Apple Adds 2-way Satellite Messaging for iOS 18

alanymarce

Well-known member
I read the announcement, and obviously this could be the end of my needing the satphone. However, does anyone know coverage? Thuraya never had global coverage and have reduced coverage recently. Iridium (which we have) does have global coverage. Will the Apple coverage be global?
 

fourfa

Observer
IIRC the satellite SOS feature that launched with iPhone 14 in 2022 was initially marketed as "free for two years," so likely we'll find out what that meant this fall. I can't imagine this 2-way mode will be all-you-can-eat free for more than a very short period. Per-message charge, monthly fee, who knows
 

toddz69

Explorer
I was very curious about the costs too - if it's less than my $14.95/mo cost for my InReach, I'll get it. My wife was more excited that I might finally update my iPhone if this works out financially :).

Todd Z.
 
IIRC the satellite SOS feature that launched with iPhone 14 in 2022 was initially marketed as "free for two years," so likely we'll find out what that meant this fall. I can't imagine this 2-way mode will be all-you-can-eat free for more than a very short period. Per-message charge, monthly fee, who knows
I would be very surprised if Apple decides to charge for “SOS” (not ordinary message) service. This is somewhat akin to 9-1-1 calls that can be made, free of charge, by any phone through any carrier (by Federal mandate I believe).
 
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fourfa

Observer
Personally I would hope so - but given how clearly they spelled it out when it launched as "not free forever" I'm pessimistic. Garmin, Spot, Iridium etc are not free either. This Apple feature seems more like those than the free-to-transmit 406 MHz SARSAT

We should find on September 9 at their launch event
 

fourfa

Observer
So far we've only learned that 2-way comm will come to all older phones (14 and later) that support satellite. Very basic SMS, no photos, very low bandwidth. You can send to any number, but receiving is more complex (details in this doc below). Sounds like the other party has to be in your favorites or emergency contacts, they have to tap an extra "send by satellite" button, and you have to continue tracking by moving the phone as directed. All makes sense


2-way messages USA / Canada only for now, 2-way SOS from anywhere as before (except Armenia, Belarus, China mainland, Hong Kong, Macao, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, and Russia in the small print)

Still no details on what happens after "free for two years" is over
 

smbisig

Adventurer
So this past weekend while camping remotely near the Olympic National Park, I woke up to a popup on my iPhone 15 saying I could share my location via satellite. I didn't because I had already shared my location and wanted to read up on it to make sure it wasn't an SOS feature. Nowhere did it say for emergencies.

The option is under the Find Me section of the phone. It's not available if you have cell or are connected to wifi.

IMG_928BD3508AE0-1.jpeg
 

nckwltn

Explorer
I’m holding onto my garmin subscription for now.

The iPhone sat coms do work really well. I gave it a test while out ins the San Rafael Swell last week… but it’s tied to my iPhone. That means I have to be able to use it. Wife has an android, kids have no phones.

Anyone can push sos on our garmin mini , which is the main reason I have the garmin… sos services.

In a few years when the kids finally do get phones so I’m not the only one with sat coms in my pocket, perhaps time to retire the garmin subscription.

I do also like that the garmin is a stand alone device that can sit in the off position for a long time and be powered on when needed. iPhone needs daily charging to be useful. Garmin can be dropped from a reasonable height and still work, iPhone is going to become compromised very quickly after a drop. That’s a lot of eggs in one basket.
 

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