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Technology Stocks : Loral Space & Communications -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Valueman who wrote (5074)12/23/1998 1:06:00 PM
From: jopawa  Respond to of 10852
 


Wednesday December 23, 9:52 am Eastern Time
Company Press Release
Globalstar Awards Launch Contract to Arianespace
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dec. 23, 1998--Globalstar (NASDAQ:GSTRF - news) today announced that it has awarded a satellite launch contract to Arianespace of Evry, France, for the launch of six Globalstar satellites aboard an Ariane 4 rocket.

The launch, currently slated for September 1999 from the Guiana Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana, would further bolster Globalstar's already robust launch back-up capability. If the launch is not required at that time to complete the Globalstar constellation, it will be reassigned by Loral to another mission. Globalstar earlier announced that it would use a combination of Soyuz and Delta launches, each with four satellites, to launch a minimum of 32 satellites in orbit to support the progressive roll-out of commercial service in the third quarter of 1999. By December 1999, Globalstar expects to have launched a total of 52 satellites, which will comprise the full operational constellation of 48 satellites, plus four in-orbit spares.

''The Ariane-4 has an excellent flight heritage,'' said Megan Fitzgerald, vice president of space systems engineering for Globalstar. ''This will provide additional flexibility in our launch schedule as we continue to deploy our space segment for the start of commercial service in the third quarter of 1999.''

Globalstar is the next-generation provider of mobile satellite personal communications services. The Globalstar system, comprising 48 low-earth-orbit (LEO) satellites and a global network of ground stations, will provide people around the world with fixed phone and hand-held mobile satellite phone services, as well as data transmission (at up to 9.6 kilobits per second), messaging, facsimile and position location services.

Globalstar is designed to provide cost-effective, high-quality mobile satellite services to customers around the world. Its use of advanced CDMA technology ensures superior voice quality, and its system routes calls through multiple satellites simultaneously, minimizing dropped calls and maximizing completed calls. Globalstar has been conducting handset tests since April of 1998 via the eight satellites it currently has in orbit.

Globalstar now has service provider agreements in more than 100 countries, covering 90 percent of Globalstar's business plan. Five Globalstar gateways are being used to control and test the satellite system, and site work and construction is under way at 20 more gateway sites around the world.

Some subscribers will use portable phones, similar to today's cellular phones, with dual-mode capability so subscribers can switch from conventional cellular telephony to satellite telephony as required. Subscribers in rural and remote areas may make or receive calls through fixed-site telephones, similar either to phone booths or ordinary residential and business telephones. Globalstar phones will communicate through a Globalstar satellite to a gateway--or ground station -- that in turn will connect calls into the existing terrestrial telecommunications network.

Globalstar, led by Loral Space & Communications, is a partnership of the world's leading telecommunications service providers and equipment manufacturers, and includes QUALCOMM Incorporated, AirTouch Communications, Alcatel, Alenia, China Telecom (HK), DACOM, Daimler-Benz Aerospace, Elsacom (a Finmeccanica/Elsag Bailey Company), France Telecom, Hyundai, Space Systems/Loral and Vodafone. For more information, visit Globalstar's web site at globalstar.com.

Loral Space & Communications (NYSE:LOR - news), headquartered in New York City, is a high technology company that primarily concentrates on satellite manufacturing and satellite-based services, including broadcast transponder leasing and value added services, domestic and international corporate data networks, global wireless telephony, broadband data transmission and content services, Internet services and international direct-to-home satellite services. For more information, visit Loral's web site at loral.com.



To: Valueman who wrote (5074)12/24/1998 5:49:00 AM
From: Doug DuBois  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 10852
 
Just when you thought it was over, a little gift from the CIA.
biz.yahoo.com



To: Valueman who wrote (5074)12/24/1998 1:44:00 PM
From: Valueman  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 10852
 
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays everyone.

We are bound to have a better 99 than 98!

After a year with a lot of noise(Chinagate, Zenit explosion noise, Russia/US bickering) and very little actual progress, 1999 should be extremely active. With 11 G* launches planned, along with Orion 2, Orion 3, Telstar 6, Telstar 7, and perhaps 8 or 9 if we are very lucky, we should have serious LSS(launch stress syndrome) by the end of the year.

What will it look like in end 99?

We will have:

Telstar 4
Telstar 5
Telstar 6
Telstar 7
+/- 8 or 9
Orion 1
Orion 2
Orion 3
Solidaridad 1
Solidaridad 2
SatMex 5
16 Agila II transponders
A CD Radio sat or two in orbit
52 G* sats(yea right)
3 or 4 sats from an acquisition or two

That ought to be worth something!

I'll go through each division at the beginning of 99 and see where we stand. Will post when I can.