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To: SafetyAgentMan who wrote (6779)9/13/1999 2:36:00 AM
From: djane  Respond to of 10852
 
Pacific Century plans global satellite fleet


Published on Friday, September 10, 1999

INTERNET


JOSEPH LO

Richard Li Tzar-kai's Pacific Century Group has
unveiled plans to launch a fleet of satellites providing
high-speed Internet access across the globe.

The company last night said it had formed a
majority-owned 70:30 joint venture with
DaimlerChrysler Aerospace (Dasa) of Germany.

PC Matrix, which will be based in Hong Kong, will
initially lease capacity from Asia Satellite
Telecommunications' AsiaSat 3S satellite.

Plans call for the subsequent development of PC
Matrix's own fleet of satellites, with the first expected to
launch in late 2002.

The first satellite would serve the Asia-Pacific but the
fleet would eventually be capable of serving the globe,
Pacific Century and Dasa said.

A key initial customer for PC Matrix will be Pacific
Convergence Corp (PCC), a subsidiary of Mr Li's
listed technology flagship, Pacific Century CyberWorks.
PCC hopes to offer ultra-fast Internet connections to
Asian homes through satellite downloads to local cable
networks.

A Pacific Century spokesman said the "point of PC
Matrix is to eventually be its own satellite company"
with the capacity to offer global interactive connectivity
to the Internet through Ka and X-band satellites.

"We expect this to be do-able by late-2002, at which
time we would begin by serving the Asia-Pacific market
first," the spokesman said.

In a related development, Mr Li's Singapore-listed
Pacific Century Regional Developments (PCRD) said it
had sold another 180 million shares in China Online on
Tuesday, following its sale of 500 million shares in the
company on Monday.

A spokesman said PCRD now held about 7.5 to 8 per
cent of China Online's outstanding shares.

Copyright (c)1999. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All Rights Reserved.



To: SafetyAgentMan who wrote (6779)9/13/1999 3:07:00 AM
From: djane  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10852
 
SkyBridge to compete with LMDS carriers

September 9, 1999

By Elizabeth V. Mooney

NEW YORK?When David Finkelstein looks up at the heavens and
ahead to the future, he sees low-earth-orbit satellites as galactic warriors
fighting to control suburban sprawl on Earth and provide the power of
Internet access to the rich and poor alike.

??The big social message is that telecommunications (networks) are like
the new railroads of the next millennium. They are altering the relative role
of infrastructure,?? said Finkelstein, senior vice president of marketing and
business development for SkyBridge, a Bethesda, Md., LEO start-up.

??LEO constellations will become a very powerful agent in that change ...
They can slow down uncontrolled urbanization, and there are a lot of
costs to society associated with this, including development and time lost
in transit.??

Bankrolled by corporate heavyweights, including Alcatel, Telstra Corp.,
Toshiba Corp. and Loral Space & Communications Ltd., SkyBridge will
focus on last-mile access instead of end-to-end connectivity.

For $4.8 billion, the equivalent ??of one operator?s fiber-optic deployment
in the New York City metro area,?? SkyBridge plans to deploy a
constellation of 80 LEO satellites covering the globe, except for the Arctic
and Antarctic regions, Finkelstein said at the recent Telecom Business ?99
Conference & Expo.

??SkyBridge is a fairly unique implementation. We are taking the notion of
statistical multiplexing used in network backbones, where aggregating
traffic is used for efficient transmission,?? he said.

??It is similar to the hand-off from base station to base station in terrestrial
wireless.??

Orbiting at an altitude of 15,000 kilometers, the LEO satellites will
provide two-way communications with a latency of about 30 milliseconds.
This is far less than the half-second delays experienced in communications
via the geostationary satellites in widespread use today. They orbit at
much higher altitudes.

Sky Bridge plans to begin launching satellites in mid-2002. Meanwhile
Hughes Electronics? $1.4 billion Spaceway system expects to begin
offering similar services that same year in North America. Likewise,
Astrolink L.L.C., a strategic venture initiated by Lockheed Martin Corp.,
plans to launch its first geostationary satellite in 2002, followed by the
launch of three additional satellites at six-month intervals.

Lockheed Martin also is providing launch equipment to Teledesic L.L.C.,
whose backers include Motorola Inc., Boeing Corp., Bill Gates and Craig
McCaw. Teledesic plans a $10 billion system of 200 LEO satellites, the
first of which is slated to be launched in 2003.

??Twenty-five percent of America will remain uncovered by terrestrial
landline or wireless, and a larger percentage worldwide will be
overlooked by Internet deployment,?? SkyBridge?s Finkelstein said.

??Satellites can reduce the gap between the information haves and
have-nots by providing universal service ... Satellites are distance
insensitive, so delivery costs are the same in Manhattan or Montana. It is
the only technology about which you can say this.??

SkyBridge sees an addressable market of about 21 million people in
North America and Europe. They live or work far enough away from
urban areas that satellite-based Internet access may be their cheapest
option.

??Remote applications are highly interactive: telecommuting, tele-medicine,
distance learning,?? Finkelstein said.

??New generations of applications are increasingly information-rich and
interactive. Workers who need to interact are increasingly mobile, spread
out and global, and they are redefining and changing work processes.??

Residential terminals will cost less than $1,000, ??and we are working to
get the price down,?? Finkelstein said. Residential customers also will pay
a $30 flat-rate monthly service fee. Business customers will pay about
$2,000 for the installation and about $50 per month for service.

Sky Bridge also will offer services to companies in industrial parks that
cable television and local exchange carriers are not interested in serving.

For these customers, local multipoint distribution systems and microwave
multipoint distribution systems ??have a wonderful future, but they have
propagation characteristics that require a line-of-site and towers every
several kilometers,?? Finkelstein said.

??How can satellite compete against fixed wireless and [digital subscriber
line]? I use the example of Direct TV. Echostar started in rural areas, and
now the largest number of its new (customer) additions are in areas that
already have cable TV.??

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