SkyLinker Sep 25, 2025
History, specifics and features, business models and positioning, technical details and technological differences – all in a large but very interesting analytical review
This extensive analytical article contains a deep analysis and comparison of the current leaders in low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite communication – Starlink, OneWeb, and Kuiper. A detailed review of their features, history, and specifics not only provides a complete picture of them but also an understanding of why comparing them solely by the number of satellites is simply inappropriate.
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Introduction. Why “counting satellites” is not the point
There is a temptation to judge LEO networks by eye: whoever has more satellites is stronger. But networks are not a zoo of metal boxes in the sky. They are complex systems with their own traffic logic, spectrum limitations, resource allocation policies, ground infrastructure, terminal generations, and a hundred other quiet engineering decisions that determine whether a specific user in a crowded city will get their stable 50–200 Mbps or see “network busy” on the screen. The number of satellites is only one consequence of the chosen architecture, not its quality.
Therefore, in this material, we will not count “who has the longer and thicker” list of launches. We will break down three different approaches – Starlink, OneWeb, and Kuiper – and show how orbital architecture, inter-satellite links, frequency allocation, the flexibility of antenna beams, ground gateways, and ecosystem strategy form real capacity and user experience. And why two projects with the same “number of satellites” can differ dramatically during peak load over a metropolis or on a busy air route.
What exactly we are comparing (and what won’t be here)
To avoid mixing apples and oranges, let’s immediately define the scope. We are talking about broadband internet access – stationary and mobile (land/sea/air), where throughput, latency, stability, and network scale are important.
We deliberately do not include adjacent but different-class areas:
- Direct-to-Cell / NTN – direct communication with mass-market smartphones, where the link budgets, antennas, and service compromises are different.
- IoT / M2M – low-bandwidth telemetry services prioritizing energy efficiency, not throughput per user.
- Specialized PNT/A-PNT services (time and position from space), which have a different metric of utility.
- Niche state-military channels with non-standard requirements and classified technical specifications.