Singapore Biz-journalSingapore Biz-journal
Notification Show More
Aa
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
  • F&B
  • Health & Fitness
  • Technology
  • Education
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Reading: Singapore-based Transcelestial uses lasers to build affordable internet networks
Share
Singapore Biz-journalSingapore Biz-journal
Aa
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
  • F&B
  • Health & Fitness
  • Technology
  • Education
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • My Bookmarks
Search
  • Home
  • Lifestyle
  • F&B
  • Health & Fitness
  • Technology
  • Education
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • My Bookmarks
Follow US
© Copyright 2023 Singaporebizjournal | Powered by Inflex Media
Singapore Biz-journal > Blog > Technology > Singapore-based Transcelestial uses lasers to build affordable internet networks
Technology

Singapore-based Transcelestial uses lasers to build affordable internet networks

Editor
Last updated: 2023/07/10 at 5:23 AM
By Editor 4 Min Read
Share
SHARE

Transcelestial is on a mission to make the internet more accessible by building a network of shoebox-sized devices that send lasers to one another, creating a fiber-like network. Today, the Singaporean-based startup announced it has raised $10 million, with the goal of expanding its wireless laser communications system in Indonesia, India, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore and the United States. Eventually, it has its eyes on space, deploying its wireless fiber optics from orbit.

The company’s A2 round was led by aerospace venture firm Airbus Ventures, with participation from Kickstart Ventures, Genesis Alternative Ventures, Wavemaker, Cap Vista and Seeds Capital. Investor In-Q-Tel was part of a previously disclosed round. This brings Transcelestial’s total raised since it was founded in 2016 to $24 million. Some of its previous backers include EDBI, Entrepreneur First, 500 Global, SparkLabs Global Ventures and Michael Seibel.

CEO Rohit Jha told TechCrunch that he and co-founder Mohammad Danesh believe “connectivity is a human right” and improving internet connections for at least a billion people drives all their commercial and technical decisions.

The two say current internet infrastructure is the main reason so many people lack reliable internet access. Undersea cables, for example, are expensive to build and only link two points. Terrestrial long-haul networks give Tier 1 cities good coverage but leave smaller cities and towns behind. Middle-mile and last-mile distribution is often costly and runs into right-of-way issues.

Transcelestial’s laser communications systems do away with underground cables, which are expensive to install and maintain, and radio-frequency-based devices, with their complicated spectrum of licensing regulations. As a result, Jha said Transcelestial can offer a significantly lower cost per bit option. Transcelestial’s shoebox-sized devices, called CENTAURI, have already been deployed in South Asian and Southeast Asian markets.

The startup recently proved that its laser technology can deliver 5G connectivity during a demonstration at the University of Technology Sydney. Its next stop is space: Transcelestial is working on bringing its technology to a low-earth-orbit (LEO) constellation, with the goal of deploying its wireless fiber optics from orbit directly into cities and downs.

In the meantime, it’s planning to move beyond its markets in Asia and start expanding early market access in the U.S., where research by the Pew Trust found that 27% of people in rural areas and 2% of those in cities lacked readily available internet connections. Transcelestial plans to enter the U.S. by exploring collaborations with the government, enterprise and telecoms over the next 12 months. Jha said the company is already working under stealth with a few ISPs and a major enterprise cloud and data center company on the West Coast.

Part of Transcelestial’s new funding will be used to prepare Terabit Factory, its production facility, against uncertainties in the supply chain. The facility has the capacity to manufacture up to 2,400 CENTAURI devices annually, which Trancelestial says is the largest deployment volume of any laser comms producer globally.

In a statement about the funding, In-Q-Tel managing director Clayton Williams said, “Transcelestial’s laser communications platform CENTAURI is a best in class solution for low cost, high bandwidth terrestrial communications. We are excited to help expand this capability to enable a space-based data backhaul for secure point-to-point communications from the U.S. and anywhere on earth.”

You Might Also Like

Singapore-based Propseller uses data to take the hassle out of real estate transactions

How Singapore’s Secretlab is conquering lucrative North American and European markets

Silicon Box launches world’s most advanced semiconductor interconnection facility in Singapore

Bitdefender acquires Singapore cybersecurity startup Horangi

Singapore fintech startups gain scale, speed up innovation in US expansion

Editor July 10, 2023 July 10, 2023
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Leave a review

Leave a review Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please select a rating!

More Popular from Singaporebizjournal

Lifestyle

Ethical and eco-friendly: We’re shopping consciously at sustainable fashion brands in Singapore

By Editor 19 Min Read

NONA MANIS – When a home chef’s sweet cravings for a traditional delicacy, transformed into a popular enterprise.

By Editor

Petite Pebble: Stylish and Comfortable Clothing for Little Ones

By Editor 4 Min Read
Health & FitnessStartups

Interview: Farina Ghanie shares the benefits of her wellness retreat programme, Arise

Many of us know what it is like to be burnt out, either from our jobs,…

By Editor
F&B

‘World’s best pastry chef’ Cédric Grolet from France opening patisserie in Singapore

You might have come across French chef Cédric Grolet’s whimsical, artful videos on Instagram, where he crafts elaborate…

By Editor
LifestyleStartups

Singapore’s Zilliqa to help sustainability-focused fashion innovators

Zilliqa, Singapore’s high-performance and low-fee layer-1 blockchain protocol, and Metapolis, an extended-reality (XR) metaverse-as-a-service platform (MaaS)…

By Editor

Ann Chin Popiah: Preserving the Art of Handcrafted Popiah Skins for Generations

Popiah, a traditional Fujianese spring roll, has long been a beloved street food in Southeast Asia.…

By Editor
Technology

Singapore’s Arbor Ventures notches $193M toward next early-stage fintech fund

Arbor Ventures, funder of fintech and shopping startups like installment loan company Tabby and Amazon brand factory Heyday, has…

By Editor
F&B

Good Meat approved to sell serum-free cultivated meat in Singapore

Good Meat announced today it has received regulatory approval from the Singapore Food Agency to use serum-free…

By Editor
Singapore Biz-journal

Singapore Business Journal is Singapore’s fastest growing media platform for startup and entrepreneur stories through news, reports and interviews. We bring to you the most inspiring, motivating and informative business stories from successful entrepreneurs.

Follow Us:

Categories

  • Health & Fitness
  • Technology
  • F&B
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Startups

Quick Links

  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright ©2025 Singaporebizjournal | Powered-by InflexMedia

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Register Lost your password?