How Musk Plans to Kill Off Cellphone Dead Zones Across the US

The danger of getting lost in the desert or stranded at sea, unable to raise an alarm, may become a thing of the past as soon as next year near if Elon Musk’s latest project goes off without a hitch. The SpaceX chief teamed up with T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert to unveil a new service that will utilize Musk’s Starlink satellites to offer cell coverage in every corner of the US.

Sievert said there were a more than half a million square miles of dead zone — areas not covered by any cellular network — across the country, and described the project as “a lot like putting a cellular tower in the sky, just a lot harder.”

Here’s how the companies plan to do it, what it means for mobile users and what the limitations will be:

What is it?

The two companies want to create an entirely new mobile network, broadcast from Starlink satellites, that uses T-Mobile’s existing mid-band spectrum. The service will give customers that sign up phone coverage practically everywhere in the continental US, Hawaii, parts of Alaska, Puerto Rico and even territorial waters.