 3 года назад

    Will it become obsolete when Starlink becomes operational?

    • @Muralidharan001
      @Muralidharan001 3 года назад

      No way, with current technology satellites can't provide enough bandwidth to a country, even if it provides in future weather will be a problem and also vulnerable to missiles. Starlink is also costly $499 for dish and $99per month. Currently each satellite provide service to 170 users at a time. I believe their customers will be Ships, Airways, yacht operators, Rich and upper middle class village folks.

  • @theotherside931
    @theotherside931 3 года назад

    *Most of internet users in Africa are Nigerians. Over 80% of Nigerians have access to internet.*

  • @markbing3758
    @markbing3758 3 года назад

    Starlink is the future.

  • @pumba6099
    @pumba6099 3 года назад

    Starlink