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Comments (256)

  • devin
    I've written it elsewhere, but: it is such a shame that the United States saw fit to run electricity _everywhere_, no matter how rural your location, but instead of do the same for rural internet we had to wait for... a private company to launch a global network of satellites. Yes, this post is about internet access while traveling 500mph, which is a different problem, but it is so messed up that people fall over themselves about Starlink for rural connectivity when it is an incredibly complex and expensive technology with huge ongoing costs that could have been solved once and for all by simply running some wires.
  • Hansenq
    Ben Thompson interviewed UA's CEO on Starlink a few months ago.Scott said: "It took time to negotiate, because we wanted to own the consumer data, and at the beginning, Starlink did, so that was hard, and then, the other thing was I wanted to let my big competitors in the United States finish their deals with other providers and get locked in so that we would — eventually, everyone’s going to have Starlink."Brilliant. Just brilliant. Ensured that UA would be first (of the 3 major US carriers) to Starlink and that everyone else had to wait until their existing agreements multi-year expired before switching. UA's best CEO in decades!https://stratechery.com/2026/an-interview-with-united-ceo-sc...
  • gpt5
    One nice thing about Starlink is that they force the airlines to offer it for free. I’m not sure why SpaceX is doing this, but it was surprising enough to me that my international WiFi was not only fast, but completely free that I researched it.
  • apitman
    I've only had it once, but inflight Starlink is a game changer. I was able to play a ranked AoE2 game over the Pacific Ocean.
  • userbinator
    Why the .ai domain? Are you using AI in your data pipeline somehow?
  • throwaway132448
    No internet on flights is one of my favourite features.
  • Bombthecat
    My trip from USA to Amsterdam doesn't have starlink, at all. Not a single plane. No matter the company.So sad
  • rayiner
    I tried Starlink on a United flight the other day (short hop from Hilton Head to DC) and it was amazing.
  • gadders
    I wish my bloody commuter train into London had Starlink. Even when the onboard wifi works you are limited to 100mb of traffic.I get a better 5g signal on the Jubilee line than I do on an overground train.
  • raw_anon_1111
    Starlink is good I’m sure. But it isn’t the be all end all of high speed internet on planes. Delta doesn’t use Starlink and most of its planes have fast satellite internet except the A900s used for short hops.
  • Hansenq
    I've definitely thought about substituting a nonstop flight for a 1-stop flight on UA regional jets just to get Starlink on the entire route. The annoying this is I live by a UA hub and UA doesn't fly regional planes between UA hubs.So the best I've been able to do is a regional flight to a UA hub near me, and then a non-regional flight back to my home airport. Which is honestly probably not worth it. And it's definitely not worth doing a two-stop trip so I'm really excited for them to roll it out on their mainline jets!
  • torcete
    People are so rude with their phones that I fear that starlink becomes popular in all flights.
  • rootusrootus
    Well, hells bells, next week I'm actually going to be flying on an Alaska Airlines E175. That's quite rare for me, I can't remember the last time I've flown on one of their small planes. And it looks like all of their E175s have Starlink. Sweet! I may have to try it out, even if paying for WiFi on a short flight is generally a waste of money.Edit: ooh, it's free! Because I have their credit card.
  • andrewcamel
    Big fan. One feature idea/request - a map showing coverage with 0-100% by route (red/yellow/green lines). I’m just curious to see where I should think to look for / expect starlink options. Probing into a few upcoming trips showed basically no coverage.
  • Singlaw
    Damn that's so cool I just checked it and it works dayum how far we have come guys
  • 6thbit
    Why does it work on the plane? are the constant handoffs between satellites not enough to break connections or cause extremely high packet loss for it to suck?is there a speed at which it would break?
  • neilsharma425
    Neat problem to work on. The tail number lookup is the hard part and it sounds like you solved it the right way, by finding the people who actually track this obsessively rather than trying to scrape it yourself.Two questions: how stale does the tail assignment data get in practice, and do you have a way to detect when an enthusiast spreadsheet goes unmaintained? And what happens to your probability estimate when an airline swaps aircraft last minute, which seems to happen pretty often on regional routes?
  • nomilk
    It would be great to make this data into a browser extension that overlays the info when using Google Flights
  • aeblyve
    This is awesome! In the past I would use the promise of starlink or other LEO internet as a tiebreaker for booking flights and was disappointed a few times (as clearly not all of the airframes for an airline have the capability)
  • dvno42
    United has this on some flights. It's no cost but they force you watch ads in the captive portal. I'd rather pay the $8 and be left in peace, every time.
  • HPsquared
    Looking forward to Starlink on UK trains. I frequently have to go basically without internet for a couple of hours.
  • caycep
    looking back at the history of starlink, when was it decided to pursue this project at SpaceX? Was it always the natural evolution, i.e. cheap launches = more communications sats? Or was there a specific communications engineer/person that brought it up to Elon or Gwynne?
  • hughes
    I would love to see this integrated into Flighty.
  • VmakeAI66
    this matches my experience exactly
  • SilentEditor
    This is incredibly interesting, will follow.
  • ellyagg
    Thank you for your service. Hopefully something like this can put pressure on airlines to understand how hostile their internet services are and that it matters.Last year I flew roundtrip to the Philippines on Philippines Airlines. Each way they claimed they had internet and each time, they sent an email reneging the day before the flight.The same thing happened when my sister-in-law flew with them a couple months earlier.These are long flights during which I expected to be able to work. Just so infuriating.
  • adrithmetiqa
    Does anyone else appreciate the final space where we can be disconnected. I do, for one
  • LightBug1
    Planes and underground trains are/were focus sanctuaries ...
  • munk-a
    I had access to it on a long-haul AirFrance flight. While I avoid doom-scrolling in my daily life because there's better stuff to do... on a long haul flight it's a surprisingly good way to pass time intermittently. I still just watched pre-downloaded dropout for 80% of the flight but when I was too tired to appreciate it I'd turn my brain off and watch a bit of that wonderful doom-scroll slop.The fact that it's powered by starlink is disappointing due purely to Elon Musk's involvement - but this is one of the better use cases for satellite internet technology. I'm not going to go out of my way to book with airlines that use the service though.
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  • oscilloscopin40
    good read. thanks for sharing
  • elonisaass
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  • kleiba
    Even when flying intercontinental for many hours, I usually just pull a Puddy on flights and do nothing. I have my laptop with me, of course, but I usually leave it just in the overhead compartment.I don't even watch movies or read.