Numerous early Starlink testers[1] have been notified that they'll soon be linking up to the Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) internet in the "Better Than Nothing Beta" test[2].

Better than nothing actually sounds pretty darn good. In this early stage, Starlink tells its early users to "Expect to see data speeds vary from 50Mb/s to 150Mb/s and latency from 20ms to 40ms over the next several months as we enhance the Starlink system. There will also be brief periods of no connectivity at all."

Is that as good as you can get from your cable provider? No, but your cable ISP will never spend the cash needed to bring broadband to rural users. If you live in the country, you need to look elsewhere for broadband internet[3].  

SpaceX has applied[4] for the Federal Communication Commission's up-to $16 billion Rural Digital Opportunity Fund (RDOF)[5]. This is a plan to bring broadband -- with download speeds of at least 25Mbps -- to six million homes and businesses, which currently have no broadband. As part of its presentation, Starlink showed internet performance tests with download speeds of between 102Mbps to 103Mbps, upload speeds of 40.5Mbps to not quite 42Mbps, and a latency of 18 milliseconds to 19 milliseconds. That's much better than conventional satellite internet, comparable to low-end cable internet, and far beyond what most rural internet users can get.

This is the first step to Starlink's public beta. Private beta sites had already been up and running in Canada and the US[6]

Third-party tests are showing decent performance numbers. Users posting to TestMy.Net[7] are showing an average download speed of 47.87 Mbps[8], with a top speed of 149.22 Mbps.

Read more from our friends at ZDNet