Apple was the first to popularize satellite connectivity for handheld devices outside specialized military and research applications. Satellite connectivity support on the iPhone 14 allows urgent communication in the absence of cellular networks, andAndroid 15is finally bringing similar software-level options to Android. Google is also pushing the envelope of what’s possible with satellite connectivity integrated into apps like Maps.
Here’s how Android 15 could help your phone connect to a satellite
A leaked video has revealed the satellite pointing UI
Rumors suggest upcoming flagship Android devices like theGoogle Pixel 9with feature modemsequipped for communicating directlywith orbiting satellites. However, popular feature spotter and tipsterAssembleDebug on X(formerly Twitter) recently shared concrete evidence buried in the code for Google Maps beta v11.125, suggesting the app would allow interfacing with satellites directly (viaPiunikaweb).
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New code sightings are stringing us along
An icon for the Satellite Gateway app
AssembleDebug spotted three strings of code which suggest Google Maps will allow you to update your location in the app via satellite at 15-minute intervals, up to five times a day. Code strings are usually text descriptors used to explain features to code reviewers and end users, so this sighting could be concrete evidence that Google is developing the functional aspects behind closed doors, even though we haven’t seen it yet.
Connect to satellite
You can update your location once every 15 minutes, up to five times a day.
Google usually doesn’t specify timelines for such feature updates, but the company may want to save everything until the Pixel 9 launches with hardware-level support for the tech before showing us everything planned on the software front. That might also be right alongside the Android 15 launch where we should get a full walkthrough of all the OS-level satellite connectivity as well.