But your laptop's Ethernet adapter comes free with your laptop (both in terms of money and waiting to get it since it's already on your desk) and possibly even more importantly you know the laptop manufacturer and users have QAed it for you so it's absolutely going to behave the way you expect which is important when the device you're designing isn't behaving.
> your laptop's Ethernet adapter
The device as-designed likely wouldn't work with your laptop's ethernet adapter - hence why the author of TFA placed an isolation transformer and jack ...on a breakout board.
Many Ethernet-supported SoCs still use various MII style interfaces because it makes more sense to outsource the physical layer to some external chip especially if not everyone is going to use Ethernet.
It's perhaps like the difference between using Thunderbolt vs raw PCIe. You technically shouldn't need Thunderbolt if you're just permanently connecting two things inside a same machine.
Is it smarter to do it proper and make it silicon efficient than just shipping the darn thing ASAP? idk. We'll see.
The chips they're using might already have Ethernet PHYs built in anyway which might also be part of the reason they're using Ethernet.
Did they remove support for the Ethernet jack on the Minis available in Ukraine? It looks like it's still present on the WiFi board, next to the power jack.
The wifi chip may emit signal during boot. The device may get accidentally reset in the field. SpaceX may push an update that messes with the settings.
Cutting down on mass would make sense, though.
I know people do that sort of thing for evaluation kits, but it doesn't seem like a good idea for production.
Aspos•14h ago
100721•13h ago
mattmaroon•13h ago
michaelt•13h ago
mft_•13h ago
mattmaroon•13h ago
michaelt•12h ago
There are alternatives if you only need short range, or if you can tolerate high latency. And of course there are fire-and-forget cruise missiles that don't need communications at all.
But there aren't all that many other options. Historically, satellite internet companies like Iridium, Globalstar and Teledesic have not fared well.
lxgr•11h ago
It only gained packed-switched data with the second generation satellite network, but data rates are still very low (think hundreds of kbps, and I believe even that needs high-gain antennas).
NitpickLawyer•10h ago
edit: it was Viasat not Iridium, I got them mixed up.
RF_Savage•10h ago
NitpickLawyer•9h ago
snickerdoodle12•8h ago
mschuster91•4h ago
Hell we let Russia freely execute dissidents (Skripal or the Berlin Tiergarten murder come to my mind) and tolerated a land-grab war by little green men in 2014. Either of these actions would have warranted serious consequences, the Crimea/Donbas grab would be a casus belli if you ask me. But again, we were too busy sucking Putin off for cheap gas.
snickerdoodle12•3h ago
mschuster91•4h ago
maxlin•11h ago
The thing came with a clear limit "this thing works in these cells of this big hex grid". And they drove it off that hex grid. Plan and simple.
Its like if the US-supplied HIMARS came with some built-in limit that it cannot be used to target known Russian nuclear installments, and they'd try to do that.
It's not that those things are unquestionable, but they are limits that would need US consultation as US obviously doesn't want the thing to escalate from being a defensive war to something else.
karp773•9h ago
coryrc•8h ago
TMWNN•6h ago
burnt-resistor•12h ago
dylan604•11h ago
Aspos•11h ago
kubelsmieci•9h ago
littlestymaar•12h ago
tomaskafka•12h ago
gruez•11h ago
The author's youtube channel also contains a video of him doing a speedtest on a starlink mini while driving on a highway.
michaelt•8h ago
Unless there's a software limit built in that turns them off, or the drone's doing some crazy high-G-force acrobatics.
codedokode•11h ago
Also as I understand, satellites do not work over Russian territory so guess where this can be used.
Andrew_nenakhov•10h ago
Ray20•4h ago
Aren't starlink have some kind of geolock?
> to have a reliable bypass of pathetic russian firewall
All data shows that Russia have one of the strongest and best firewall in the world, in many aspects even better than in China. And all the Russians I spoke with say that VPN is not blocked and any service for a couple of bucks does its job.
neilv•5h ago
Wouldn't publicity paint a target on one's back?
stephen_g•4h ago
neilv•3h ago
tenuousemphasis•13h ago
mattmaroon•13h ago
someothherguyy•13h ago
rozhok•6h ago
0xbadcafebee•2h ago