Posted by Alumni from Wired
March 6, 2025
One by one, Ukrainian villagers gathered round and held their smartphones out to catch the signal. A nearby Starlink terminal, a small, square-shaped panel facing the sky, was about to beam their voices to a satellite in low Earth orbit, which in turn would relay their calls to relatives hundreds or thousands of kilometers away. Here, close to the front line in Ukraine's northeastern provinces, where mobile phone networks are down, you don't get to make that connection very often, to send that picture that shows you are still OK. Phones rang, people on the other end picked up, conversations'and tears'flowed. 'I don't think it can be exaggerated how big a difference it makes to people's lives. For them to be able to have that moment of normality,' says Ada Wordsworth, director of KHARPP, a charity predominantly working to rebuild homes in Ukraine, who brought the Starlink terminal to this village with her team in 2023. KHARPP has paid for and deployed six Starlink terminals in... learn more

WE USE COOKIES TO ENHANCE YOUR EXPERIENCE
Unicircles uses cookies to personalize content, provide certain advanced features, and to analyze traffic. Per our privacy policy, we WILL NOT share information about your use of our site with social media, advertising, or analytics companies. If you continue using Unicircles by clicking below link, you agree to our use of Cookies while using Unicircles.
I AGREELearn more
x