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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Globalstar Telecommunications Limited GSAT
GSAT 56.29-0.7%12:20 PM EST

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To: ccryder who wrote (8305)11/12/1999 2:12:00 PM
From: Maurice Winn  Read Replies (1) of 29987
 
<Regarding using G*/GEO Sats for wireless data, broadband downlink from GEO will require more antenna gain (read bigger) than practical for a hand held device. Alternatively, an order of magnitude increase in GEOSAT power would be required. But there is a paradigm change on the bandwidth required for WWW access--e.g. Palm Pilot V.>

As $ill Gates says, Paradigm Shift Happens [TM] so maybe the bandwidth required will change.

Thanks for the explanation. Which makes me think of an umbrella, which Globalstar subscribers stick upside down in the ground using the spike and it tracks the satellite and gives them great antenna gain and multi megabits per second download from one of those Loral satellites under instruction from the Globalstar satellite [which was told to do that by the normal Globalstar phone].

The OmniTRACS units can do that on trucks swooping and turning along highways and even hitting the odd pot hole. They can do it on boats, bobbing around in the ocean. So it shouldn't be too hard to do it with a little [300mm diameter] umbrella stuck in the ground. An easy Bluetooth connection to the WWeb device and hey presto, instant bandwidth in the desert.

If people are zooming around in their monster Winnebagos, keeping the road kill up and the endangered species down an umbrella in their vehicle shouldn't be too much of a burden to carry. Even a backpacker could carry a little furled antennae with little difficulty.

Aluminium-coated kevlar or something should do it. Kevlar is strong, so the signals wouldn't smash through it [just kidding]. It could double as a real umbrella in rain [when the Loralien signals would probably fade making the WWeb useless anyway].

How about that?
Maurice
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