The satellite company, O3b Networks, has attracted investors at Google, HSBC Principle Investments and Liberty Global for its project to deliver cheaper, high-speed wireless Internet access to underserved regions of the world. The term, ‘O3b’, refers to the “other 3 billion,” or the large segment of the world’s population that can’t access the Internet because there is no fiber cable in their regions.
03b, a Jersey Island (UK)-based company, announced that it is building 16 satellites that will enable lower-cost Internet accessibility over 3G and WiMax networks. These satellites will provide “trunking” or backhaul coverage zone between +/- 40 degrees of latitude which blankets much of the world’s underserved regions including Latin America, the Middle East, Africa and South Asia.
Fiber cable and the labor for digging fiber trenches in underdeveloped countries is costly by any measure. Mobile operators face prohibitive costs in building transmission capacity between their networks and towers. Using satellites had been long been considered problematic due to their latency or the time it takes for a signal to travel between earth and satellites.
Today’s geosatellites orbit the earth at an altitude of 22,500 and their latency can exceed 600 milliseconds. By contrast, O3b plans to use MEO satellites which orbit the earth at 5,000 miles and can reduce latency to only 120 milliseconds—not that much more than a fiber network.
O3b which expects to activate service by late 2010 intends to provide speeds of up to 10G bps (bits per second) to regions. The companies collectively invested about $65 million with the total cost estimated at $650 million.
This is good news for “3b” consumers, and probably a smart investment for Google which recognizes that the majority of the world isn’t currently using its services do to lack of access. With their $10M investment, Google is getting in on the ground floor, so to speak. Consider this another milestone in moving forward their Android initiative.
Want more info? Download this PRI (Public Radio) Podcast, Google to invest in internet start-up (4:30).









