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Navy’s first 4G wireless network heads to sea in March

Posted at 7:19 AM, Feb 07, 2013
and last updated 2013-02-07 07:19:49-05

The Navy’s first shipboard high-speed cell network will set sail in March aboard the USS Kearsarge and the USS San Antonio.

The brand new 4G LTE network is a microwave-based wireless wide-area network (WWAN) that will augment the satellite-based communications on board the ships, according to Danger Room

Between 300 and 400 sailors and Marines who go through training on the 4G LTE network will be equipped with LG smartphones running Android. The devices will facilitate calls, text, and data transfer between ships from up to 20 nautical miles’ distance; between decks on board the ships; and, critically, to relay data between Marine helicopters and the ships below.

Like, for instance, videos of pirates. Seriously.

“The air node will allow them to have a mobile air network. We want to test that for anti-piracy missions,” says Doug Abbotts, a spokesman for the Navy’s Naval Air Systems Command, which has been working on the network since 2009. “The air node goes over the suspected pirate [via the helicopter] and the people who are advancing on the pirates, so they can shoot video through sensors on the helicopters and that video can be transferred to the ship via the network, or transmitted to a patrol boat” responding to a pirate attack.

Read more at Danger Room