There's one huge catch.
At only 11 inches in height and width and a single inch in thickness, Amazon's standard "customer" terminals — as it chooses to brand them — are notably smaller compared to competitors, and weigh less than five pounds. To put those numbers into perspective, Starlink's smallest available terminal is nearly double the size and a little over nine pounds.
Amazon says that, despite the small form factor, the customer terminal "will be one of the most powerful commercially available" of its size, providing speeds up to 400 megabits per second. Although, don't expect that to be the average speed, especially as more customers are brought on board ifAmazon's terminals could also be a lot cheaper, too. After a price hike last year, Starlink's kit will currently set you back $599.
A large, high-bandwidth model was also revealed and is a hefty 19 by 30 inches in size. That's bigger than Starlink's beefiest and fastest terminal, but the payoff is that you get up to a gigabit per second in speed. Clearly, Amazon is getting serious about giving Starlink a run for its money. But before Project Kuiper can take off, it'll need to get its satellites airborne.
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