Satellite Internet of Things (IoT) connectivity provider Myriota has launched four additional nanosatellites to strengthen its UltraLite low Earth orbit (LEO) constellation, enhancing its global coverage capabilities.
The satellites are currently being onboarded following their deployment on SpaceX's Transporter-13 mission on 14th March, with additional launches planned throughout the year to further expand the constellation.
This latest deployment reinforces Myriota's set of global IoT connectivity options, which includes its 3GPP-aligned HyperPulse geostationary satellite service.
Myriota's expanded network allows the company to address a wide range of IoT sensor use cases globally, with customisable performance, capacity, and coverage to meet specific customer requirements.
The service spans from highly power-constrained, challenging deployment scenarios to applications requiring seamless terrestrial to non-terrestrial network roaming.
"We are maintaining a regular cadence of satellite launches, adding ever more capacity, coverage and resilience to our UltraLite constellation of LEO satellites as we invest in continuous upgrading of our service offerings," Ben Cade, chief executive of Myriota, said.
The expanded capacity ensures Myriota's global customers in logistics, utilities, and agriculture sectors can securely monitor and collect data worldwide using long-lasting and low-cost IoT sensors.
Customers and partners are already using the technology to track, locate, and monitor assets including water tanks, vehicles, wind turbines, shipping containers, equipment, and tools.
"Our networks can now support tens of millions of IoT connections around the globe, ensuring access to low-power, cost effective sensor networks to more countries and industries, ready for our partners to further expand their solution deployments in 2025 and 2026," Cade said.