18/01/2026
GOOD NEWS! DIRECT-TO-CELL STARTLINK TECHNOLOGY IS COMING THIS MARCH 2026!!
President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos Jr. welcomed Globe Telecom and Starlink to sign a digital connectivity pact, what happened wasn’t just another corporate deal — it was a turning point for millions of Filipinos who have lived their entire lives offline.
Direct-to-Cell satellite technology is about to become available in the Philippines. It will allow ordinary mobile phones to connect directly to satellites when there is no cell tower, no signal, and no network.
No special device.
No additional hardware.
Just the phone in a person’s hand connecting to the sky.
This alone makes the Globe–Starlink partnership one of the most important infrastructure developments in the country in years.
This technology matters because millions of Filipinos still live beyond the reach of mobile coverage. Entire barangays remain invisible to the digital world.
No internet.
No reliable calls.
No access to online services.
No way to participate in the modern economy.
For them, “slow internet” is not the problem. The problem is total absence.
Direct-to-Cell removes geography as a barrier. Mountains, islands, forests, and isolated coastlines no longer automatically mean disconnection.
A farmer can send messages from his field.
A teacher can receive materials in a remote school.
A fisherman can check weather updates offshore.
A family can contact relatives without traveling hours just to find a signal.
In disasters, this becomes a lifeline. When typhoons destroy cell towers and floods cut power, communication collapses first. People cannot call for help.
Local governments lose visibility. Rescue is delayed. Satellite-to-phone connectivity keeps communication alive when ground networks fail.
The economic impact is immediate.
Connectivity means access to markets, digital payments, remote work, and online businesses.
Without it, rural communities remain locked out.
With it, location stops deciding who gets opportunities and who does not.
Education also changes.
Students in remote areas can finally access online lessons and learning platforms without depending on weak or nonexistent infrastructure. The digital divide that widened during the pandemic begins to narrow.
The policy environment mattered too.
The Marcos administration cleared the regulatory path for satellite services and treated digital infrastructure as national development, not a side project.
Without that, this technology would still be stuck on paper.
This partnership exposes a reality the country has avoided for decades: traditional networks will never reach every island, every mountain, and every village. It is too expensive.
The terrain is too difficult.
Satellite connectivity bypasses all of it.
This is not just a telecom upgrade. It is social infrastructure.
A country cannot claim progress while millions vanish the moment signal bars disappear.
Direct-to-Cell technology does not solve every problem, but it removes the biggest one: isolation.
That is why this matters. Not for headlines. Not for speeches. But because it finally gives disconnected Filipinos a way in.
CTTO
- JLB