- Feb 29, 2000
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Originally posted by: KLin
http://www.cnn.com/2008/TECH/0...n.satellite/index.html
Where do I sign up?![]()
Originally posted by: ScottMac
There'd still be a few seconds of latency. 22,500 miles each way + processing / routing delays.
Any non-batch / connectionless stuff would still suck. It would just suck much faster.
Originally posted by: Rubycon
Originally posted by: ScottMac
There'd still be a few seconds of latency. 22,500 miles each way + processing / routing delays.
Any non-batch / connectionless stuff would still suck. It would just suck much faster.
Depends on the orbit - the system I've used has latency comparable to DSL (100ms) due to lower orbiting satellites. If they are using this for telesurgery, for example, it will be LEO. INMARSAT, OTOH, runs about 650-1000ms and is quite noticeable.
EDIT: CNN reports 1.2 giga BYTES per second. Is that right?
Originally posted by: her209
Think about about what the Federal government has then?
:shocked:
Originally posted by: KLin
Original AP story.
Mary Yamaguchi needs to get her facts straight. :roll:![]()
Originally posted by: Rubycon
Originally posted by: ScottMac
There'd still be a few seconds of latency. 22,500 miles each way + processing / routing delays.
Any non-batch / connectionless stuff would still suck. It would just suck much faster.
Depends on the orbit - the system I've used has latency comparable to DSL (100ms) due to lower orbiting satellites. If they are using this for telesurgery, for example, it will be LEO. INMARSAT, OTOH, runs about 650-1000ms and is quite noticeable.
EDIT: CNN reports 1.2 giga BYTES per second. Is that right?
Originally posted by: KLin
Original AP story.
Mary Yamaguchi needs to get her facts straight. :roll:![]()
Originally posted by: ScottMac
Fixed mount dishes 5M do not tilt & swivel (azimuth and elevation mounts) .. that' means stationary orbit, that means ~22,500 miles where they park geostationary satellites.
LEO = Low Earth Orbit only gives ~15 minutes horizon-to-horizon at best, probably really less than ten (typical for LEO amateur radio sats was 8-12 minutes on an direct overhead pass).
INMARSAT is also geostationary.
GPS is an orbiting constellation and uses omni-directional antennas (Bi-/Tri/Quad-filar helix)
If it's a stationary dish, the satellite is parked.
Originally posted by: Rubycon
Originally posted by: KLin
Original AP story.
Mary Yamaguchi needs to get her facts straight. :roll:![]()
Mari
Yes those reporters are always taking too large a byte and never save their bits. Makes the computer users get all stirred up in frenzy. What kind of big deal is a factor of eight anyway?
Originally posted by: ScottMac
Fixed mount dishes 5M do not tilt & swivel (azimuth and elevation mounts) .. that' means stationary orbit, that means ~22,500 miles where they park geostationary satellites.
LEO = Low Earth Orbit only gives ~15 minutes horizon-to-horizon at best, probably really less than ten (typical for LEO amateur radio sats was 8-12 minutes on an direct overhead pass).
INMARSAT is also geostationary.
GPS is an orbiting constellation and uses omni-directional antennas (Bi-/Tri/Quad-filar helix)
If it's a stationary dish, the satellite is parked.
Our system has the actual dish inside a radome and it's gimballed because the ship moves.![]()
