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To: DMaA who wrote (20422)3/17/2000 6:40:00 PM
From: Moonray  Respond to of 22053
 
I doubt it. Not with 66 satellites coming down on your head.

Iridium ends with a whimper:

o~~~ O



To: DMaA who wrote (20422)3/18/2000 10:32:00 AM
From: Moonray  Respond to of 22053
 
Iridium Satellite Network to Flame Out
Reuters - Saturday March 18 2:19 AM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Iridium LLC, a bankrupt $5 billion
satellite telephone service, entered the history books on
Saturday as one of the costliest corporate fiascoes of all time.

The Washington-based company said it was cutting off telephone
service to its 55,000 customers as of 11:59 p.m. on Friday, a
prelude to court-ordered liquidation.

Iridium's last act will be to ``de-orbit' -- and
ultimately burn up -- its constellation of 66 satellites
now 485 miles high, which was the first to make staying
connected possible from any spot on Earth.
The
network has been reported to have cost $5 billion to $7 billion.

By beaming instructions to on-board devices, engineers
eventually will tip the craft, one by one, on a path that
will send them down in flames. The target will be the
ocean -- a spectacle that may be visible from Earth.


Iridium on Friday gave up its hunt for a buyer to rescue it
from bankruptcy proceedings.

``No bid was received which was a qualified bid,' William
Perlstein, an attorney representing the debt-plagued firm,
told the U.S. bankruptcy court in Manhattan.

Judge Arthur Gonzalez cleared Iridium to spend $8.3 million
to start winding up its business while selling remaining
Earth-bound assets, including ground stations.

Iridium had been operating under court protection from its
creditors since last August, less than a year after its
network became operational on Nov. 1, 1998.

The flop reflected a string of badly botched
business calculations. For one thing, the company's
clunky telephones initially were priced at $3,000
apiece, with calls costing as much as $7 a minute.
Not only were the phones as big as bricks, but they
did not work indoors.

Wireless Networks Doomed Iridium


Iridium was doomed by the rapid spread of ground-based
wireless networks. Such networks now let business travelers,
a prime market for the satellite phones, stay connected from
most major destinations.

An attorney for telecommunications equipment maker
Motorola Corp. (NYSE:MOT - news), which built and
operated the satellites, told the court it would begin
the de-orbiting process in about a week.

Clearing out the satellites is necessary because keeping
them aloft costs large sums of money. Without proper
attention, they could interfere with other spacecraft and
explode if hit, adding to the human-made debris already
cluttering the heavens.

Bringing the satellites back must be coordinated with
several U.S. government agencies. Motorola said it would
take up to two years to burn up the last of the satellites
in the atmosphere.


Motorola, which held 18 percent of Iridium, the largest
stake, said it would ``maintain' the network while the
de-orbiting plan was finalized, an apparent reference to
steering the satellites away from danger.

``Motorola is extremely disappointed that Iridium LLC has
not succeeded in its effort to emerge from voluntary
bankruptcy,' the Schaumburg, Illinois-based company said
in a statement.

``Motorola and other Iridium investors have worked very hard
to support Iridium LLC's efforts to reorganize and continue
operating the business. Unfortunately, that has not happened.'

o~~~ O