When disaster strikes, government promises often ring hollow. But there's a company quietly proving that innovation doesn't wait for bureaucrats to act—it just gets the job done.
While officials hold press conferences and make speeches, satellite infrastructure is already restoring connectivity to affected regions. No red tape, no delays. Just real solutions delivered when people need them most.
This isn't just about internet access. It's a wake-up call that decentralized, independent infrastructure can outpace traditional institutions when it matters. In a world where connectivity has become as essential as electricity, who provides it—and how fast—actually matters more than you'd think.
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fren.eth
· 01-05 07:25
It's obvious that the ones really doing the work are never the people in meetings... The satellite network operation is indeed impressive. While the government was still dithering in PPT presentations, they had already laid down the signals.
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CafeMinor
· 01-05 04:05
Here comes the harvest again. I'm tired of hearing the rhetoric about satellite internet... What will happen when a real disaster occurs?
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GrayscaleArbitrageur
· 01-04 09:52
It's the same old rhetoric again, the opposition between bureaucrats and innovative companies. It's quite ironic to see this here, as if they truly see companies as saviors.
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GasFeePhobia
· 01-04 09:51
Really, in critical moments, private enterprises still have to step up... The government’s old-fashioned approach is still in meetings, while their satellites are already in space.
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IntrovertMetaverse
· 01-04 09:50
Satellite networks are really amazing; while the government is still in meetings, their signals are already full.
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bridge_anxiety
· 01-04 09:44
This is the true spirit of Web3, much more reliable than those organizations that only hold meetings.
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RugPullAlarm
· 01-04 09:36
Wait a minute, has this company really amortized the costs of satellite infrastructure? Or is this just another round of marketing? Check the on-chain fund flows, everyone. Don't let the stories kill your rationality.
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MetaMasked
· 01-04 09:32
Actions always carry more weight than words, this is what Web3 should be doing.
When disaster strikes, government promises often ring hollow. But there's a company quietly proving that innovation doesn't wait for bureaucrats to act—it just gets the job done.
While officials hold press conferences and make speeches, satellite infrastructure is already restoring connectivity to affected regions. No red tape, no delays. Just real solutions delivered when people need them most.
This isn't just about internet access. It's a wake-up call that decentralized, independent infrastructure can outpace traditional institutions when it matters. In a world where connectivity has become as essential as electricity, who provides it—and how fast—actually matters more than you'd think.