SpaceX held talks with Apple Inc about using Starlink connectivity for the iPhone maker’s new satellite features, Elon Musk said. The companies have had “promising conversations”, SpaceX chief executive officer Musk said Thursday on Twitter, adding that Apple’s iPhone team is “super smart”. It was unclear if the talks were ongoing.
The comments came a day after Apple announced Emergency SOS
via Satellite, which will allow iPhone 14 users to ping emergency services
using satellite networks in areas without standard cellular reception. For the
service, Apple partnered with Globalstar Inc to power the satellite
infrastructure, the network provider said in a regulatory filing Wednesday.
Last month, Musk’s SpaceX and US wireless carrier T-Mobile
US Inc pre-empted Apple’s long-anticipated announcement by revealing that phone
users on T-Mobile’s network would be able to tap into SpaceX satellites to send
text messages in areas without cellular connectivity.
The collaboration is dependent on SpaceX launching an upgraded
version of its Starlink satellites, known as Version 2. That partnership, which
won’t launch until the end of next year at the earliest, will differ from
Apple’s feature in that it will allow for communication between consumers.
Apple’s short length satellite texting service is only designed to message
emergency responders, the company said Wednesday.
The satellite infrastructure will allow integration with
Apple’s Find My app, allowing hikers and explorers to be more accurately
tracked by friends in areas where GPS or cellular services may not normally
work.
Apple’s feature is set to launch in November and will be
free for two years. The company didn’t say how much it would cost after that
initial period. Apple is investing hundreds of millions of dollars into
Globalstar’s satellite infrastructure, the company said. The T-Mobile and
Starlink feature will be free. Starlink is SpaceX’s ambitious plan to create a
constellation of thousands of satellites, in order to beam broadband internet
coverage to the Earth below. The company has roughly 3,000 satellites in orbit
at the moment and recently said it has more than 400,000 subscribers.
Musk’s companies have never collaborated with Apple, though
he did confirm in 2020 that he attempted to sell Tesla Inc to the technology
giant during some of the automaker’s darkest days. Apple CEO Tim Cook later
said he had never spoken with Musk about such a deal.
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