
Microsoft has formally teamed with SpaceX’s Starlink to provide high-speed internet connectivity to underprivileged regions across the globe. The project, which was unveiled yesterday, on Tuesday. This is in an effort to increase global connectivity. Also, this blends Microsoft’s community-based deployment methods with Starlink’s low-Earth orbit satellite technology.
The company indicates that the software company is open to working with Tesla. As the richest person in the world, CEO Elon Musk’s family of companies sues Microsoft partner OpenAI.
Microsoft moved to collaborate with Starlink and local ISP Mawingu Networks to connect 450 community hubs, such as farmer cooperatives and digital centres, in Kenya, which is the early testbed, more like the initial phase regarded as the launchpad.
Also, by creating “AI-ready communities” in remote and difficult-to-reach locations, the initiative seeks to close the digital gap by emphasising adoption and training in digital skills in addition to basic coverage.
Melanie Nakagawa, Microsoft’s chief sustainability officer, stated in a blog post that the company is integrating low-Earth orbit satellite connection with community-based deployment models and local ecosystem relationships through its partnership with Starlink.
Nakagawa stated that Microsoft is collaborating with Starlink, an internet service provider in Kenya, to connect 450 community hubs throughout the nation.
The project will increase demand for Musk’s space company, which may go public this year and has contracts with NASA and the Department of Defence.
Musk is seeking up to $134 billion in damages from the non-profit OpenAI Foundation, which owns more than $100 billion in stock in the for-profit AI lab, in his lawsuit against OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, according to a January court filing.
In 2015, Musk and a number of other people, including Reid Hoffman, a Microsoft board member and the founder of LinkedIn, cofounded OpenAI.
On his social network X, Musk has been critical of Microsoft. Earlier this month, he stated that the corporation “has a responsibility to investigate” Hoffman’s connection to convicted sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein.
Hoffman expressed his profound regret for having known Epstein through a Massachusetts Institute of Technology fundraising connection.
Earlier this month, Musk announced that SpaceX would merge with his xAI firm, which created the Grok AI model and chatbot, which has become popular as a platform of choice for tech applications.
Microsoft announced last year that Grok models are now supported by its Foundry cloud platform, which is used to create AI-infused applications.
The partnership has lasted many years; including in the US, Microsoft has worked to link people with technology. Nakagawa tweeted on Tuesday that it had expanded the internet access and coverage to more than 299 million people, having set a goal in 2022 to reach over 250 million people by the end of 2025.
The infrastructure integration seeks to deliver cloud and AI services to remote areas without access to standard fibre or mobile networks; the collaboration makes use of the Microsoft Azure Space platform.
And despite continuous legal issues and public unrest between Elon Musk and Microsoft-backed OpenAI, the deal moves forward.
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