Tuesday's Flight 63 took off from Sydney shortly after 10 a.m. and was supposed to arrive in Johannesburg about 14 hours later. All appeared to be going smoothly until nearly five hours into the journey, when the Airbus A380 turned around over the ocean, per Flightradar24 data. It headed back to Australia and touched down in Sydney about nine hours after taking off from there.
Founded in 2019 and based in Helsinki, ReOrbit aims to help countries control their own satellites. According to its CEO, Sethu Saveda Suvanam, it offers a solution to nations that can't build their own satellites but want an affordable alternative to Elon Musk-owned Starlink. Unlike Starlink, which also targets private users and enterprises, ReOrbit wants its clients to have full ownership and sovereignty over their satellites and communications. This means sourcing hardware from trusted sources and controlling it with ReOrbit's software layer.
It's knowing that the city itself wants you to to build something great, is willing to actually put the money where the mouth is, right? And help you do that.
They're both Android smartwatches with AI-powered health coaches, they have around the same battery life, brightness, and storage, and notably, they're the same price. Also: Everything announced at Made by Google 2025: Pixel 10 Pro, Fold, Watch 4, and more Of course, you'll get different watch bands and different brand styles, with Google's watch being slightly bigger, but the bones of these devices are almost identical.
The growing trend of mobile service providers collaborating with satellite operators presents significant opportunities in direct-to-device services, with the potential to expand beyond emergency alerts.
"Evolved Mobility for Messaging helps mobile network operators overcome interoperability challenges when integrating with non-terrestrial networks like Skylo," explained Andrew Davies, chief executive officer of Syniverse.