Report: Apple Planned to Offer Starlink-Like Home Internet Service - MacRumors
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Report: Apple Planned to Offer Starlink-Like Home Internet Service

Apple had plans to offer a Starlink-like satellite home internet service in collaboration with Boeing, The Information reports.

Emergency SOS via Satellite iPhone YT
Starting in 2015, Apple held discussions with Boeing about "Project Eagle," a plan to launch a service to provide wireless internet services to iPhones and homes. The companies would have launched thousands of satellites into orbit around the Earth to beam internet services down to the surface. Apple intended to sell antennas that users could attach to their windows to disperse internet connectivity throughout their homes.

Apple believed the plan would help provide a more seamless experience, with mobile carriers seen as "necessary but inconvenient partners" that held back the iPhone. Similar to the transition to Apple silicon, Apple saw Project Eagle as another way to reduce its reliance other companies. Apple spent $36 million testing out a Project Eagle concept at a facility in El Segundo, California.

The service was originally scheduled to launch in 2019, but it never saw the light of day. CEO Tim Cook was concerned that Project Eagle would endanger Apple's relationship with the telecoms industry. He also expressed concerns over its significant cost with an unclear near-term business case. In 2016, Apple canceled the project and senior staff involved in it left the company.

Former hardware engineering chief Dan Riccio then formed a group looking at new wireless opportunities that would help differentiate Apple's devices. In 2018, Apple conducted talks with satellite internet providers such as OneWeb about investing in them to deploy a home internet service via satellites. OneWeb purportedly told Apple that the service would cost $30 billion and $40 billion to deliver, and similar concerns to those that killed Project Eagle put an end to the ambition.

The group then refocused around the idea of offering satellite communications to iPhones in remote areas that were not already served by conventional cellular networks. Apple launched its Emergency SOS via Satellite feature in 2022.

In 2023, Apple's satellite team proposed to use a new generation of satellites to deliver full, unrestricted internet service to iPhones in remote locations. The feature would have cost Apple significantly more than Globalstar's existing service for Apple, increasing from several dozen satellites to hundreds. Apple ultimately again declined to offer it due to concerns that it would anger mobile carriers.

Today, some Apple employees and senior executives question the long-term viability of the iPhone's satellite connectivity features. Former Apple employees who worked on the project say the Globalstar network is already outdated, slow, and limited compared to SpaceX, and will continue to be through the next decade.

Apple has not yet started charging iPhone users for satellite connectivity features, and has extended the free access period through at least September 2025. The company's reluctance to charge customers is apparently related to fear that it could trigger the U.S. government to regulate Apple like a telecommunications carrier, which could force the company to build surveillance back doors into iMessage.

The existing satellite connectivity features cost Apple hundreds of millions of dollars per year. Some top executives, including software chief Craig Federighi and head of corporate development Adrian Perica, have advocated discontinuing the features. They argue that customers are more likely to sign up for satellite features through their mobile carriers.

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Top Rated Comments

Dr McKay Avatar
11 months ago

Should Apple start making printers and scanners again, too?
You’re asking that in the wrong place, because a lot of people will answer “Yes”. Hell I remember users scrabbling to buy the Apple branded AA battery charger when they made one, people in the comments were claiming the AA batteries included were “thinner and lighter” than other brands.



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Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Eric_WVGG Avatar
11 months ago
Boeing, huh. Will Applecare+ cover accidental damage from a satellite crashing into my house?
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
MacUserFella Avatar
11 months ago
I pray that this means the return of the AirPort
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
turbineseaplane Avatar
11 months ago
Services, Services, Services!

Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
cateye Avatar
11 months ago

I pray that this means the return of the AirPort
the weird and very MacRumors-user conceit about Apple’s entirely average at best wifi routers is just baffling. They were so not worth the price. Is it the Apple logo on the outside? I’ve never understood why common sense goes out the door anytime someone brings up those stupid devices. It was absolutely the right decision for Apple to nix that business. Should Apple start making printers and scanners again, too?
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
11 months ago
Reads to me as Apple letting its business relationships get in the way of innovation. Steve would be proud. How many times did he push and strain relationships with the music industry and with the mobile industry telling them they couldn't preinstall or brand anything.

As always, Tim Cook has lost the plot. He's protecting every near-term dollar of revenue at the expense of long term revenue, because thats what Wallstreet wants. Its not like carriers can just say "I'm not supporting iPhone" anymore, its too entrenced in society, they would face huge backlash.

Instead of taking upgrades to the phone to the market that could have kept them ahead of the competition, he focused on a dead-end car project and an expensive AR flop and announcing vaporware as the key feature of their product line.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)