CUPERTINO, Calif. – Itās no secret Emergency SOS via satelliteĀ has been a great success for Apple. Ever since it launched back in late 2022, there have been countless reports of people being able to use satellite connectivity to call for help. So itās no surpriseĀ iOS 18Ā will expand that feature and offer satellite text messaging services as well.
The best part about Emergency SOS via satellite is that itās been completely free so far. Originally Apple offered the service for a single year, thenĀ expanded that to two years after those 12 months were almost up. We had wondered whether Message via satellite would be the same, and it seems this is the case.
According toĀ CNET, Message via satellite will be a free feature āat least for nowā. Apple hasnāt elaborated on that, but it suggests that, like Emergency SOS via satellite, the service may not be free forever. However since we still donāt know how much Emergency SOS via satellite is going to cost, or when users might be asked to pay for the service, we canāt guess how things might change for its text messaging counterpart.
However the good news is that Message via satellite wonāt require any specialist hardware. Apple confirmed to CNET that it will be rolling out as a software update, though it will be limited to phones that already have satellite connectivity. That meansĀ iPhone 14,Ā iPhone 15Ā and presumably the upcomingĀ iPhone 16.
While the system uses satellites rather than regular cell signals, itās very similar to the regular iMessage system and includes both Tapback reactions and emoji support. The limits havenāt been specified, though I suspect that Apple wonāt be letting you clog up bandwidth with anything bigger than that ā like video and image files.
The key thing here is that this isnāt an emergency feature, and you can text friends and family as you normally would. Which means you can stay connected with people in areas when youād otherwise be on your own. Anyone using iMessage will also be able to message you as normal, but SMS, which is also supported, will be limited.
According to Apple emergency contacts youāve already set up can message you freely via SMS. However anyone else wonāt be able to contact you via satellite unless you initiate the conversation first.Ā RCS messagingĀ wonāt be supported when that launches on iOS 18, though. Simply because it hasnāt been optimized to account for satellite messagingās smaller transfer limits.
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