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Just caught wind of something interesting happening in the telecom space. TELUS and AST SpaceMobile are joining hands on a pretty ambitious project to bring cellular coverage to Canada's remote regions using satellite infrastructure.
So here's what's going down - TELUS is making an investment and becoming an equity shareholder in AST SpaceMobile. The two companies are joining hands to deploy space-based broadband services across those hard-to-reach areas where traditional cell towers just don't make economic sense. What's clever about this is that TELUS customers can use their existing smartphones to send texts, make calls, and access data without needing any special equipment.
Remote connectivity has always been a pain point in Canada. You've got massive geographic areas where infrastructure investments are tough to justify, so communities basically get left behind. This partnership seems like a practical approach to solving that problem using satellite tech instead of traditional ground infrastructure.
The fact that they're joining hands on this tells you something about where the industry is heading. Telecom companies are starting to realize satellite broadband isn't just science fiction anymore - it's becoming a legitimate way to fill coverage gaps. TELUS putting money into this and taking an equity position suggests they see real value in the model long-term.
Worth watching how this develops. If it works well in Canada, you could see similar partnerships pop up elsewhere. The whole remote connectivity problem is global, so successful models tend to get replicated pretty quickly.