You have to hand it to Elon Musk who has occasionally be referred to
as a real life "Tony Stark." The man helped to co-found PayPal and Tesla
Motors. Musk also helms SpaceX, which just recently made its fifth
successful trip the International Space Station (ISS) to deliver
supplies via the Dragon capsule. The secondary mission of the latest ISS
launch resulted in the "successful failure" of the Falcon 9 rocket,
which Musk described as a Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly (RUD) event. In
addition to his Hyperloop transit side project, Musk is eyeing a space-based Internet network that would be comprised of hundred of micro satellites
orbiting roughly 750 miles above Earth.
The so-called "Space Internet"
would provide faster data speeds than traditional communications
satellites that have a geosynchronous orbit of roughly 22,000 miles.
Musk hopes that the service will eventually grow to become "a giant
global Internet service provider," reaching over three billion people
who are currently either without Internet service or only have access to
low-speed connections. And this wouldn't be a Musk venture without
reaching for some overly ambitious goal. The satellite network would
truly become a "Space Internet" platform, as it would form the basis for
a direct communications link between Earth and Mars. It's the coming thing.
Virgin Galactic's Richard Branson this week said he wants to launch as many as 2,400 small satellites
in an effort to set up a constellation capable of bringing broadband
communications through a company called OneWeb to millions of people who
do not have it. He said he plans to initially launch a low-earth-orbit satellite constellation of 648 satellites to get the project rolling.