Skip to main content

Howdy Howdy chicken chowdy

Howdy Howdy chicken chowdy

Howdy Howdy chicken chowdy

tally ho my dear boy

tally ho my dear boy

tally ho my dear boy

Hello WorldHallo WeltBonjour à tout le monde

tally ho my dear boy

tally ho my dear boy

tally ho my dear boy

Amazon’s Starlink competitor Leo gets a new date

An Amazon Leo terminal being installed. | Image: Amazon

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy says the company's space-internet service Leo (formerly known as Project Kuiper) will "launch in mid-2026." I'm going to assume that means proper commercial availability since the company already announced the start of an "enterprise preview" at the end of 2025, when the service was supposed to originally launch.

Unlike SpaceX's Starlink service, Amazon doesn't (yet) have its own fleet of rockets to regularly send Leo satellites into low-Earth orbit. That's meant hitching rides with a variety of launch partners, including SpaceX, until Jeff Bezos' own reusable New Glenn rocket is fully operational.

Amazon has FCC app …

Read the full story at The Verge.