
The telecoms firm is apparently testing Starlinkâs satellite-connected equipment at its Adastral Park research centre in Ipswich.
Instead of using cables to transmit data, Muskâs Starlink has placed a network of more than 5,000 satellites in low Earth orbit, which beam high-speed internet to small dishes on the ground.Â
BTâs goal is to stamp out so-called ânot spotsâ in rural areas, reports The Telegraph. It is also said to be eyeing Starlinkâs satellite-mobile service in a possible boon for customers on BT-owned EE â though it may need the go-ahead from regulator Ofcom to proceed.
Although itâs easy to take lightning-fast internet or 5G for granted in the capital, Londoners can run into connection troubles when they venture further afield. Even today, around three per cent of the UK doesnât receive superfast broadband, while seven per cent lacks reliable 4G outdoors.
Notably, Starlink doesnât have a UK partner for its upcoming mobile-satellite network, meaning Brits stand to miss out on the service when it goes live later this year. In a milestone for the company, Starlink recently powered its first exchange of text messages using its âdirect-to-cellâ satellites.
BT previously told the Standard that it was testing a satellite service with the aim of plugging spotty connections. In the future, the space-beamed signal would step in if your internet dropped out, often without you even knowing it.
âItâs our objective for the customer to be unaware of how theyâre accessing the network to give them the coverage they need,â Andy Sutton, an engineer and principal architect at BTâs Networks division, told the Standard last July.
The trial with Starlink could be the latest blow for BTâs current satellite partner, London-based OneWeb. A £400 million bailout during the pandemic indicated that the firm was already facing concerns.