Technology

Secretive Startup Promises Satellite Internet for the Masses

Skylo’s $100 “hub” antennas can divvy up satellite signals among a bunch of Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connections.

Signal analyzers waiting to be tested at Skylo’s lab in San Mateo.

Photographer: Kelsey McClellan for Bloomberg Businessweek

For years, parades of companies have been trying to create an all-encompassing global wireless network that would have the power to connect every imaginable object to the internet, reaching places impervious to cell towers and fiber-optic cables. Silicon Valley startup Skylo Technologies Inc. says it’s come the closest so far.

The San Mateo company’s small but powerful antenna, which it unveiled on Jan. 21 after three years of development in secrecy, can connect to pricey satellite-based internet services and relay their bandwidth to hundreds of other devices. Similar technology is already on the market, but Skylo’s founders say theirs does the job way better for way less. “If this type of connection was available for a few dollars per month, it would open up entirely new markets for people who are completely unconnected and underserved,” says Chief Executive Officer Parthsarathi Trivedi.