Thought this might be of interest to some folks. Garmin and Zoleo use Iridium satellites, Apple and Spot use Globalstar. From testing by backpackinglight.
Globalstar remains constrained by the fact that its satellites can't talk to each other - they have to talk to ground stations. Globalstar has 25 satellites in orbit (and 17 more on the way soon), and another 27 ground stations. But if you get your message up to a Globalstar satellite, it has to hang on to it until it "sees" a ground station, and that can take some time. If it takes too much time, your message drops (send failure).
Iridium, on the other hand, relies on a true "mesh" network - its satellites talk to each other and (quickly) bounce your messages around, until it reaches the one closest to Tempe, AZ, where it's main ground station is located.
The result? Faster message delivery and more reliable communications.
This performance is magnified in heavy tree cover or in canyons. Here, Iridium has an edge as well, because of its 66 operational satellites currently in the sky.
This is why we lean towards recommending Iridium-based satellite messaging devices.
Globalstar remains constrained by the fact that its satellites can't talk to each other - they have to talk to ground stations. Globalstar has 25 satellites in orbit (and 17 more on the way soon), and another 27 ground stations. But if you get your message up to a Globalstar satellite, it has to hang on to it until it "sees" a ground station, and that can take some time. If it takes too much time, your message drops (send failure).
Iridium, on the other hand, relies on a true "mesh" network - its satellites talk to each other and (quickly) bounce your messages around, until it reaches the one closest to Tempe, AZ, where it's main ground station is located.
The result? Faster message delivery and more reliable communications.
This performance is magnified in heavy tree cover or in canyons. Here, Iridium has an edge as well, because of its 66 operational satellites currently in the sky.
This is why we lean towards recommending Iridium-based satellite messaging devices.