I think manufacturing orbital datacenters in space is absolutely necessary. 
Then, at no point, is a heavy set of frames needed to hold the weight of the 
boards. Producing the chips in a real vacuum no gravity environment may also 
allow radically different design

-----Original Message-----
From: Starlink <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Michael 
Richardson via Starlink
Sent: Thursday, September 1, 2022 3:54 PM
To: Ulrich Speidel <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Starlink] Starlink "beam spread"


Is there any orbit other than GEO that would make CDNs in space useful?

While current Starlink don't have lasers that could reach up to higher orbits, 
maybe a subsequent generation could have such a thing.  Maybe there could even 
be a standard which OneWeb/StarLink/??? could all agree to, and CDN satellites 
(with bigger solar panels and longer service lifetimes) could be built to.

Having said all of this, it sure seems that the better place today for CDNs
is within satellite serviced villages.    Some may even remember the Internet
Cache Protocol (ICP), which never really got anywhere (RFC2186).

There are perhaps energy arguments for moving datacenters to space, but stuff 
just isn't reliable enough, and I'm sure it's a fail until you manufacture in 
space.





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