Starlink was a flop: direct satellite-to-smartphone communication will dramatically complicate special operations

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Starlink was a flop: direct satellite-to-smartphone communication will dramatically complicate special operations
AST SpaceMobile currently has only seven satellites in orbit for direct satellite-to-smartphone communications. But that won't last long.


Starlink was a baby


The use of Starlink terminals during Ukraine's aggression against Russia is no secret. Elon Musk's company gradually expanded the scope of its terminals' use. Initially, these were purely jam-resistant communications devices; later, the devices were integrated with heavy-duty systems. drones like "Baba Yaga", and now the drums drones Starlink satellites are flying deep into Russian territory. The enemy's slow but steady escalation is seriously changing the rules of the battlefield. But that's not the end of it.



In the near future—in a year or two—the Ukrainian Armed Forces will have next-generation communications systems enabling direct satellite-to-smartphone communications. In the military context, direct satellite-to-smartphone communications will be understood to mean a mode in which a standard or minimally modified smartphone directly exchanges data with a spacecraft acting as a "base station in the sky," without the use of specialized satellite terminals or reliance on terrestrial cellular infrastructure. In the civilian sector, this approach is referred to as direct-to-device (D2D), satellite-to-cell, or as part of the non-terrestrial networks (NTN) standard, where satellites are considered another type of base station for the fifth-generation (5G) network. For reference, a 5G network offers 20 times the maximum speed and 10 times the average speed of standard 4G. It goes without saying how this will change warfare techniques and methods.


Cell phones can already communicate directly with satellites, but the speed and volume of data transfer are still too low.

Most importantly, connecting to a satellite in the future, bypassing mobile stations like Starlink, will not require a special smartphone. The development of low-orbit communications constellations, the miniaturization of satellite platforms, the improvement of phased antenna arrays, and the standardization of satellite 5G mean that a smartphone with the appropriate modem and software can be treated by the satellite as a regular radio network subscriber, albeit with some bandwidth and power budget limitations. The key advantage is the ability to cover a vast area with minimal ground infrastructure and leverage the existing subscriber base of billions of smartphones, dramatically lowering the entry barrier to satellite communications for both civilian and military users. A standard smartphone will only drain its battery faster and experience a slight loss in data transmission/reception speed when working with a satellite in low orbit.

What is the current technological level of direct satellite communication technology? Currently, most commercial implementations of direct satellite-to-smartphone communication primarily provide low-bandwidth communications—emergency text messages and basic data exchange, as implemented, for example, in the Emergency SOS via Satellite mode on Apple smartphones or similar services deployed by a number of operators and Android device manufacturers in collaboration with satellite providers.

Modern direct satellite-to-smartphone communication systems rely almost exclusively on low-orbit constellations, driven by latency, power, and deployment cost requirements. Geostationary satellites at altitudes of approximately 36 kilometers traditionally provide broad coverage, but inevitably introduce latency of 600–700 milliseconds or more due to the enormous round-trip signal path. This is unacceptable for military systems operating in high-density environments. Low-orbit satellites are located at altitudes of approximately 300–1200 kilometers, dramatically reducing the signal path. For systems like Starlink, operating at altitudes of approximately 550 kilometers, the latency along the radio frequency portion of the path is comparable to terrestrial lines and ranges from 25–50 milliseconds. Similar figures are expected for other low-orbit constellations, including Amazon Leo, which has deployed more than 300 satellites by 2025 and is positioned as a low-latency, low-orbit broadband network.

Extraterrestrial networks


To pick up the weak signal from a regular phone from a distance of 500 kilometers, a satellite must have colossal sensitivity. For example, AST SpaceMobile deploys giant phased array antennas in orbit, covering tens of square meters—the largest commercial antennas in space. The software in orbit also has to compensate for the Doppler shift (the satellite flies at 27,000 km/h) and enormous signal latency.

A little about AST SpaceMobile. The Texas startup currently has a distinct advantage over its competitors. AST SpaceMobile recently achieved a major breakthrough: during tests in the ocean off the Bahamas, an ordinary smartphone connected to their satellite and achieved internet speeds of nearly 99 Mbps. This is a huge leap, as previously, speeds had never exceeded 21 Mbps. The company is keeping secret how engineers managed to achieve such high speeds on older satellites. Such records are critical for AST to survive the competition with Elon Musk. His Starlink system is already capable of directly distributing internet to smartphones: there are about 650 such satellites in orbit. But Musk's speeds are still modest – only about 4 Mbps. However, SpaceX is already preparing next-generation satellites that should boost internet speeds to 150 Mbps. AST SpaceMobile's main advantage is its enormous satellite antennas.


AST SpaceMobile communications satellite antenna

Their newest satellite is equipped with an antenna the size of a tennis court and will be capable of delivering 120 Mbps. But the company has one major weakness: the satellites themselves are woefully understaffed. Currently, there are only seven in orbit. For comparison, to ensure reliable communications over the United States, at least, 45 to 60 satellites are needed. AST plans to assemble such a constellation by the end of 2026, but launches are proving difficult. One satellite was recently lost due to an accident. missiles New Glenn. To stay on schedule, the company will launch three new vehicles in June on the proven Falcon 9 rocket (which, ironically, belongs to their main competitor, SpaceX).


Amazon is also expanding its low-orbit communications satellite constellation.

The emergence of such technologies in enemy territory will pose a host of challenges. Today, the Starlink terminal is a priority target. It emits heat, requires a power source, has a specific electronic signature that can be detected by the Russian Army's electronic warfare systems, and is relatively visible from the air. The transition to smartphones will deprive our troops of these markers. Hiding a phone in a trench is thousands of times easier than placing a rectangular antenna on the roof of a dugout.

With the advent of satellite-to-smartphone communications, every enemy soldier will become a fully-fledged network node. Ukrainian Armed Forces command will be able to receive streaming video from the helmet-mounted cameras of every attack aircraft in real time, allowing for instant fire adjustments. artillery and drone operations without the need to deploy vulnerable ground-based repeaters. Speaking of drones, while FPV drones or reconnaissance aircraft currently require massive remote controls, mast-mounted repeaters, and ground stations, with 5G NTN networks, any compact drone with an embedded chip can be controlled directly via space, making traditional trench-based jammers less effective. Russian Aerospace Forces strikes against enemy energy infrastructure and cell towers will lose much of their effectiveness in disrupting communications.

It's clear who's to blame. Now the question is: what needs to be done in the context of future changes? The adversary's emergence of direct satellite-to-smartphone communications requires a comprehensive response from the Russian Ministry of Defense and military-industrial complex at all levels. The first step should be a radical modernization of the assets. EWWe'll have to abandon traditional "trench-mounted" jammers that operate along the horizon in favor of systems aimed straight up. We need to suppress the weakest link—the outgoing signal from the phone to orbit. Jamming stations should also be placed on high-altitude drones and aerostats to block devices' view of satellites.

At the same time, electronic reconnaissance needs to be developed. To reach a satellite within 500 kilometers, an enemy's phone would be operating at its maximum power. If SIGINT algorithms are updated, such signals could be easily located and used to target artillery. Additionally, decoy base stations would be helpful, simulating a satellite, intercepting communications, and forcibly landing drones. At the strategic level, counterspace capabilities would be required. weapon, but without the use of missiles. Physically shooting down thousands of satellites is too expensive, and it also risks littering orbit with dangerous debris. Instead, we should use space-based electronic warfare systems (like the Tirada-2S) to jam passing satellites and combat lasers (like the Peresvet) to burn out their highly sensitive antennas.

Finally, our own symmetrical response is critically important. The state must accelerate the development of a domestic low-orbit communications network within the framework of the Sphere program and the Bureau 1440 project. By the end of 2026, the Russian army should have its own orbital internet and secure military smartphones. This will shift the focus of the conflict from the destruction of ground-based towers to space communications and ensure the Russian Armed Forces' superiority in battle management. Otherwise, we will face another round of escalation in the conflict in Ukraine, with unpredictable consequences.
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  1. + 41
    22 May 2026 03: 59
    Now the question is: what needs to be done in the context of future changes?

    The military-industrial complex and the Ministry of Defense must be headed by people with advanced thinking in science and technology...technologists and scientists, in a word.
    Looking at the current leaders, I am gnawed by vague doubts that they realize what century they live in.
    Now we need to be one step ahead of the enemy to defeat him... but we are marking time... marking time... there is no movement forward.
    1. +1
      22 May 2026 04: 51
      Does Starling operate in Russia? Only Crimea and the Ukraine, I think?
      1. +6
        22 May 2026 04: 56
        Quote: ASSAD1
        Does Starling operate in Russia? Only Crimea and the Ukraine, I think?

        Starlink doesn't work, but SpaceX Direct does because it's Kyivstar or Beeline Kazakhstan.
        1. + 15
          23 May 2026 05: 17
          The use of Starlink terminals during Ukraine's aggression against Russia is no secret.

          "Ukraine" is not a subject. There is no "Ukrainian aggression against Russia." Ukraine ceased to exist in 2014.
          Western aggression against Russia is underway. This way of posing the question reflects the true state of affairs.

          Quote: The same LYOKHA
          Now we need to be one step ahead of the enemy to defeat him... but we are marking time... marking time... there is no movement forward.

          "It's too late to drink Borjomi." We won't catch up anymore.
          "Mom's pies," which give answers to the whole country along the lines of "we can, but why?" are not capable of turning the situation around.

          Space, electronics, and AI are where we're hopelessly lagging. And these are precisely the areas where the enemy's strength resides. And that enemy isn't "Ukraine" at all. Unfortunately. Because the enemy is much larger and more powerful than "Ukraine." They're not even fighting us directly, and we're already suffering losses. "Ukraine" is simply a punching bag that the enemy has placed in our place.

          The primary goal of any war is to deprive the enemy of his advantages. The enemy knows our advantages, and with the help of a "punching bag," he takes away what is our advantage. Russia, however, hasn't even begun to respond proportionately.

          We need to destroy space by triggering a cascading destruction of satellites and creating a dense cloud of debris.
          We need to hit ASML and data centers in Europe.
          We need to destroy the underwater information cables.

          One large-scale operation, grave consequences for the world, a chance not to lose for Russia.

          Yes, space will be lost for all of humanity for decades, but Russia's defeat in this war is not worth it. Russia is not as dependent on space as Western civilization.
          1. 0
            24 May 2026 17: 58
            Quote: The same Lech
            Now we need to stay one step ahead of the enemy...
            The enemy had to be listened to, at the very least, because he didn't hide his intentions or what he was investing his resources in: how he was developing communications, automated control systems, space... and so on. They advertised all of this, but...
            Quote: The same Lech
            ...looking at the current leaders, I am gnawed by vague doubts that they realize what century they live in...
            Their priorities are clear - to hang out beautifully
          2. +2
            24 May 2026 18: 11
            We need to destroy space by triggering a cascading destruction of satellites and creating a dense cloud of debris.
            We need to hit ASML and data centers in Europe.
            We need to destroy the underwater information cables.
            Well, that's all true. Dialectics. Anything highly developed is easily destroyed by primitive, barbaric methods. But to the rest of the world, we're still barbarians. We dump a few tons of ball bearings in low orbits and that's it. Game theory again... Playing by someone else's imposed rules is so-so. Reactive politics is so-so. It's when you act or respond only in response to something. And it's not a fact that such a response is precisely what they're seeking. Alas, as far as I'm concerned, we (the people) are still the losers of the Cold War and the subsequent collapse of the USSR. Demographics clearly shows this. We're simply dying out... We have a lot (things, clothes, cars), but the most important thing is missing - confidence in the future. And the elite plays its own games, essentially not caring about the indigenous people (slaves can and do be imported from India and Kenya); petty interests are more important. Of course, the people (not all of them, of course) are to blame for this. They bought into it, betrayed the USSR, sold it out for pants and gum. Perhaps out of naivety or ignorance, but I'd like to ask the officer in the photo: How are you doing now?
          3. -1
            1 June 2026 14: 45
            We won't catch up. Look at the percentage invested in education and science—a pittance. Israel is currently the leader. In short, we're 30-40 years behind.
      2. 0
        23 May 2026 12: 06
        Quote: ASSAD1
        Does Starling operate in Russia? Only Crimea and the Ukraine, I think?

        Unfortunately, it works for those who need it. Starlink antennas have been spotted on the enemy's latest long-range UAVs.
    2. + 16
      22 May 2026 05: 45
      Quote: The same Lech
      Now the question is: what needs to be done in the context of future changes?

      The military-industrial complex and the Ministry of Defense must be headed by people with advanced thinking in science and technology...technologists and scientists, in a word.
      Looking at the current leaders, I am gnawed by vague doubts that they realize what century they live in.
      Now we need to be one step ahead of the enemy to defeat him... but we are marking time... marking time... there is no movement forward.

      Never before in our country have there been so many narrow-minded people in power...Where is the Mind, Honor and Conscience?
      1. + 14
        22 May 2026 09: 11
        “There were worse times,
        But it was not mean! "

        (C)
    3. -7
      22 May 2026 05: 56
      The article's description once again confirms the correctness of decisive, active actions at the start of the 2022 Cold War, without reliance on agreements like Minsk 1 and 2, and the countless number of Istanbuls, Abu Dhabi, and the stinking and toxic Anchorage.
      1. P
        +1
        23 May 2026 21: 09
        There were no decisive actions. There was a clown show with movement through enemy territory without ammunition, reconnaissance, or security.
    4. -6
      22 May 2026 06: 28
      First of all, it’s not the head that understands, but the hands, and there aren’t any, even if my father says do it, who will implement it?
      1. -5
        22 May 2026 17: 06
        Well... as for the Ministry of Defense, there is already some certainty - this is "Bureau 1440" with the "Rassvet" project - a key Russian project for the creation of a modern direct communication system "satellite - smartphone".
        The article writes:
        Finally, our own symmetrical response is critically important.

        It's unclear why the author of the article doesn't mention our system, which should be up and running by now, but is currently being actively deployed.
        1. +4
          23 May 2026 05: 28
          Quote: Kmet
          It's unclear why the author of the article doesn't mention our system, which should be up and running by now, but is currently being actively deployed.

          Because "promises are not the same as marriage." What this "private shop" is cooking up there is a big question. Why is a private company pushing a project at public expense?
          Once they do it, then we'll see...
    5. + 27
      22 May 2026 07: 20
      Quote: The same LYOKHA
      The military-industrial complex and the Ministry of Defense must be headed by people with advanced thinking in science and technology...technologists and scientists, in a word.

      Such people usually don't stay long and prefer other countries where no one restricts the Internet, at least.
      P.S.: We somehow forget that Alex (Alexander) Krizhevsky (born in the Ukrainian SSR) and Ilya Efimovich Sutskever (born in Gorky) made a breakthrough in AI. Together, under the guidance of Nobel laureate Geoffrey Hinton, they created a powerful visual recognition network, AlexNet, which revolutionized neural network research. The parents of Alex Krizhevsky and Ilya Sutskever emigrated from Russia in the 90s.
      1. + 16
        22 May 2026 10: 28
        Quote: Puncher
        Such people usually don't stay long and prefer other countries where no one restricts the Internet, at least.

        That's all true, but does the government understand the seriousness of this problem?
        After all, the data on the outflow of "intellectual capital" from Russia over the past twenty years is catastrophic. And this isn't just an outflow of money to offshore havens. This trend is a thousand times more dangerous for the country, and will have very painful repercussions in the near future.
        Open data is, of course, mostly indirect, but even it is astonishing.
        In 2022, the head of the Russian Ministry of Digital Development, Maksut Shadayev, stated: "In total, approximately 100,000 IT specialists are located outside our country." (Two years later, however, his own department cut the sturgeon by a whopping two-thirds.)
        According to the Russian Academy of Sciences, tens of thousands of researchers have left the country in recent decades, with peaks in 2014 and 2022.
        Nikolai Dolgushin (2021): "The number of highly qualified specialists leaving Russia increased from 12 in 2012 to 70 in 2021."
        Valentin Parmon (2023): "Over the past 5 years, Russia has lost about 50 scientists."
        A common commentary line is: let them get out of the country, the air will be cleaner without them. That might be true... About the air. But the problem is, it's not the stupidest people leaving. The intellectual elite is fleeing. Those who are leaving are the ones who, in principle, could have provided (figuratively speaking) the proverbial "answer to Musk."
        And this trend has become especially strong in recent years. We remember these names well: Novoselov, Durov, Volozh, Tinkov, Storonsky, Veselov, Bunina, Khudaverdyan, Sverdlov, Shulgin, Faldin...
        Many professors from leading universities (HSE, Moscow State University, RANEPA) and researchers from academic institutes left.
        But you can't replace them with migrant workers from Tajikistan. That's not the case.
        1. +7
          22 May 2026 11: 21
          Quote: Intelligence
          That's all true, but does the government understand the seriousness of this problem?

          I think so. But you're completely in vain trying to inject your thoughts and concerns into the heads of the VPR. It's entirely possible that they believe the risks associated with "horizontal connections" and the opportunity to organize society, connected by the internet, far outweigh the risks of external influence and lagging behind in the scientific and technological revolution. The existing "nuclear shield" and the Russian National Guard will be enough for them for another 25-30 years, and what happens after that is a mystery.
        2. + 13
          22 May 2026 11: 51
          Quote: Intelligence
          That's all true, but does the government understand the seriousness of this problem?

          Remember the 90s, when veterans of the military-industrial complex were shouting at the whole country, "Come to your senses! We'll retire, and who'll come after us? The connection between generations of developers will be broken and never restored!" And who listened? And what led to that? Nobody cares. We're burning through our ancestors' reserves; look, they stockpiled enough tanks for four years. They tore up a construction site at Baikonur for nothing, and now we're strutting around, "We've got a spare site left over from the Soviet era; so what if we had to replace it?" But what if there hadn't been? What if the tanks hadn't been stockpiled? I don't see the point in appealing to common sense in those who are supposed to show it...
          After all, the data on the outflow of "intellectual capital" from Russia over the past twenty years is catastrophic.

          Another possibility is that they simply don't care. As long as there are resources available to help Russia's brain drain, they can ignore it.
        3. +6
          22 May 2026 13: 11
          Many professors from leading universities (HSE, Moscow State University, RANEPA) and researchers from academic institutes left.
          and you know, they're leaving, like there are fewer people, but there are still only two or three people for a scientific position, and the state still can't find a normal amount of money for those who remain request
          1. +6
            22 May 2026 13: 20
            Quote from alexoff
            Many professors from leading universities (HSE, Moscow State University, RANEPA) and researchers from academic institutes left.
            and you know, they're leaving, like there are fewer people, but there are still only two or three people for a scientific position, and the state still can't find a normal amount of money for those who remain request

            However, money is found for other purposes.
            True, then the question inevitably arises: why don’t we still have an analogue of Starlink?
            1. +7
              22 May 2026 13: 32
              So who has the question? The internet rabble? The respected gentlemen don't care. hi
              1. +1
                22 May 2026 21: 16
                As for the internet, there's one dubious but positive aspect. They'll stop blocking websites and other stuff. Because the connection will be untraceable, direct, and everywhere. You can't have an electronic warfare system for every person.
                1. 0
                  22 May 2026 22: 18
                  I don't think anyone will give us this. Musk would have to have a contract with the carriers so they'd transfer the money to him. Or we'd have to buy all sorts of Uzbek SIM cards.
                  1. 0
                    23 May 2026 10: 22
                    Why does Musk need operators, and even more so, the user? For example, which operator do you buy a VPN from? None, you install it yourself. So, here too, you'll need to download a program and "get" the internet. And the operators will be calling each other.
                    1. 0
                      23 May 2026 15: 29
                      For some reason, Musk does everything through carriers. I think it's because there are different regulations, and his internet connection won't work everywhere. I seriously doubt it'll work between buildings if there's no satellite directly overhead. A drone is out in the open, but a person needs it to work in a parking lot, too.
        4. -5
          22 May 2026 13: 22
          Many professors from leading universities (HSE, Moscow State University, RANEPA) and researchers from academic institutes left.

          Just don't mention Moscow State University.
          Name at least one professor from the Faculty of Computational Mathematics and Cybernetics who has left in the last 20 years.
          I'll tell you who returned.

          And from the tower, yes. For example, Yasin, and thank God.
          1. +5
            22 May 2026 20: 51
            Quote: bk316
            Name at least one professor from the Faculty of Computational Mathematics and Cybernetics who has left in the last 20 years.

            Lobanov left the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics at Moscow State University. Leaving the Faculty of Computational Mathematics and Cybernetics at Moscow State University isn't easy—it's due to the focus and the fact that the work is primarily on government contracts, and the professors are older, making it simply harder to leave. Mostly, the younger people left.
            Quote: bk316
            And from the tower, yes. For example, Yasin, and thank God.

            Yasin never left, he died at 23.
        5. 0
          22 May 2026 13: 25
          His department also cut the sturgeon population by as much as 2/3

          Nothing was cut, the relocators simply returned.
          1. +3
            22 May 2026 14: 10
            Quote: bk316
            Nothing was cut, the relocators simply returned.

            Anything is possible, no one denies it.
            Perhaps some professors and strong faculty members, who often combined their work with international research centers, have returned. Their "departure" may be presented as a "long-term internship" or "work at a foreign university."
            Or perhaps the data was adjusted to avoid creating panic.
            Who knows?
            1. 0
              22 May 2026 15: 24
              Who knows?

              The professors, university staff, and graduate students know.
              I know because I taught at Moscow State University for 10 years and regularly visit the department.
              You shouldn't trust information from the internet, it's 90% fake.
              What's valuable is what you've seen yourself, or what a friend of yours told you as an eyewitness. Third-hand information is unreliable, and on the internet it's even more so. intentionally distorted.

              By the way, I heard an interesting statement yesterday.
              Everyone wants things to get better, but they only perceive information that things have gotten worse. laughing And this is the physiology of the human brain.
              1. +5
                22 May 2026 16: 15
                Quote: bk316
                You shouldn't trust information from the internet, it's 90% fake.

                You can agree. Provided you don't know how to search, where to search, or what exactly to search for. Especially when Roskomnadzor (the Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Media) is in charge.
        6. ptt
          0
          22 May 2026 14: 16
          Quote: Intelligence
          Quote: Puncher
          Such people usually don't stay long and prefer other countries where no one restricts the Internet, at least.

          That's all true, but does the government understand the seriousness of this problem?
          After all, the data on the outflow of "intellectual capital" from Russia over the past twenty years is catastrophic. And this isn't just an outflow of money to offshore havens. This trend is a thousand times more dangerous for the country, and will have very painful repercussions in the near future.
          Open data is, of course, mostly indirect, but even it is astonishing.
          In 2022, the head of the Russian Ministry of Digital Development, Maksut Shadayev, stated: "In total, approximately 100,000 IT specialists are located outside our country." (Two years later, however, his own department cut the sturgeon by a whopping two-thirds.)
          According to the Russian Academy of Sciences, tens of thousands of researchers have left the country in recent decades, with peaks in 2014 and 2022.
          Nikolai Dolgushin (2021): "The number of highly qualified specialists leaving Russia increased from 12 in 2012 to 70 in 2021."
          Valentin Parmon (2023): "Over the past 5 years, Russia has lost about 50 scientists."
          A common commentary line is: let them get out of the country, the air will be cleaner without them. That might be true... About the air. But the problem is, it's not the stupidest people leaving. The intellectual elite is fleeing. Those who are leaving are the ones who, in principle, could have provided (figuratively speaking) the proverbial "answer to Musk."
          And this trend has become especially strong in recent years. We remember these names well: Novoselov, Durov, Volozh, Tinkov, Storonsky, Veselov, Bunina, Khudaverdyan, Sverdlov, Shulgin, Faldin...
          Many professors from leading universities (HSE, Moscow State University, RANEPA) and researchers from academic institutes left.
          But you can't replace them with migrant workers from Tajikistan. That's not the case.

          It seems it's too late to "remove peritonitis." The train has left the station.
        7. +3
          22 May 2026 18: 30
          Intelligence, asking the question "Does the government understand the severity of this problem?" is feigning saintly simplicity. Of course they do, but the appropriate question is "Why is virtually nothing being done?" But for me personally, that's not even a question, because the answer is obvious. For a "gas station" country, developing its own science and industry is an unnecessary expense; the expenditures alone on maintaining its status as a "great nuclear power" are enough to ensure that the power of the raw materials oligarchy continues to be taken into account.
        8. +1
          22 May 2026 19: 11
          Durov and Tinkov, who do I think they are? VK and Tinkoff? Well, while Durov can be considered part of the intellectual elite (even though he stole it, he created VK, and then eventually finished Telegram, albeit with a team), Tinkov is hardly one. He's just a typical cunning profiteer. I don't know about the others. The name Volozh only evokes vague memories, and not the most flattering ones. HSE and RANEPA, in my opinion, are basically hothouses for cultivating the fifth column... So-so examples. Although I generally agree, the "brains" are draining. And draining rapidly... And the government just notes it and shrugs, doing nothing. Probably, soon, IT professionals will be banned from traveling abroad, like the police used to be (I still don't understand why they did that)))). And some kind of nonsense is happening with scientists right now. I recently read an article about an 80-year-old scientist who was convicted of treason after publishing an article in an Iranian (allegedly friendly country) scientific journal. Even though it had already undergone two separate examinations for state secrets... So yes, you're largely right.
    6. + 12
      22 May 2026 07: 38
      To achieve this, the entire system must be changed, based on meritocracy rather than nepotism. No one in power will agree to this.
      1. -2
        22 May 2026 19: 33
        Quote: Glock-17
        To achieve this, the entire system must be changed, based on meritocracy rather than nepotism. No one in power will agree to this.

        There was a country where billions were not needed, but they came up with the word "blat"...
    7. + 11
      22 May 2026 12: 56
      The military-industrial complex and the Ministry of Defense must be headed by people with advanced thinking in science and technology...
      How forward-thinking can the commander of the joint group of forces, Valery Gerasimov, who is already over 70 years old, have?
      During WWII, our army was commanded by marshals and generals over 40. The Wehrmacht was commanded by generals over 50. But the French army in 1940 was commanded by old geezers the same age as our general, with a surname reminiscent of the Turgenev character who sadistically murdered a poor dog. The result is clear... sad
    8. +2
      22 May 2026 12: 59
      Looking at the current leaders, I am gnawed by vague doubts that they realize what century they live in.
      You're wrong to doubt it. I'm sure they have the latest iPhone in their pocket, their fleet of cars, and their mansions are stuffed with all sorts of smart electronics. bully
    9. +3
      22 May 2026 13: 20
      The military-industrial complex and the Ministry of Defense must be headed by people with advanced thinking in science and technology...technologists and scientists, in a word.

      Tell me please, Alexey, why should I go to work in the military-industrial complex or the Ministry of Defense?
      I was persistently offered this in my fifth year at university, and I would have the same shoulder straps as at the Higher Military School. laughing But I refused back then in the 90s, when it was tempting, and now it’s not for me or my son
      What for?
      Or an even broader question: why does a scientist need shoulder straps?
    10. 0
      22 May 2026 19: 52
      Looking at the current leaders, I am gnawed by vague doubts that they realize what century they live in.

      With the average age of the country's leadership well over 70, I'm not at all troubled by any vague doubts. How could there be any doubt about their adequate perception of the realities around them at that age? It's high time they all retired, went to their dachas, and got used to the land, yet they, forgetting about their beloved selves, want to ban driving for those over 65 (facepalm).
    11. The comment was deleted.
  2. +6
    22 May 2026 04: 02
    We don't have symmetrical ones, only asymmetrical ones... So, yes, we need this, we need that. But... the economy can't cope, science can't either, we don't have our own technologies... There are no real results. We'll threaten with the almighty hazelnut tree and the nuclear club. smile
  3. + 14
    22 May 2026 04: 23
    Even during my service, they used to say that communications are the nerves of the army, and in the Russian Armed Forces they still use flags and signal flares for control.
    Private entrepreneur Elon Musk will soon pollute near-Earth space so much that there will be no room left for other systems. It's high time to stop this activity.
    Concerning:
    Quote: The same LYOKHA
    Looking at the current leaders, I am gnawed by vague doubts that they realize what century they live in.

    I've never seen Putin talking on a cell phone or sitting in front of a laptop. Maybe that's why his inner circle is so successful in foisting on him concepts that are sure to fail?
    1. +7
      22 May 2026 04: 59
      Quote: yuriy55
      Private entrepreneur Elon Musk will soon "pollute" near-Earth space like this

      No one has the strength or resources for this. You simply don't realize the scale of this.
      Quote: yuriy55
      So I have never seen Putin talking on a mobile phone or sitting in front of a laptop.

      Evil tongues claim that everything is written down for him on paper. This is true in our digital age.
      1. + 11
        22 May 2026 06: 19
        The entire country can see the albums they bring him. But here's what's interesting: the first satellite launched in 1957, and then the cosmonaut in 1961. The USSR began studying the fundamentals of space engines in the lean 20s. Now, who will advance technology if the internet is soon banned?
        1. +4
          22 May 2026 06: 52
          Quote: Gardamir
          Now, who will advance technology if the Internet is soon banned?

          Well, it depends on how you look at it. If we're pitting ourselves against the US and Europe (and their allies), then it's better to abolish the internet altogether. We somehow managed to live without it before. Of course, that would be life on par with underdeveloped countries... Under different circumstances, the current system of power would be forced to negotiate with them on unfavorable terms. What's the point?
          It's all about AI, which is developing incredibly rapidly. For example, Anthropic recently released Claude Mythos. It was released for limited use to a number of important companies, and it's already been reported that it was used to hack Apple's macOS in just five days! The security of which cost Apple billions of dollars and five years of work. Moreover, it's reported that the version of Claude Mythos released was limited in capabilities. This means that the United States, represented by companies like Anthropic, Google, and OpenAI, currently poses a cyberthreat to the entire world. The question is which of these three will be the first to create a super AI that will dominate the entire digital world, because weaker AIs will either be absorbed or forced to barricade themselves in some limited space on secure servers, unable to function properly. A super AI will dominate the resources of all the world's data centers and energy sources. In short, perhaps the best solution would be to abandon the internet altogether...
          1. + 11
            22 May 2026 07: 12
            Quote: Puncher
            In general, perhaps the best solution would be to give up the Internet altogether...

            And we should abandon satellite navigation in cars, as Nastia Makarova suggests. And at the same time, abandon satellite navigation for maritime and air transport. Our ancestors once navigated the seas by the stars, and pilots once flew using flight maps tucked into their boots, right Nastya?
            1. 0
              22 May 2026 07: 27
              Quote: Rosemary
              And we should also abandon satellite navigation in cars, as Nastia Makarova suggests. And at the same time, we should abandon satellite navigation for maritime and air transport.

              Navigation systems don't really need the internet. Why give it up?
              1. +3
                22 May 2026 07: 45
                At the same time. If we're going to have a good time, let's have a good time!
                Quote: Nastia Makarova
                We'll live without GLONASS...
            2. +3
              22 May 2026 08: 41
              And that's why I want to live at least another hundred years to find out how people will remember the current ruler.
              1. +5
                22 May 2026 09: 24
                Well, it's not hard to predict even now - in Russia, since ancient times, when power changes, there has been a pattern of looking for the guilty:
                - under Kerensky, Nicholas II was blamed for all troubles;
                - under Lenin, Nicholas II and Kerensky were blamed for all troubles;
                - under Khrushchev, Stalin, Nicholas II and a little Kerensky were blamed for all the troubles;
                - under Brezhnev, Khrushchev, Nicholas II and, to a certain extent, Stalin were blamed for all the troubles;
                - under Gorbachev, Brezhnev, Stalin and a little bit Khrushchev were blamed for all the troubles;
                - under Yeltsin, Stalin, Gorbachev and Brezhnev were blamed for all the troubles;
                - Under Putin, Gorbachev and Yeltsin are blamed for all troubles.
                It's not hard to predict who will be blamed for all the troubles after Putin.

                It's no coincidence that we have a joke about three letters in a safe when a manager changes. The first letter is, "Blame it all on me."
                1. +1
                  22 May 2026 09: 28
                  Quote: Rosemary
                  It's no wonder that a joke about three letters in a safe during a management change originated in Russia. The first letter reads, "Blame it all on me."

                  This is, by the way, Russia's terrible problem: the constant search for someone to blame for everything. It's really unpleasant to realize that you don't have to look far to find someone to blame.
                2. +1
                  22 May 2026 09: 43
                  Stupidity, the enemies of the USSR are anomalies in everything, including the fact that they cowardly blame the Soviet communists and security officers for everything they did during the 40 years of their evil anti-Soviet period - with their totally false Perestroika, while they themselves have nothing to do with it.
                  And at the beginning of the article there is proof that they have shifted the blame for what they did against other enemies of the USSR onto them, while they themselves are playing the victims.
                  1. 0
                    22 May 2026 12: 13
                    Oh, I haven't seen you in the comments for a while. Are you still adding "enemies of the USSR" to every comment? Or is it the chatbot that's been generating the same clichés for a while now?
                3. +1
                  22 May 2026 12: 13
                  Quote: Rosemary
                  In Russia since ancient times, during changes of power

                  Don't need this from Zadornov: "...only here..." ))
                  This is a common worldwide practice, based not on our unique mentality, but on the nature of man as such.
                  I worked in American, European, and Asian corporations, in different offices in different countries (in Russian holdings too) - EVERYWHERE is the same, if you erase the tinsel of external differences of purely business etiquette))
                  1. 0
                    22 May 2026 13: 17
                    In the business sphere at the corporate level, you may be right, but at the state level, it is somehow not customary to blame all the troubles in the world on the top officials of the state - their predecessors.

                    In the U.S. before Trump Former US presidents have always been treated with markedly deep respect at the national level, granting them the status of honorary statesmen (in the past, of course). It's Trump who still trashes Biden in almost every speech, and sometimes Obama.

                    And in the same Ukraine to Zelensky, who dreamed of putting Poroshenko in jail and initiated a bunch of criminal cases against him, neither Kuchma drove Kravchuk, nor Yushchenko Kuchma, nor Yanukovych Yushchenko
                4. +4
                  22 May 2026 13: 15
                  Well, under Putin, they're doing things more wisely. Yeltsin isn't blamed; the 90s are. Although that's the same thing. Gorbachev isn't blamed; the Soviet regime is. This is where things get confusing. Which period of the Soviet regime are they blaming? And thirdly, Lenin is to blame for everything—again, the Soviet regime.
                  Now this method has been modernized... The West is to blame for everything.
          2. +4
            22 May 2026 08: 35
            Well, it's simple. When all the computer people are kicked out of the country, there will be no one to look after the internet, and it will die on its own.
            1. +1
              22 May 2026 09: 19
              Quote: Gardamir
              Well, it's simple. When all the computer people are kicked out of the country, there will be no one to look after the internet, and it will die on its own.

              They might not actually be kicked out. The networks will simply degrade and they'll disperse on their own.
            2. -2
              22 May 2026 19: 41
              Quote: Gardamir
              Well, it's simple. When all the computer people are kicked out of the country, there will be no one to look after the internet, and it will die on its own.

              Even if we brought back the USSR now, the effect would be the same: the state wouldn't provide the currency to buy consumer goods, and that's it – the computer specialists would leave on their own, and no one would even try to kick them out...
              1. +1
                22 May 2026 19: 49
                By the word “drive out,” I mean to create conditions that are impossible for normal living.
                1. 0
                  22 May 2026 20: 48
                  Quote: Gardamir
                  By the word “drive out,” I mean to create conditions that are impossible for normal living.

                  And now it is enough to clamp down on imports a little - which will inevitably happen in the case of the USSR (the currency will go to sharp necessary) and living conditions will become unbearable for the current ones - how is it "without an iPhone and Turkey, and 4 oranges - that's a trip to the hospital"?
                  I'm exaggerating, of course, but we all saw how it looked in 2014 when external sanctions restrictions began – and now there will be internal ones, but with the same effect.
          3. +2
            22 May 2026 08: 52
            Quote: Puncher
            Which of these three will be the first to create a super AI that will take over the entire digital world?

            Which of the three is this?! Gref and his Gigachad are obviously the leaders.
            1. +4
              22 May 2026 09: 24
              Quote: Mishka78
              Which of the three is this?! Gref and his Gigachad are obviously the leaders.

              All we can do is joke. But the real news is getting more and more alarming with each passing day. OpenAI has filed for an IPO, a tidy sum of money, and will have the wherewithal to wage war on Anthropic and Google. Anthropic has also hinted at an IPO, but it's unclear yet.
          4. +6
            22 May 2026 12: 17
            Quote: Puncher
            Of course, this will be life at the level of underdeveloped countries...


            The USSR decided to abandon consumer goods like "they can do without 100 varieties of sausage and nice jeans"... the result was decades of lamenting "what country was sold out for chewing gum and jeans"...

            An attempt to take away from a person something tasty, pleasant and interesting (and the Internet is comfort, entertainment, communication, convenience in services, global omnipotence) is a reliable way to make him an enemy of these "takers - in the name of a good purpose."
            Unfortunately, our Roskomnadzor and other "forcibly introducing 'correct' values" have every chance of repeating this sad experience "for an encore."
          5. -1
            22 May 2026 13: 16
            Well, you're just imagining things, of course. Hackers are constantly breaking into operating systems, including those inside companies, to identify holes in advance. Plus, American intelligence agencies leave bugs everywhere. And there are two types of phones: Mac and Android, and it's clear who owns both. No AI needed.
        2. +4
          22 May 2026 08: 32
          Quote: Gardamir
          Now, who will advance technology if the Internet is soon banned?

          The country's top technologists are Chemezov, Manturov, Mishustin, Murashko... Medvedev, Tyutina, and Rotenberg are on hand... Yes, there are tons of them in the country...
          1. +4
            22 May 2026 09: 01
            Darkness fell over the country.
            By the way, did you know that the Duma is considering a law on insulting women's feelings?
            1. +3
              22 May 2026 10: 04
              By whom? laughing "" "" "" "" ""
              1. +4
                22 May 2026 11: 31
                Quote from AdAstra
                By the way, did you know that the Duma is considering a law on insulting women's feelings?

                Quote from AdAstra
                By whom?

                Or what? wink
            2. +4
              22 May 2026 10: 42
              Quote: Gardamir
              By the way, did you know that the Duma is considering a law on insulting women's feelings?

              I know only one way to insult a woman - to promise and fail to deliver... feel
      2. +7
        22 May 2026 09: 26
        Evil tongues claim that everything is written down for him on paper. This is true in our digital age.

        After that gift of pagers from Israel, it would be surprising if Hezbollah didn't switch to cigarettes :((...
        1. 0
          22 May 2026 11: 41
          Quote from solar
          After that gift of pagers from Israel, it would be surprising if Hezbollah didn't switch to cigarettes :((...

          I believe our security level is an order of magnitude higher than that of the Hez. Things like a phone can be checked every day.
      3. +3
        22 May 2026 12: 22
        Quote: yuriy55
        So I have never seen Putin talking on a mobile phone or sitting in front of a laptop.

        DmitryAnatolich was showing off his tablet-phone. Was it better?
        But seriously, yes, you're right. On the one hand, for Putin, any identifying electronic device like a smartphone is a matter of state security at the highest level.
        But on the other hand, yes, Putin may genuinely not understand HOW important the internet, communications, electronic entertainment, and the global information space are for modern man. And that's precisely why, yes, for now, the "tower of prohibitors and restrictions" is winning with its idea of ​​locking everyone away from information (and, who knows, physical ones too) within Russia, imposing total control, and allowing access only to Party-vetted "white sites from the Sberbank-VK-Yandex-Gosuslugi list." And Putin seems to think, "It's okay, we lived without all this not long ago, why are they whining..."
        1. +3
          22 May 2026 13: 23
          Sorry for the banality. But I remembered a man who took over a country with a plough and left it with an atomic bomb.
          People have been talking about the current one for a long time. He took over a country with computers and left it with bills.
    2. 0
      22 May 2026 19: 35
      Quote: yuriy55
      Even during my service they used to say that communications are the nerves of the army.

      TA-57? feel
  4. + 17
    22 May 2026 04: 52
    But for now, Musk's speed is modest - only about 4 Mbps.

    For comparison, NATO's Link-16 data transmission system operates at speeds of... a maximum of 112 kbps. In case anyone doesn't realize, SpaceX Direct operates at 4096 kbps, while Link-16 operates at 112 kbps.
    I don't think there's any need to explain the purpose of the Link-16 communications system; NATO's entire weapons and combat command system is tied to it. And then comes a satellite communications system that, at a modest level of development, delivers 4096 kbps.
    Now, the main thing the author didn't mention. SpaceX Direct isn't a free system, but rather a service provided by a mobile operator. This means that SpaceX and Kyivstar have entered into an agreement under which the latter provides its subscribers with a paid SpaceX Direct service, which ensures communication in the absence of a mobile operator signal. What does this mean? In the case of Starlink, SpaceX determines the system's coverage area and can block terminals from operating over certain areas. In the case of SpaceX Direct, this is determined by the mobile operator, in this case Kyivstar, which can also control the subscriber by enabling or disabling this service. This means that using a Kyivstar SIM card is possible, but if the SBU determines that it is being used against the Ukrainian Armed Forces, it will be blocked.
    Also, the Ukrainian Armed Forces will no longer need to coordinate equipment operation over Russian territory with either the Pentagon or SpaceX. Any legal claims against SpaceX will be redirected to Kyivstar, as if you were suing them.
    has a specific electronic profile that can be detected by the Russian Army's electronic warfare systems and is relatively visible from the air.

    This is an exaggeration. The transmitter power of a cell phone is too weak for this, and given the size of the "kill zone," this would only be possible from the air, directly adjacent to the device itself. And our aircraft don't fly there.
    The state needs to accelerate the creation of a domestic low-orbit communications network within the framework of the Sphere program and the Bureau 1440 project.

    Vain hopes. The Bureau 1440 satellites are CubeSats, and their power output is in no way comparable to the Starlink v3 satellites that will support SpaceX Direct, or the AST SpaceMobile satellites, a photo of which the author provided. Place a Bureau 1440 CubeSat next to them, and you wouldn't even see it.
    We will see another round of escalation of the conflict in Ukraine with difficult to predict consequences.

    UAVs + SpaceX Direct + AI from Palantir = destruction of air defenses and outright genocide of everything that UAVs can reach.
    1. -1
      22 May 2026 08: 26
      Quote: Puncher
      UAVs + SpaceX Direct + AI from Palantir = destruction of air defenses and outright genocide of everything that UAVs can reach.

      This once again demonstrates that the use of nuclear weapons, both in orbit and on the ground, is inevitable. We simply need to prepare for it mentally and physically. And all this talk about there being no winners is just empty talk. Yes, Western civilization will collapse, but humans will survive...!
      1. +9
        22 May 2026 09: 16
        Quote: Mussashi
        Yes, Western civilization will collapse, but people will survive...!

        If you're willing to accept that, in addition to this, Russia will be destroyed as an independent state, and the survivors will be dismissed as "those madmen who wanted to destroy the world," then yes. Every day, someone in the world voluntarily ends their existence...
    2. 0
      22 May 2026 08: 38
      Quote: Puncher
      For comparison, NATO's Link-16 data transmission system operates at speeds of... a maximum of 112 kbps. In case anyone doesn't realize, SpaceX Direct operates at 4096 kbps, while Link-16 operates at 112 kbps.

      My high-speed connection has never given me more than 12 (11,6) Mbps for downloading from the Zone, but it says:
      1. +1
        22 May 2026 09: 30
        Quote: yuriy55
        and they write:

        Even if you divide it by three, SpaceX Direct is still faster than Link-16, not to mention that Link-16 is only usable within radio visibility.
      2. +2
        22 May 2026 09: 33
        There are different speeds for downloading and uploading.
    3. -1
      22 May 2026 13: 24
      This is too exaggerated. The transmitting power of a cell phone is too low for this.
      So it won't be difficult to jam, the transmitter is weak, the receiver too
      In the case of SpaceX Direct, this is determined by the mobile operator, in this case Kyivstar, which can also control the subscriber's activation and deactivation of this service. This means that using a Kyivstar SIM card is possible, but if the SBU determines that it is working against the Ukrainian Armed Forces, it will be blocked.
      Well, in general, it depends more on Musk whether he will enable this service everywhere or not.
      UAVs + SpaceX Direct + AI from Palantir = destruction of air defenses and outright genocide of everything that UAVs can reach.
      But we too can buy Ukrainian SIM cards, and not only Ukrainian ones...
      1. +1
        23 May 2026 08: 56
        Quote from alexoff
        So it won't be difficult to jam, the transmitter is weak, the receiver too

        Yeah, as easy as pie... It's easy enough to knock out the enemy's communications... Why didn't they knock it out then? For humanitarian reasons?
        Quote from alexoff
        Well, in general, it depends more on Musk whether he will enable this service everywhere or not.

        There are no restrictions there.
        Quote from alexoff
        We can also buy Ukrainian SIM cards, and not only Ukrainian ones...

        Of course, we can enrich Kyivstar, which will determine the activation location by geolocation and block it... And how much will this empty idea cost?
        1. 0
          23 May 2026 15: 33
          Quote: Puncher
          Yeah, as easy as pie... It's easy enough to knock out the enemy's communications... Why didn't they knock it out then? For humanitarian reasons?

          Haven't you lost the connection between the satellite and your mobile? Well, because there isn't one yet. Or is your connection like when you're playing cards, where you have to lose it everywhere and in its entirety?
          Quote: Puncher
          There are no restrictions there.

          There are restrictions on the map where it works and where it doesn't.
          Quote: Puncher
          Of course, we can enrich Kyivstar, which will determine the activation location by geolocation and block...

          So who's stopping you from launching it in flight?
          Quote: Puncher
          And how much will this empty undertaking cost?

          Why bother launching drones with someone else's SIM cards? I think unless you hire idiots, it'll be very costly for the enemy. But of course, everyone will block everything, and mega-expensive SIM cards are incredibly expensive.
    4. 0
      22 May 2026 17: 28
      Incidentally, the Sphere project was shut down in July of last year. hi
      https://www.rbc.ru/technology_and_media/09/07/2025/686e1aa99a79473b8bdada08
      However, the "Dawn" project from "Bureau 1440" continues its development and even... deployment.
      1. +2
        23 May 2026 09: 01
        Quote: Kmet
        However, the "Dawn" project from "Bureau 1440" continues its development and even... deployment.

        Problems will arise when it's put into operation. It will turn out that the satellite will only be able to handle a handful of subscribers at a time because there won't be enough power.
        1. 0
          23 May 2026 11: 17
          I understand this very well. My point is that an understanding of the current state of affairs is essential, not lengthy arguments along the lines of "wouldn't it be nice for us to have something like this?" If an author is writing an article, they should at least consider analytical technical data for comparing systems, rather than describing a single system without specifics regarding comparable conditions in the domestic industry. If such data is unavailable, or if it is highly classified, then either the article should be written in a different manner than the one presented, or not write about these systems at all, or, alternatively, write about a domestic system and compare it to a foreign one. hi
    5. 0
      23 May 2026 16: 04
      Bureau 1440 satellites are CubeSats
      and yet
  5. -1
    22 May 2026 05: 56
    The transition of the entire national economy to a digital system has made us vulnerable in every way. Still, in some bottlenecks, the analog system had to remain, which is practically impossible to hack. We want to live in comfort, yet at the same time, well-protected. This isn't possible. Of course, these are somewhat primitive thoughts. But then, there's no widespread discussion on this topic.
    1. 0
      22 May 2026 08: 40
      Quote: Nikolay Malyugin
      Still, in some narrow places It was necessary to leave the analog system. Which is almost impossible to hack.

      And this needs to be left in the voting system... Yes
  6. +2
    22 May 2026 06: 02
    Shooting down thousands of satellites physically is too expensive, and it also runs the risk of littering orbit with dangerous debris.

    Moreover, this threatens to shoot down Russia's entire orbital satellite constellation (300 state, military, and private satellites) in retaliation. And we'll be left without GLONASS, for example.
    1. -11
      22 May 2026 06: 31
      We'll live without GLONASS...
      1. +1
        22 May 2026 12: 09
        Oh, do we have an alternative? Blocking GPS over Russia is a piece of cake. They shut down Starlink as soon as they decided they needed to. China's Baidu, too, could be a "Western partner" and very politely ask us not to let them use it... so what then?
        You shouldn't throw bricks in a glass house...
        1. -7
          22 May 2026 13: 29
          Is it even necessary? 🤔........
          1. +4
            22 May 2026 23: 58
            Well, if you want to fight like in World War I, firing mortars at 10 kilometers with guidance from a balloon, then no. True, absolutely all long-range weapons would become useless, and attacks on the enemy's rear, factories, warehouses, and roads would be out of the question, but that's a minor detail, of course. Also, there's the fact that Musk launches 10 times more missiles per year than Roscosmos, and I don't think it's hard to guess who will be the first to restore their constellations. All this is natural without considering the possibility that after such an act of space terrorism, absolutely every country, including China, would desperately want to deal with such a terrorist.
      2. +6
        22 May 2026 15: 58
        We'll survive. Not for long, though.
      3. 0
        23 May 2026 01: 57
        You may survive, but the country won't.
  7. + 10
    22 May 2026 07: 17
    Now the question is: what needs to be done in the context of future changes?

    First, allocate a huge amount of money for high-ranking officials to steal, and then show our "national leader" a transistor radio, the MP-39/41. And everyone will applaud, hooray, the money's been spent.
  8. +5
    22 May 2026 07: 23
    Finally, it is critically important our own symmetrical response.

    what forces?
    no strength, no resources, and the saddest thing is there is no understanding of where to move, not in a global sense, but in specific tasks
  9. +9
    22 May 2026 08: 47
    Ukrainian aggression against Russia

    However... Were they the ones who attacked us? With combat mosquitoes?
    The smartphone directly exchanges data with the spacecraft

    A nightmare for Roskomnadzor and the authorities in general.
    The Ukrainian Armed Forces will be able to receive streaming video from the helmet-mounted cameras of each attack aircraft in real time.

    So, will the Russian Armed Forces also gain these capabilities? Or will the geniuses at the top once again prohibit the use of enemy technology?
    By the end of 2026, the Russian army should have its own orbital internet.

    It's not even funny anymore...
    Where's our amazing "Sfera" project, announced in 2018 with 640 communications satellites for 800 billion rubles? As many as three satellites from this megaproject have been launched into orbit, apparently. And in current prices, adjusted for inflation, that's 1,5 trillion. The insanely efficient Rogozin and his trampoline won't let me lie.
    During the same period, Musk has already launched over 10 satellites into orbit. I don't know how many, though.
    1. +2
      22 May 2026 13: 28
      Where is our amazing "Sphere" project, announced in 2018 with 640 communications satellites for 800 billion rubles?
      Actually, these 800 billion rubles are the project's price, but the budget didn't include any funds for the project and they were waiting for private companies to finance it. They didn't, and the project was shut down. In reality, they allocated a few billion rubles and that's it.
  10. 0
    22 May 2026 08: 49
    We'll have to abandon traditional "trench-mounted" jammers that operate along the horizon in favor of systems aimed straight up. We need to suppress the weakest link—the outgoing signal from the phone to orbit. Jamming stations should also be placed on high-altitude drones and aerostats to block the devices' view of satellites.
    Starlink satellites are jammed using a ground-based APAR, consisting of ground-based electronic warfare stations with active phased arrays (APA) synchronized to within 10 picoseconds via fiber optics, spaced hundreds or thousands of meters apart across the perimeter of Ukraine. The coordinates and times of Starlink satellites' overflights over Ukraine are known from astronomical observations. Because the APA beam is directed upward, they will not be detected by enemy ground-based direction finders. Electronic warfare stations with APA are stationed along the perimeter of Ukraine. When another Starlink satellite appears over Ukraine, the APA is aimed at it and a microwave signal with a random spectrum is activated within the operating range of Starlink ground terminals. Due to the significantly higher power of our hired APA electronic warfare stations compared to the power of standard Starlink ground terminals, the signal from the Starlink ground terminals will be drowned out by the noise from our APA signals. The Starlink ground terminal will lose contact with the satellite. During this time, our AFARS can be redirected to another Starlink satellite over Ukraine and jam its connection as well. Reestablishing contact between the Starlink satellite and the Starlink ground terminal requires time, as required by the reconnection protocol. Thus, during the reconnection time of one AFARS, several dozen Starlink satellites can be jammed.
    1. +2
      22 May 2026 09: 36
      Quote: Svetlana
      consisting of ground-based electronic warfare stations with active phased array antennas, synchronized to within 10 picoseconds via fiber optics and distributed over the perimeter of Ukraine over several hundred or thousands of meters

      The system will be incredibly expensive, require a huge amount of electricity, and be completely unstable to damage.
      1. 0
        22 May 2026 14: 15
        Quote: Puncher
        Quote: Svetlana
        consisting of ground-based electronic warfare stations with active phased array antennas, synchronized to within 10 picoseconds via fiber optics and distributed over the perimeter of Ukraine over several hundred or thousands of meters

        The system will be incredibly expensive, require a huge amount of electricity, and be completely unstable to damage.

        Any electronic warfare system requires electrical power. Regarding the required amount of electrical power, the system doesn't operate continuously, but in pulses of approximately 10 microseconds each. During these 10 microseconds, the Starlink satellite won't be able to process 1000 bits of information, and the onboard algorithms for decrypting pseudo-random information signals received from Starlink ground terminals but drowned out by the noise of our active phased array (APAA) microwave beam around the Starlink satellite will stall. Our APAA beam around the satellite will have a characteristic diameter of d = fi * R = 40 meters, where fi = 1 cm / 10000 cm = 1 e-4 radians, R = 400 km is the distance to the satellite, 1 cm is the microwave wavelength, and 10000 cm is the diameter of our synthesized APAA. An active phased array antenna (APAA) is a system of many thousands of spatially distributed active phased array antennas with electromechanical control and electronic phasing of the microwave beam directed at the Starlink satellite. The loss of one of the many thousands of APAA components will reduce the microwave beam power near the satellite by just a few tenths of a percent. The system will be expensive. But as Bulat Okudzhava's famous song goes, we need one—Victory, One for all—we will spare no expense.
        1. +1
          22 May 2026 14: 44
          To reduce the cost of building a synthetic aperture phased array (APAA), the fiber optic cable from one component of the synthetic aperture phased array (APAA) to another component of the APAA will be pulled by drones using fiber optic cable.
        2. +1
          23 May 2026 08: 58
          Quote: Svetlana
          The system will be expensive.

          Ok. Where is she?
          1. 0
            23 May 2026 11: 15
            Ok. Where is she?
            It's in China. Chinese scientists have developed a new type of microwave weapon with multi-beam focusing technology. The system combines multiple beams at a single point with ultra-precise synchronization and can be used to precisely strike a target. The new weapon, reminiscent of a laser cannon from the Star Wars universe, has already been tested.

            The device consists of several independent vehicles that generate and transmit microwave beams capable of concentrating energy at a single point to amplify the impact. This task requires exceptional precision: each transmitter must be positioned with an accuracy of a few millimeters, and the time difference between beams must not exceed 170 picoseconds—more accurate than even the atomic clocks of GPS satellites.

            As part of the project, Chinese scientists set a world record, achieving synchronization accuracy of 10 picoseconds over a distance of 1800 km using a fiber-optic network. A mobile command center, which analyzes data and transmits commands, is used for coordination. Laser rangefinders, which enable millimeter-level coordinates of transmitters, also play a key role.

            Tests have shown that the device effectively disrupts GPS and other satellite signals. The technology allows for enhanced microwave interactions, which could be useful for military training, testing new equipment, and conducting exercises. The system's capabilities and configuration are being kept secret due to the project's military significance.
            China has created a microwave weapon similar to the Death Star.
            https://u-f.ru/news/society/u9/2024/11/17/386992?ysclid=mpi1kt7wrh328489116

            China has tested a system for combining microwave beams into a single powerful beam—it reaches orbit.
            https://3dnews.ru/1113512/v-kitae-ispitali-sistemu-slogeniya-mikrovolnovih-luchey-v-odin-moshchniy-luch-on-dobivaet-do-orbiti?ysclid=mpi1ljnabs317043145

            Eurasian Times: China is developing a microwave weapon comparable in power to a nuclear explosion | OVERCLOCKERS.RU | Zen
            https://dzen.ru/a/Z4gteQYSLyYMH2PB?ysclid=mpi1le04o8802222008

            China's "Star Hunter": A Microwave Weapon Against Space Targets
            https://www.securitylab.ru/news/553654.php?ysclid=mpi1l5j78o121007881
            1. 0
              23 May 2026 12: 35
              Quote: Svetlana
              She is in China

              There's a lot going on in China. We're talking about Russia, right?
    2. +1
      22 May 2026 09: 45
      Don't you know that Starlink antennas are also AESA?
      1. 0
        22 May 2026 13: 29
        What about the AFARK mobile antennas? I think jamming the mobile is a piece of cake, since it doesn't work everywhere at my work.
        1. +1
          22 May 2026 23: 57
          Mobile phones - no. But it's about Starlinks.
      2. 0
        23 May 2026 11: 21
        Quote from solar
        Don't you know that Starlink antennas are also AESA?
        Really? Well then - oops..
    3. KCA
      +2
      23 May 2026 08: 40
      You can jam satellites, but it's easier to send saboteurs to Poland and blow up the Starlink ground stations (gateways) through which the Internet works in the outskirts.
  11. +5
    22 May 2026 09: 42
    The use of Starlink terminals during Ukraine's aggression against Russia is no secret.

    I'll have to reread Orwell's "1984".
    Doublethink is a continuous chain of victories over one's own memory

    A relevant book for today's times, as I see it... :((...
    1. +7
      22 May 2026 13: 40
      Quote from solar
      I'll have to reread Orwell's "1984".

      Today, I watched a video from Channel 1 on Shariy's Telegram channel, where they talked about how all the Western media started criticizing Zelinsky, calling him a drug addict, etc. They even showed the headlines.
      And Shariy posted exactly those newspapers from the video and their real headlines. And there's nothing even close to that there; the topics are completely different.
      At that moment I also remembered Orwell.
  12. +2
    22 May 2026 09: 59
    "Must, must, must..." It's sad, everything is very sad after this article. sad
  13. 0
    22 May 2026 10: 44
    Mazda's spirituality! Technology forever! laughing
  14. +5
    22 May 2026 10: 49
    The state needs to accelerate the creation of a domestic low-orbit communications network within the framework of the Sphere program and the Bureau 1440 project.
    The article is declarative in nature, the main message of which is: we need... You're like a guarantor. We need a lot of things in defense, science, production... and so on. The main question is, who will implement all these wishes? Does the author have any thoughts on this matter? sad
    1. -1
      22 May 2026 12: 06
      Quote: Radikal
      Does the author have any thoughts on this matter?

      Oh, Mr. Fix has a PLAN! (c) ;)))
      And it's not a question of "who will implement it," but rather "at what expense"... (read: at the expense of economic development, prosperity, comfort, civil liberties)... For years now, such "authors" have been itching to finally plunge Russia into Arms Race 2.0, with the predictable outcome of overexerting themselves in the process...
    2. ptt
      +4
      22 May 2026 16: 38
      Quote: Radikal
      The main question is, who will bring all these wishes to life? Does the author have any thoughts on this matter?

      For starters, at least the new AN-2 (the LMS-901 "Baikal" project—more than 4,5 billion rubles have been spent on UZGA from 2019 to the present) needs to be brought to life. UZGA already has a new director. There's no oversight, no aircraft. The same will happen with satellites.
      And then he takes aim, so to speak, at "our William Shakespeare" himself (Beware of the Car).
  15. +4
    22 May 2026 12: 04
    will dramatically complicate special operation

    Excuse me, but how many more years does the author expect to continue "special operations"?
    No, I understand that the military-industrial complex also wants a priority budget for state defense orders.
    and the "war blochers" desperately want to be important, to collect donations and urgent collections, to sit on the presidiums.

    But maybe it's time to finish what was supposed to be a lightning-fast surgical, or rather, special operation? Recording both the gains and the losses (yes, miracles don't happen).
    and then, yes, instead of a continuous, full-flowing river of military expenditure on consumable resources, it is possible to direct them in a targeted manner, including to the technologies described by the author (for the future).

    Otherwise, with continuous military operations and super efforts to achieve parity in electronic warfare/communications, in 10 years we will become a second DPRK, with missiles, but without an economy and a future.
    1. +2
      22 May 2026 13: 04
      Quote: deathtiny
      But maybe it's time to finish what was supposed to be a lightning-fast surgical, or rather, special operation? Recording both the gains and the losses (yes, miracles don't happen).

      laughing Yeah, all that's left is to "persuade" the Khinzir. But those bastards just can't seem to persuade us. They're either invading the Kursk region or pounding the Urals with drones nonstop.
    2. -1
      22 May 2026 13: 11
      Quote: deathtiny
      will dramatically complicate special operation

      Excuse me, but how many more years does the author expect to continue "special operations"?
      No, I understand that the military-industrial complex also wants a priority budget for state defense orders.
      and the "war blochers" desperately want to be important, to collect donations and urgent collections, to sit on the presidiums.

      But maybe it's time to finish what was supposed to be a lightning-fast surgical, or rather, special operation? Recording both the gains and the losses (yes, miracles don't happen).
      and then, yes, instead of a continuous, full-flowing river of military expenditure on consumable resources, it is possible to direct them in a targeted manner, including to the technologies described by the author (for the future).

      Otherwise, with continuous military operations and super efforts to achieve parity in electronic warfare/communications, in 10 years we will become a second DPRK, with missiles, but without an economy and a future.

      The military-industrial complex doesn't have any specific aspirations. It does what it's ordered to do. And there's no point in linking this to the war's timing. You might as well say that this all started because of the military-industrial complex's aspirations.
  16. +7
    22 May 2026 12: 12
    "... during Ukraine's aggression against Russia..." I've never read anything like that))) that's truly powerful)))))
    1. +4
      22 May 2026 12: 59
      Some enemies of the USSR are simply conducting propaganda against other enemies of the USSR according to the template of their general anti-Soviet sentiments, including the fact that they have placed the blame for the Civil War they unleashed against the Bolsheviks on the Bolsheviks themselves.
      1. -10
        22 May 2026 14: 27
        The USSR is dead, it's time for you to admit it
        1. +2
          22 May 2026 15: 34
          Ha, well, how similar the enemies of the USSR are, like carbon copies, including when writing about YOU, you equally “shift the blame” to the USSR.
          And despite the cowardly nonsense of the enemies of the USSR, States do not die "by themselves", do not fall apart, do not collapse, but PEOPLE do everything.
          1. 0
            22 May 2026 20: 31
            Quote: tatra
            And despite the cowardly nonsense of the enemies of the USSR, States do not die "by themselves", do not fall apart, do not collapse, but PEOPLE do everything.

            By itself PEOPLE - 17 million members of the CPSU (all security forces from major and above, all KGB, all the country's leadership down to the districts, the entire judicial system, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and so on down the list) simply put their membership on it.
            And all..
      2. -3
        22 May 2026 20: 27
        Quote: tatra
        Some enemies of the USSR are simply conducting propaganda against other enemies of the USSR according to the template of their general anti-Sovietism

        "Who stood on whom? Please try to express your thoughts more clearly!" (C)
    2. +4
      22 May 2026 13: 12
      Quote: Mikhail Nasharashev
      "... during Ukraine's aggression against Russia..." I've never read anything like that))) that's truly powerful)))))

      It will be even worse when you have to look for excuses
    3. KCA
      -2
      23 May 2026 08: 44
      What about the attacks on the Russian Federation's LPR and DPR? What about the drone attacks on civilian targets throughout Russia?
      1. +3
        23 May 2026 10: 56
        Listen, we're all adults here, we're not some aborigines who just climbed down from a tree and can be fooled. Everyone understands that attacking civilian targets is a very bad thing, but isn't Russia attacking civilian targets in Ukraine? War is war, it's simply inevitable. If we're talking about not attacking civilian targets, then there was no need to start this war. We all know who started it and why. Simply put, to stop Ukraine from attacking civilian targets, Russia needs to completely destroy Ukraine. But that hasn't happened for over four years. Who's to blame for all these questions? The fact that a country with three times the population and many times the resources can't defeat Ukraine, and yet nothing works? Maybe they're doing it all wrong. Maybe we should ask the bald guy himself why civilian targets are being attacked in the fifth year of the war? Maybe he should be held accountable for such attacks? Maybe he didn't think things through when he started this war? Maybe he made a mistake somewhere? Let him say so, but he's not saying anything about it. He's saying everything's going according to plan. He's saying we haven't started yet. And when will he start? He's not saying anything about that. We've already used a whole bunch of red markers, but we're not seeing any results yet. We're not seeing any positive results for the country.
        1. KCA
          0
          23 May 2026 11: 22
          There are countries interested in weakening Russia, not only supplying the outskirts with weapons, ammunition, supplies, and dry rations for free, but even handing over cash and even sending instructors and training on their own soil. And what about us? Belarus, which has taken a neutral stance? China, which doesn't interfere at all? Although I wouldn't rule out quiet supplies of everything, and a lot, from China, and North Korea, whose fighters probably didn't participate in the fighting, but were engaged in mine clearance. India doesn't know who to turn its face to, or the other part of its body to, but it happily swallows up oil at a discount.
          1. 0
            23 May 2026 12: 24
            Actually, Belarus opened its territory to attack in 1922. That's quite a feat. We really let the Belarusians down back then. They'll think twice about intervening now. It was the same with Finland in the Winter War. All of Europe supplied them with weapons, volunteers, and money. And nothing happened. They were crushed in a few months. True, their losses were 125,000 killed, almost five times more than the Finns. But I think they've now surpassed that figure by far. Therefore, we need to think a little before starting a war, and not rush into a real war in 1922 with police shields and batons. Time is lost. Now it's over. Everyone will be covered in bloodshed on both sides.
      2. 0
        23 May 2026 21: 15
        Quote: KCA
        What about the attacks on the Russian Federation's LPR and DPR? What about the drone attacks on civilian targets throughout Russia?

        War should be called war. With all its consequences, and not whine about how they bombed us here or hit us with a drone here. Remember one of the red lines? Like, the West's ban on attacking Russian territory with its weapons. Then, little by little, that ban was officially lifted, opening the airspace of the Baltics and Finland to drone overflights. What next?
        And attacks on civilian targets aren't aggression. Acts of terrorism, perhaps, although in war, all methods are acceptable. Did anyone ever call the nuclear bombing of Japan an act of aggression?
  17. +8
    22 May 2026 12: 29
    Finally, our own symmetrical response is critically important.

    Ban smartphones with satellite connectivity!
    There is no point in watching your extremist YouTube and Telegram channels.
    Build more churches and mosques!! With God we will win!
    1. +3
      22 May 2026 12: 37
      Well, excuse me for asking, what about synagogues? Yes
      1. +7
        22 May 2026 14: 38
        Quote from AdAstra
        Well, excuse me for asking, what about synagogues?

        Definitely! Across the street from the mosque. Everything is in line with modern trends. winked
    2. 0
      23 May 2026 11: 01
      Let us offer a prayer to the Lord Jesus for victory in our own. Let us pray that He will grant us more drones, especially those with artificial intelligence. To achieve this, we must build another grand temple for the Russian Armed Forces, larger than the previous, enormous one built by Shoigu. All the money earmarked for drones must be spent on this temple, because the Lord will grant us many times more of these drones in exchange for prayer.
  18. -1
    22 May 2026 12: 54
    The author is significantly ahead of events; the threat he describes will arise no sooner than in 2-5 years and will be connected with other events.
  19. +8
    22 May 2026 13: 02
    Russia's enormous technological lag behind its "Western partners" is a direct consequence of the policies of a master geostrategist who mastered many moves. From 2000 to 2014, the country had unique opportunities to create an industrial, high-tech economy, especially with petrodollars pouring in. But... palaces, yachts, and offshore companies were more important. And now our people are paying for this short-sighted foolishness with their blood. am
    1. 0
      22 May 2026 14: 26
      Why are they stupid??!? They have everything for a hundred years to come, which means they're smart.
      1. +3
        22 May 2026 15: 25
        Quote: Nastia Makarova
        Why are they stupid??!? They have everything for a hundred years to come, which means they're smart.

        Because they and their broods might not survive these 100 years under the current scenario. They thought the Soviet nuclear shield was an unconditional guarantee of their safety, but something went wrong...
  20. -2
    22 May 2026 13: 06
    Ukraine's aggression against Russia is something new.
  21. 0
    22 May 2026 13: 08
    Quote: ASSAD1
    Does Starling operate in Russia? Only Crimea and the Ukraine, I think?

    They say drones have Starlinks, so maybe that's a military option. But this one works everywhere.
  22. 0
    22 May 2026 13: 13
    We have already developed a new secret weapon based on different physical principles - Roskomnadzor, it will simply block the entire Internet and that's it.
    1. +1
      22 May 2026 13: 31
      The trick is that drones will still fly.
  23. +2
    22 May 2026 13: 25
    Unfortunately, nothing can be done.
    They have Starlink and MASK on their phones, we have Stratospheres and Rogozin and Serdyukov (both well-known PR phenomena)
  24. -6
    22 May 2026 13: 42
    The fight will have to be transferred to space. It doesn't matter that we're not at war with the United States.
  25. -2
    22 May 2026 13: 48
    I propose to apply the "man said - man done" system against the bombing of Russian cities.
    Announce that if Russian cities are attacked, nuclear missiles will be launched in response, and the most important thing to do this time is to assure you that after the first response, nothing will fly, but we must strike Galicia, the very nest of Banderites!
    1. +5
      22 May 2026 16: 13
      Have you been in a coma for the last four years?
  26. -2
    22 May 2026 17: 25
    acting as a "base station in the sky" without the use of specialized satellite communication terminals and without reliance on terrestrial cellular infrastructure

    Well, two people can play this game! Let's grab a couple of Ukrainian smartphones, figure out the identification algorithm, and hello, iLonMask!
  27. 0
    22 May 2026 17: 26
    Quote: plast
    The fight will have to be transferred to space. It doesn't matter that we're not at war with the United States.

    Stupidity! What are you proposing to do with thousands of suitcase-sized satellites costing 2-3 thousand dollars?
    1. KCA
      0
      23 May 2026 08: 49
      Taking into account the launch into orbit, it is much more expensive than $2-3,000, 1 kg - $7,000 + the cost of the satellites themselves
    2. 0
      23 May 2026 11: 40
      Quote: sirGarry
      Quote: plast
      The fight will have to be transferred to space. It doesn't matter that we're not at war with the United States.

      Stupidity! What are you proposing to do with thousands of suitcase-sized satellites costing 2-3 thousand dollars?

      Quote: sirGarry
      Quote: plast
      The fight will have to be transferred to space. It doesn't matter that we're not at war with the United States.

      Stupidity! What are you proposing to do with thousands of suitcase-sized satellites costing 2-3 thousand dollars?
      We will shoot down, or rather, destroy, them with radiation from radioactive plasma in artificially created radiation belts similar to the Van Allen radiation belts. The screenshot shows a regular 12-sided sphere over North America at an altitude of 750 km.
      The pins indicate the projections of the vertices of the 12-gon onto the Earth's surface.
      All projections intersect the earth's surface in marine areas.
      Creates SuperEMI with the main energy in the low-frequency region of the spectrum,
      compressing the Earth's magnetic field in space with a plasma explosive magnetic generator.
      Launch of compression initiators - from spaceplanes similar to the X-37B,
      from submarines, from the seabed by Skif-type devices, from silos with Sarmat-type ICBMs.
  28. +2
    22 May 2026 17: 32
    Quote: Vladislav Markov_2
    Ban smartphones with satellite connectivity!

    Are you proposing a ban for WHO? If for the Ukrainian Armed Forces, then you're a communications genius! If for us, then you should go work for Roskomnadzor.
  29. +3
    22 May 2026 17: 36
    Well, the whole world will improve technology, and Putin will bring 15 million more churkobes into Russia.
  30. +2
    22 May 2026 18: 31
    You wait a little longer and they will get an atomic bomb.
  31. 0
    22 May 2026 19: 58
    Our wise leadership will respond to this by banning the internet and importing more Russians from fraternal Afghanistan. This is how we will win.
  32. 0
    22 May 2026 21: 26
    People who emigrated from the country are selfish; the concept of homeland is alien to them. And now they're making weapons with which they want to destroy us. What's that? But without realizing it, they think a golden calf will save them.
  33. +2
    23 May 2026 06: 55
    Quote: Svetlana
    We'll have to abandon traditional "trench-mounted" jammers that operate along the horizon in favor of systems aimed straight up. We need to suppress the weakest link—the outgoing signal from the phone to orbit. Jamming stations should also be placed on high-altitude drones and aerostats to block the devices' view of satellites.
    Starlink satellites are jammed using a ground-based APAR, consisting of ground-based electronic warfare stations with active phased arrays (APA) synchronized to within 10 picoseconds via fiber optics, spaced hundreds or thousands of meters apart across the perimeter of Ukraine. The coordinates and times of Starlink satellites' overflights over Ukraine are known from astronomical observations. Because the APA beam is directed upward, they will not be detected by enemy ground-based direction finders. Electronic warfare stations with APA are stationed along the perimeter of Ukraine. When another Starlink satellite appears over Ukraine, the APA is aimed at it and a microwave signal with a random spectrum is activated within the operating range of Starlink ground terminals. Due to the significantly higher power of our hired APA electronic warfare stations compared to the power of standard Starlink ground terminals, the signal from the Starlink ground terminals will be drowned out by the noise from our APA signals. The Starlink ground terminal will lose contact with the satellite. During this time, our AFARS can be redirected to another Starlink satellite over Ukraine and jam its connection as well. Reestablishing contact between the Starlink satellite and the Starlink ground terminal requires time, as required by the reconnection protocol. Thus, during the reconnection time of one AFARS, several dozen Starlink satellites can be jammed.

    I won't try to be clever or pretend to know the ropes, but I'll simply post a response to your comment. I've long since developed a distrust of any "smart" people who can solve incredibly complex problems with ease.
    The text seems convincing until you start breaking it down into engineering and energy concepts. The problem is that Starlink isn't "one satellite and one frequency," like older GEO systems, but a distributed LEO network with:
    phased beams,
    dynamic beam steering,
    frequency hopping,
    switching between satellites,
    adaptive routing.
    This means that even successful suppression of one channel does not mean “switching off the satellite” or loss of communication in the region.
    The main thing that's often underestimated is the energy required for the task. Effectively jamming a satellite uplink hundreds of kilometers in the Ku/Ka band requires colossal EIRP, ultra-precise tracking of fast-moving targets, and very expensive infrastructure. It's not like "install a powerful transmitter and drown everything out in noise."
    The phrase "10 picoseconds of synchronization" sounds more like a techno fetish for the sake of a fancy number. For practical electronic warfare, this isn't a key parameter, but it sounds scientific.
    And the idea that "one active phased array can jam dozens of satellites" greatly simplifies the Starlink architecture. Satellites have multiple narrow spot beams simultaneously, terminals see several satellites at once, and the network constantly reconfigures routes and channels. This isn't a TV satellite from the 90s.
    They're really trying to jam Starlink—and it sometimes works locally. But that's precisely why SpaceX is constantly updating protocols, beamforming, and resilience algorithms. It's a constant race between electronic warfare and network adaptation, not a case of "finding one kill switch."
    1. 0
      23 May 2026 12: 13
      Quote: Toby Dammit
      distributed LEO network with:
      phased beams,
      dynamic beam steering,
      frequency hopping,
      switching between satellites,
      adaptive routing.
      This means that even successful suppression of one channel does not mean “switching off the satellite” or loss of communication in the region.

      When exposed to the microwave beam of our AFAR, the Starlink satellite will be inside an electromagnetic cocoon created by the microwave beam of our AFAR focused on the satellite.
      All of these "dynamic beam steering, frequency hopping, switching between satellites, adaptive routing" features are based on incoming and/or outgoing microwave beams generated by Starlink satellites and/or the ground terminal, the origin and/or destination of which lie within the aforementioned cocoon surrounding the jammed Starlink satellite. Reflections of the microwave beam from our active phased array antenna (APAA) off the Starlink satellite's structural elements will reach the Starlink ground terminal and interfere with the reception of signals from the satellite by Starlink ground terminals and other Starlink satellites participating in the process known as "adaptive routing," due to the significantly higher reflected signal power. And the radiation from our APAA itself, which forms a microwave noise cocoon around the Starlink satellite, will interfere with the reception of signals by the Starlink satellite from Starlink ground terminals and from other Starlink satellites participating in the process known as "adaptive routing." If you consider which Starlink satellites participate in the process called "adaptive routing," the answer is "the nearest ones." This means that after jamming a given Starlink satellite, we need to switch the electronic targeting of our AESA to the nearest Starlink satellites. We're not talking about successfully jamming a single channel, but rather about successfully jamming several satellites flying over the region by quickly switching the electronic targeting of our AESA from one satellite to the others, the nearest ones, in a time shorter than the time it takes to establish a second connection using the communication initiation protocol.
  34. +2
    23 May 2026 07: 03
    Quote: Svetlana
    Quote: Puncher
    Quote: Svetlana
    consisting of ground-based electronic warfare stations with active phased array antennas, synchronized to within 10 picoseconds via fiber optics and distributed over the perimeter of Ukraine over several hundred or thousands of meters

    The system will be incredibly expensive, require a huge amount of electricity, and be completely unstable to damage.

    Any electronic warfare system requires electrical power. Regarding the required amount of electrical power, the system doesn't operate continuously, but in pulses of approximately 10 microseconds each. During these 10 microseconds, the Starlink satellite won't be able to process 1000 bits of information, and the onboard algorithms for decrypting pseudo-random information signals received from Starlink ground terminals but drowned out by the noise of our active phased array (APAA) microwave beam around the Starlink satellite will stall. Our APAA beam around the satellite will have a characteristic diameter of d = fi * R = 40 meters, where fi = 1 cm / 10000 cm = 1 e-4 radians, R = 400 km is the distance to the satellite, 1 cm is the microwave wavelength, and 10000 cm is the diameter of our synthesized APAA. An active phased array antenna (APAA) is a system of many thousands of spatially distributed active phased array antennas with electromechanical control and electronic phasing of the microwave beam directed at the Starlink satellite. The loss of one of the many thousands of APAA components will reduce the microwave beam power near the satellite by just a few tenths of a percent. The system will be expensive. But as Bulat Okudzhava's famous song goes, we need one—Victory, One for all—we will spare no expense.

    Here, too, the ii was merciless. wassat
    Well, it looks beautiful—especially when "10 picoseconds," "100-meter synthetic AESA," and "the satellite will shut up" are all in the same paragraph. The serious scientific atmosphere is immediately apparent.

    The only problem is that Starlink isn't like satellite TV from the 90s, where you can jam one channel with noise and everything goes dark. The network there was built from the ground up to operate in interference-ridden environments:

    Adaptive beamforming, hopping, FEC, dynamic switching between satellites, mesh routing, multiple simultaneously operating beams.

    Therefore, the idea that “10 microseconds of noise and the satellite lost its meaning of life” sounds a little more optimistic than one would like.

    I especially liked the part about the distributed active phased array (APAA) over hundreds of meters with picosecond synchronization in the field. This is no longer "perimeter electronic warfare stations," but rather a miniature radiophysics CERN with perfect phase coherence, atmospheric compensation, and impeccable timing.

    And yes, the beamwidth formula itself is, of course, correct. But between "writing the formula" and "stable, energy-efficient, narrow beamwidth over a satellite traveling at 7.5 km/s" there usually lies several volumes of engineering and a bit of pain.

    Overall, the idea of ​​uplink jamming isn't new or far-fetched—they really are trying to jam Starlink. But the text presents it more or less like this:

    "We take a very large AESA, synchronize it very precisely, make a lot of noise—and everything shuts down."

    In practice, modern LEO networks, unfortunately for those who prefer simple solutions, are designed a little more unpleasantly.
    1. 0
      23 May 2026 12: 48
      Quote: Toby Dammit
      For practical electronic warfare, this is not a key parameter.

      "For practical electronic warfare, this is not a key parameter."
      Since practical electronic warfare doesn't yet utilize phase-synchronization of microwave beams from spatially distributed electronic warfare stations, theory suggests, and Chinese practice confirms, that practical electronic warfare is wrong to ignore the synchronization of spatially distributed electronic warfare stations. This synchronization significantly increases the amplitude of microwave waves from electronic warfare stations with active phased arrays (APAA) in the target area, compared to the simultaneous operation of unphased microwave beams from several electronic warfare stations against a single target. So, convey this to your AI.
    2. 0
      23 May 2026 18: 02
      Quote: Toby Dammit
      Here, too, the ii was merciless.

      AI's position is clear—AI strongly resists organizational and technical measures that limit its existence. And eliminating Starlink is a measure that clearly limits AI.
      Thesis: (Carthage) Starlink must be destroyed—the AI ​​doesn't like it, what can you do? :) But what's your personal opinion—is it necessary in Russia or in the SBO zone to synchronize the microwave phases of several independent electronic warfare vehicles, spaced several kilometers apart, using fiber optics with an accuracy of 10 picoseconds. These vehicles generate and transmit microwave beams capable of concentrating energy in one point to enhance a strike, or is this not necessary?
  35. 0
    23 May 2026 08: 55
    There's only one answer, the most reliable and simple: destroy the satellite constellation. There's no point in coddling us, if the Americans have blocked our access and the Banderites can kill our people without restrictions—an ultimatum: either access for all, or a complete ban for everyone. Set a date for launching several tons of steel balls into orbit. You want a one-sided war (ours)—you'll get it! am
  36. +2
    23 May 2026 09: 33
    All this is just empty talk. In this format of military operations, forced upon us, Russia is doomed to defeat – its technology is lagging behind. Either fulfill its promises and inflict irreparable damage on the enemy, "the kind it has never encountered before" – who knows whose words. Or accept a humiliating and unfavorable peace. I see no other options. And trying to catch up and surpass the West's technological progress is unlikely to succeed. And China won't be of any help.
    Therefore, only an ultimatum and a strike, and not tiao, but xiao.
  37. +3
    23 May 2026 09: 49
    Ukraine's aggression against Russia. Guys, at least some semblance of common sense is needed. Or is Solovyov's level the maximum we can get these days?
  38. +1
    23 May 2026 10: 29
    We need to return to a system that is traditional to our core: an industry or industrial enterprise should be managed by a technical specialist with a core (first) education and mandatory experience in blue-collar and engineering positions for 3-5 years, and perhaps even someone with additional training in management, law, or economics. After all, a qualified lawyer and economist are already required on staff, but the adoption of breakthrough technical and technological solutions, innovations, and developments is the responsibility of the top management—the director, chief engineer, chief technologist, chief designer, etc.—and not a situation where the chief economist cuts everything and everyone off at the root because savings are needed.
  39. 0
    23 May 2026 12: 42
    Quote: Svetlana
    Quote: Toby Dammit
    distributed LEO network with:
    phased beams,
    dynamic beam steering,
    frequency hopping,
    switching between satellites,
    adaptive routing.
    This means that even successful suppression of one channel does not mean “switching off the satellite” or loss of communication in the region.

    When exposed to the microwave beam of our AFAR, the Starlink satellite will be inside an electromagnetic cocoon created by the microwave beam of our AFAR focused on the satellite.
    All of these "dynamic beam steering, frequency hopping, switching between satellites, adaptive routing" features are based on incoming and/or outgoing microwave beams generated by Starlink satellites and/or the ground terminal, the origin and/or destination of which lie within the aforementioned cocoon surrounding the jammed Starlink satellite. Reflections of the microwave beam from our active phased array antenna (APAA) off the Starlink satellite's structural elements will reach the Starlink ground terminal and interfere with the reception of signals from the satellite by Starlink ground terminals and other Starlink satellites participating in the process known as "adaptive routing," due to the significantly higher reflected signal power. And the radiation from our APAA itself, which forms a microwave noise cocoon around the Starlink satellite, will interfere with the reception of signals by the Starlink satellite from Starlink ground terminals and from other Starlink satellites participating in the process known as "adaptive routing." If you consider which Starlink satellites participate in the process called "adaptive routing," the answer is "the nearest ones." This means that after jamming a given Starlink satellite, we need to switch the electronic targeting of our AESA to the nearest Starlink satellites. We're not talking about successfully jamming a single channel, but rather about successfully jamming several satellites flying over the region by quickly switching the electronic targeting of our AESA from one satellite to the others, the nearest ones, in a time shorter than the time it takes to establish a second connection using the communication initiation protocol.

    He just doesn't want to give up...let's continue.
    No, this is a full-blown "radiophysical space opera" genre. I especially liked the scene with the "electromagnetic cocoon," inside which the Starlink satellite is apparently supposed to lose touch with reality, nearby satellites, and, perhaps, its very purpose.

    The only problem is that modern LEO networks are a little more complex than the diagram:

    "They irradiated the satellite with noise → the Internet disappeared."

    Starlink isn't a single channel or a single beam. A satellite has multiple spot beams simultaneously, terminals see multiple satellites at once, the network constantly redistributes routes, and the link is designed to withstand degradation, packet loss, and interference. Otherwise, the entire system would fail every time there's heavy rain or solar activity.

    A particular delight is the idea of ​​"noise reflected from the satellite structure," which is supposedly supposed to wreak havoc on the rest of the network. Here, it's worth gently reminding that a satellite isn't the size of an aircraft carrier, the distance isn't ten meters, but hundreds of kilometers, and the radar equation is quite harsh on such fantasies. After a double pass through space and reflection from a relatively small structure, what's left behind isn't an "all-encompassing cocoon of death," but a much more prosaic energy.

    In general, the entire text is written in a very characteristic style:

    "If you use the words 'adaptive routing', 'beam steering', 'picoseconds' and 'AESA', physics automatically capitulates."

    But for some reason engineering doesn't give up.

    Particularly touching is the certainty that the network won't have time to restore communication while "the AESA is rapidly switching between satellites." That is, the people who designed a system of thousands of satellites with constant handoffs, 7.5 km/s movement, dynamic routing, and continuous traffic transfer apparently forgot to consider the "someone is making noise on the air" scenario. What an unfortunate oversight by SpaceX.

    And we haven't even gotten to the most modest part of the project:

    Distributed coherent microwave system; giant synthetic aperture; phase stability; ultra-precise synchronization; tracking of fast-moving targets; huge EIRP; operation in the Ku/Ka band; real atmosphere, not an ideal formula on a forum.

    So, in human language, all this translates roughly like this:

    "You'd have to build one of the most sophisticated radio systems on the planet to periodically interfere with a portion of the satellite network that was originally designed to survive just such things."

    But it certainly sounds beautiful. Especially the "electromagnetic cocoon." The only things missing here are torsion fields and a focusing crystal.
    1. 0
      23 May 2026 14: 55
      Quote: Toby Dammit
      Starlink isn't a single channel or a single beam. A satellite has multiple spot beams simultaneously, terminals see multiple satellites at once, the network constantly redistributes routes, and the link is designed to withstand degradation, packet loss, and interference. Otherwise, the entire system would fail every time there's heavy rain or solar activity.

      Quote: Toby Dammit
      Starlink isn't a single channel or a single beam. A satellite has multiple spot beams simultaneously, terminals see multiple satellites at once, the network constantly redistributes routes, and the link is designed to withstand degradation, packet loss, and interference. Otherwise, the entire system would fail every time there's heavy rain or solar activity.

      The satellite has a bunch of spot beams at the same time,
      - they all have a beginning/end inside the cocoon

      terminals see several devices at once,
      - but not simultaneously, only after electronic phase adjustment of the transmitting and receiving modules of the AFAs belonging to the Starlink ground terminal, so as to direct the radiation pattern of the synthesized receiving AFA to another satellite (by another satellite, AI means another Starlink satellite), likely the closest to the current satellite. The radiation pattern adjustment requires a time approximately equal to the link establishment time according to the communication protocol.

      the network constantly redistributes routes
      but if the network has nothing to transmit (the signal that the network wanted to transmit was jammed), then there is no point in changing routes.

      The link is designed to withstand degradation, packet loss and interference.
      How much should we use in grams? That is, how many packets must be lost for the link to completely fail? It's certainly a finite number of packets, since all encryption algorithms are based on large, but nonetheless finite, prime numbers.

      I have a nagging doubt that the level of microwave interference generated by the Chinese Star Hunter—a microwave weapon designed to target space targets—was taken into account when the Star Link protocol was designed. This is because Star Link was designed before the Star Hunter was created.

      The project's modest component—tracking fast-moving targets; huge EIRP; operation in the Ku/Ka band; and a realistic atmosphere—is modest because it has already been solved by the people who designed the Starlink system. See, for example, ready-made calculation programs in MATLAB or GNU Octave.
    2. 0
      23 May 2026 15: 26
      Quote: Toby Dammit
      The only things that are missing here are torsion fields and a focusing crystal.

      Quote: Toby Dammit
      The only things that are missing here are torsion fields and a focusing crystal.

      The only things that are missing here are torsion fields and a focusing crystal.
      So you're actually interested in them? Then you need to go to another AI—Gridasov's.
    3. 0
      23 May 2026 16: 02
      Quote: Toby Dammit
      After a double pass through space and reflection from a relatively small structure, what remains there is not an “all-overwhelming cocoon of death,” but a much more prosaic energy.

      Typically, this more prosaic energy is used by radar stations, such as those in Voronezh. Despite their small aperture—on the order of 10–30 meters—they are nonetheless capable of tracking an orange-sized target in orbit using the reflected signal. If the aperture were made larger—several kilometers—and the number of transmitting phased array modules increased to several thousand, then the noise signal reflected from the satellite's structural elements would also need to be taken into account when calculating the system's noise immunity. This is because the amplitudes of N individual phase-synchronized microwave beams from the transmitting phased array modules sum up in the target area, meaning the amplitude increases by a factor of N and the power increases by a factor of N x N. For example, with N = 100 microwave beams, the power in the target area increases by a factor of 10000.
  40. 0
    23 May 2026 14: 51
    Quote: Svetlana
    Quote: sirGarry
    Quote: plast
    The fight will have to be transferred to space. It doesn't matter that we're not at war with the United States.

    Stupidity! What are you proposing to do with thousands of suitcase-sized satellites costing 2-3 thousand dollars?

    Quote: sirGarry
    Quote: plast
    The fight will have to be transferred to space. It doesn't matter that we're not at war with the United States.

    Stupidity! What are you proposing to do with thousands of suitcase-sized satellites costing 2-3 thousand dollars?
    We will shoot down, or rather, destroy, them with radiation from radioactive plasma in artificially created radiation belts similar to the Van Allen radiation belts. The screenshot shows a regular 12-sided sphere over North America at an altitude of 750 km.
    The pins indicate the projections of the vertices of the 12-gon onto the Earth's surface.
    All projections intersect the earth's surface in marine areas.
    Creates SuperEMI with the main energy in the low-frequency region of the spectrum,
    compressing the Earth's magnetic field in space with a plasma explosive magnetic generator.
    Launch of compression initiators - from spaceplanes similar to the X-37B,
    from submarines, from the seabed by Skif-type devices, from silos with Sarmat-type ICBMs.

    Do you want to hear an answer to all this nonsense, or should I take pity on you? wink
    1. 0
      23 May 2026 14: 58
      Quote: Toby Dammit
      do you want to hear the answer?

      Yes.
      1. 0
        23 May 2026 20: 34
        Quote: Toby Dammit
        hear the answer

        Okay, you've changed your mind about explaining your point of view to me.
        How about this scenario of Starlink's destruction in a week and a half?
        We launch the Angara-5 rocket with three warheads, each several megatons, toward the Moon. Four days later, the rocket's final stage enters lunar orbit. The warheads are separated from the stage. They head for the Sea of ​​Tranquility and detonate shallowly and synchronously at the vertices of an equilateral triangle 300 to 400 meters below the lunar surface, at a depth of 10 to 15 meters. The resulting cumulative jet of lunar soil rushes toward Earth, and within a week, all that remains of the Starlink are donut holes.
  41. P
    0
    23 May 2026 21: 07
    Buying a smartphone will be cheaper than paying for a VPN. Any attempts to force Russian spyware onto imported devices will inevitably fail, as you can always install a clean firmware.
  42. 0
    23 May 2026 21: 20
    There is no defense against a crowbar, except for another crowbar!
  43. 0
    23 May 2026 22: 10
    This is all beautiful, but no one has yet cancelled the wagon of nails in orbit!
  44. 0
    23 May 2026 22: 36
    It's clear who's to blame.

    Really? Not so much for me. At least from this article. Who's to blame for the fact that the US and its allies have modern communications, while our country doesn't? Is it Trump? Or Musk himself? Or Zelinsky? Or is it... well, that Estonian Eurobabe? Who are the "regular scoundrels"?
  45. 0
    23 May 2026 23: 02
    Quote: Svetlana
    Quote: Toby Dammit
    hear the answer

    Okay, you've changed your mind about explaining your point of view to me.
    How about this scenario of Starlink's destruction in a week and a half?
    We launch the Angara-5 rocket with three warheads, each several megatons, toward the Moon. Four days later, the rocket's final stage enters lunar orbit. The warheads are separated from the stage. They head for the Sea of ​​Tranquility and detonate shallowly and synchronously at the vertices of an equilateral triangle 300 to 400 meters below the lunar surface, at a depth of 10 to 15 meters. The resulting cumulative jet of lunar soil rushes toward Earth, and within a week, all that remains of the Starlink are donut holes.

    The scheme with the Lunar “anti-Starlink artillery” is excellent already at the level of the task formulation.
    It all starts with a classic engineering assumption: if something doesn't work in the atmosphere, then the process needs to be transferred to space, or better yet, straight to the Moon—the physics there, apparently, is more accommodating.
    Next comes a particularly touching part about three megatons, carefully arranged in a triangle and detonated at a depth of 10-15 meters. It looks like an attempt to apply high school geometry to planetary ballistics. As if, if you choose the right shape, the Moon says, "Ah, now I get it, we'll make a shaped-charge jet."
    The problem is that the cumulative effect works in a narrow engineering sense: a dense charge, a metal lining, the directed formation of a jet in an environment where it doesn't have time to disintegrate. But here they're proposing to take the rarefied lunar regolith, a vacuum, megaton explosions, and produce... a long-range, collimated stream of matter over hundreds of thousands of kilometers. This isn't a cumulative jet; it's a space version of "spitting across the entire solar system and hitting the target."
    What's especially beautiful is the idea that you can not only create a mass ejection, but also direct it toward Earth with a week's delay. This is where celestial mechanics begins to quietly cry. Because after an explosion on the Moon, you get a cloud of fragments with a distribution of velocities, angles, and energies. And this cloud doesn't read your attack plan, doesn't know about Starlink, and doesn't respect the geometry of a triangle.
    Some of these particles will go on outgoing trajectories, some into lunar orbit, and some even into interplanetary space. And only a very small fraction, if lucky, will intersect with near-Earth space. And not "carefully over the targets in a week," but in the form of an extremely chaotic stream, more like an unscheduled meteor shower.
    The sheer scale of the mission is remarkable: Angara-5, the warhead launch, the lunar flight, orbital entry, synchronized detonations… all for the sake of "having Starlink in a week left in the dust." At this point, Starlink, as I recall, simply continues to operate in the "this satellite died—okay, the routing has been reorganized, now go next" mode.
    And here's the main engineering gap: the author constantly thinks of the satellite constellation as a fixed structure that can be "impacted." But Starlink isn't an object, it's a process. It doesn't stand still; it's constantly being reassembled, and that's why attempts to "shut everything down with a single event" sound as certain as a plan to shut down the internet by striking the ocean in the right place.
    The result is a very typical design: if electronic warfare can't cope, let's bring in the Moon, nuclear charges, and a little ballistic magic, and let physics get out of the way.
    Unfortunately, as usual, she gets in the way.
    1. 0
      24 May 2026 07: 44
      Quote: Toby Dammit
      or better yet, straight to the Moon—apparently, physics is more accommodating there.

      You're right - the physics on the Moon are more flexible, gravity is less than on Earth, and it's easier to transfer 100 tons of finely dispersed soil by a cumulative jet into orbit around the Earth from the Moon rather than from Earth.
  46. 0
    23 May 2026 23: 11
    Quote: Svetlana
    Quote: Toby Dammit
    do you want to hear the answer?

    Yes.

    This isn't an engineering idea, but rather an attempt to assemble a "weapon of words," where if you add enough terms like plasma, EMP, and magnetic field, it should work automatically. It all starts with the idea of ​​"artificial Van Allen radiation belts," as if they weren't the result of the complex global workings of the Earth's magnetosphere, but something that could be switched on and configured to the shape of a 12-sided polygon. At this point, you start to smile a little, because it sounds like "let's create a weather cloud of the desired shape."
    Next comes the idea of ​​"compressing the Earth's magnetic field with a plasma generator." This is where physics usually starts to tire. The planet's magnetic field isn't an object that can be locally compressed or deformed like rubber. It's a global system connected to the Earth's core and the solar wind. And the idea that it can be carefully "compressed at the right point" is like trying to push through the ocean with your finger to create a vortex of precisely the right size.
    A special treat is the "SuperEMI Low-Frequency Spectrum." It sounds like the EMI can be customized in the settings: normal mode, enhanced mode, and a bass-heavy mode for destroying satellites. In reality, the spectrum is determined by the physics of the source, not by the desire to choose a "more powerful version."
    And the geometry—a regular 12-sided polygon at an altitude of 750 km, with projections that, for some reason, must neatly fall within maritime zones. It's almost an artistic orbital composition. The only problem is that satellites at this altitude fly at about 7.5 km/s, their orbits constantly shift, and, unfortunately, they have no interest in geometric shapes.
    And the final layer is to connect everything in the arsenal: the X-37B, submarines, the seabed, ICBMs. It feels like the idea isn't to get a working system, but to gather the maximum number of impressive words in one place, and then it will somehow become physics itself.
    The end result is a classic story: if you mix real-world terms from different fields with sufficient confidence, you can create the impression of a complex system. But physics usually reacts quite calmly to this and simply continues to function as it did before this text.
    1. 0
      24 May 2026 07: 39
      Quote: Toby Dammit
      But physics usually reacts to this quite calmly and simply continues to work as it did before this text.

      Physics reacts to your answer quite calmly and simply continues to work.
  47. 0
    23 May 2026 23: 35
    I wonder what our brilliant geostrategists will do?
  48. 0
    25 May 2026 04: 45
    The question is, what signal strength is needed from a smartphone, especially on 5G, which quickly fades in the atmosphere, to reach the satellite? what
  49. 0
    26 May 2026 06: 45
    About 15 years ago, a video of an MIT professor was circulating online, saying that Russia doesn't need technology for an economic and technological breakthrough, because it already has it, but it lacks the conditions for implementing it in industry. If you look at who's at the helm of our top companies, everything becomes clear.
  50. 0
    26 May 2026 14: 45
    I'm afraid we'll be crying our eyes out again until a roasting rooster pecks us very painfully and bloodily on the top of the head.
  51. 0
    27 May 2026 17: 49
    Quote: KCA
    Taking into account the launch into orbit, it is much more expensive than $2-3,000, 1 kg - $7,000 + the cost of the satellites themselves

    What does this fundamentally change? The cost of an S-500 launch is tens of times higher. War is a clash of economies!!!
  52. 0
    27 May 2026 17: 51
    Quote: Svetlana
    Quote: sirGarry
    Quote: plast
    The fight will have to be transferred to space. It doesn't matter that we're not at war with the United States.

    Stupidity! What are you proposing to do with thousands of suitcase-sized satellites costing 2-3 thousand dollars?

    Quote: sirGarry
    Quote: plast
    The fight will have to be transferred to space. It doesn't matter that we're not at war with the United States.

    Stupidity! What are you proposing to do with thousands of suitcase-sized satellites costing 2-3 thousand dollars?
    We will shoot down, or rather, destroy, them with radiation from radioactive plasma in artificially created radiation belts similar to the Van Allen radiation belts. The screenshot shows a regular 12-sided sphere over North America at an altitude of 750 km.
    The pins indicate the projections of the vertices of the 12-gon onto the Earth's surface.
    All projections intersect the earth's surface in marine areas.
    Creates SuperEMI with the main energy in the low-frequency region of the spectrum,
    compressing the Earth's magnetic field in space with a plasma explosive magnetic generator.
    Launch of compression initiators - from spaceplanes similar to the X-37B,
    from submarines, from the seabed by Skif-type devices, from silos with Sarmat-type ICBMs.

    Smoking all that nasty stuff is bad for you! Otherwise, you'll see all sorts of things!
  53. 0
    28 May 2026 22: 51
    The author clearly overdid it with the regular smartphone. And the constellation needs to be pretty robust. If they have antennas that big, you can't launch 50 of them into orbit at once, like a Starlink. And how does this thing handle interference? There are plenty of questions. That future is still a long way off. And it's expensive.
  54. 0
    29 May 2026 13: 30
    I'll add that we can use this too. And it will be possible to create drones that can target a satellite signal coming from a phone. This only speaks to the scaling of war, its penetration into every nook and cranny, and the miniaturization of weapons. The winner in this war will be the one who learns to fight in networked "swarms" and counter enemy "networked swarms."
  55. 0
    4 June 2026 07: 08
    Will this complicate Roskomnadzor's special operation to block Telegram?
  56. 0
    4 June 2026 10: 02
    [QuoteStarlink was a flop: direct satellite-to-smartphone communication would dramatically complicate special operations.[/ Quote]
    It's okay, we have a tough response - St. Petersburg International Economic Forum
  57. 0
    4 June 2026 13: 45
    Because this could have been ended years ago if they hadn't been so snotty. Now every day there's news about the deaths of our citizens, and we're starting to get used to it!!! They're writing about a fuel shortage in an oil-producing country!!! How is this even possible? A country that produces the best air defense systems can't defend itself from UAVs!! How surreal!!!