Yeah, but if they spread the cost across many customers, the cost per customer is going to be much smaller, even if it doesn’t last as long before needing a replacement.
If it costs $100,000 to build a fiber line to a single home for 30 years (360 months) that house will need to pay $278/month for 30 years to break even. Throw in interest rates/inflation, and it’ll be more.
But if a satellite that costs $1.5 million to build and launch into orbit can serve even 200 customers for 5 years, that’s only $125/month per customer.
As it stands right now, Starlink serves something like 12 million customers on 10,000 satellites. So that’s an average of 1200 customers served by each satellite, which is what makes $50/month service feasible as a business.
GamingChairModel@lemmy.world 1 hour ago
Yeah, but if they spread the cost across many customers, the cost per customer is going to be much smaller, even if it doesn’t last as long before needing a replacement.
If it costs $100,000 to build a fiber line to a single home for 30 years (360 months) that house will need to pay $278/month for 30 years to break even. Throw in interest rates/inflation, and it’ll be more.
But if a satellite that costs $1.5 million to build and launch into orbit can serve even 200 customers for 5 years, that’s only $125/month per customer.
As it stands right now, Starlink serves something like 12 million customers on 10,000 satellites. So that’s an average of 1200 customers served by each satellite, which is what makes $50/month service feasible as a business.