Tag Archives: satellite

Spot unveils Global Phone satellite handset for near-global coverage

Spot has introduced a satellite-powered global cell phone called – quite aptly – the Spot Global Phone. The handset offers connectivity almost anywhere in the world, making it ideal for trekkers, frequent travelers, sailors, or anyone else who ventures off into places unknown – or unserviced by your regular cell phone provider. As you might

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Beyond Kepler: Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite Set For 2017 Launch

astroengine writes “NASA has selected a $ 200 million mission to carry out a full-sky survey for exoplanets orbiting nearby stars. The space observatory, called the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, is scheduled for a 2017 launch. Like the currently operational Kepler Space Telescope, TESS will be in the lookout for exoplanets that orbit in front of their host stars, resulting in a slight dip in starlight. This dip is known as a “transit” and Kepler has revolutionized our understanding about planets orbiting other stars in our galaxy by applying this effective technique. As of January 2013, Kepler has spotted 2,740 exoplanetary candidates. “TESS will carry out the first space-borne all-sky transit survey, covering 400 times as much sky as any previous mission,” said TESS lead scientist George Ricker, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research. “It will identify thousands of new planets in the solar neighborhood, with a special focus on planets comparable in size to the Earth.”"

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Lockheed Martin powers up its first GPS III satellite, stays on track for 2014

Lockheed Martin powers up its first GPS III satellite, brings accurate positioning that much closer

It’s been awhile since we heard much about Lockheed Martin’s GPS III satellite family beyond mention of an early prototype. The next-gen positioning system just took a big step forward with word that the company has successfully powered up the first production craft of the bunch, Space Vehicle One. Flicking the switch clears it for testing and keeps the GPS III program’s 2014 launch window within view. More importantly, the activation takes us one step closer to improved GPS accuracy for civilians and soldiers alike.

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Via: Phys.org

Source: Lockheed Martin

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Suitcase-sized satellite launched to hunt asteroids, space junk

A rocket carrying seven new satellites, including the first spacecraft designed to hunt huge asteroids and two of the world’s smallest space telescopes, launched into space Monday.


FOX News

NASA launches Landsat 8 satellite to better study the skies above, water below

NASA launches Landsat 8 satellite to improve our coverage of the skies above and water below

NASA’s Landsat program recently turned the big four-oh, and what better way to deal with the mid-life crisis by getting a new satellite as a present? Accordingly, the space agency has just launched Landsat 8 into orbit to give its Earth Science program a new injection of youth. The new vehicle improves the accuracy of existing light and thermal sensors while widening the scope to better reflect modern climate studies — number 8 now tracks aerosols in the atmosphere, high cirrus clouds and the telltale signs of water quality and consumption levels. We won’t get the first USGS-derived results from the new satellite until after a 100-day shakedown period, but we’re sure the deeper understanding of our planet will help the Landsat program forget all about those first few gray hairs.

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Source: NASA

Engadget

NASA launches high-tech next-generation TDRS-K communications satellite

NASA successfully launched the next generation communications satellite called the Tracking and Data Relay Satellites, known as TDRS-K. The satellite headed into orbit atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket. The rocket lifted off at 8:48 PM EST on Wednesday from Cape Canaveral, Florida. NASA says the launch went off without a hitch from

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NASA launches new tracking and communication satellite

NASA has launched a new communication satellite.


FOX News

Canada’s Dextre robot refuels faux satellite from the ISS in first-of-a-kind test

Canada's Dextre robot refuels faux satellite from the ISS in first-of-a-kind test

Move over, Canadarm. You may have helped the space shuttle fleet repair the Hubble Telescope and build the International Space Station, but there’s another robotic tool that’s the apple of the Great White North’s eye. Dextre, the Canadian Space Agency’s dual-armed mechanical “handyman,” has successfully refueled a faux satellite from the ISS as part of NASA’s and the CSA’s joint Robotic Refueling Mission. Not only did the exercise demonstrate how satellites could be juiced up in space and have their lives extended, but the CSA says it’s a first for the history books, to boot. Since 2011, Dextre completed a trio of tests to show how it could service satellites that weren’t built for being pried opened in space. Late this week, NASA and CSA robotics controllers removed two safety caps from a washing machine-sized mock satellite, snipped two sets of retaining wires and pumped in a bit of ethanol. Sure, you could take a Frankenstein-like approach and cobble together new satellites from old ones, but Dextre’s trials indicate there’s promise for a proactive tactic that would keep existing hardware humming.

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Dextre Successfully Refuels Mock Satellite and Aces a Major Test for Space Robotics

Longueuil, Quebec, January 25, 2013 – Dextre, the Canadian Space Agency’s robotic “handyman” on board the International Space Station (ISS), made space history last night by successfully refueling a mock satellite on the exterior of the station. Topping off the satellite’s fuel tank was the pivotal task in the experimental Robotic Refueling Mission (RRM), a collaboration between the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) to demonstrate how robots could service and refuel satellites on location in space to extend their useful lifetime.

For RRM, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center designed a module simulating a satellite, as well as custom power tools for Dextre. Since RRM operations began in 2011, Dextre has performed three series of tests to show how a robot could service satellites, which were designed never to be opened in space. In this latest set of operations, Dextre removed two safety caps, cut through two sets of thin retaining wires, and finally transferred a small quantity of liquid ethanol into the washing machine-sized module. The latter maneuver was particularly tricky, since handling liquids in space required perfect precision to prevent dangerous leaks. The specialized tools built for the job allowed Dextre to seal the connections between the tool and the fuel valve to eliminate the possibility of leaks. Adding to the level of difficulty was the fuel hose itself, which adds additional forces that tend to pull Dextre’s hands. It took the combined skills of the experienced NASA and CSA robotics controllers to pull off this first-of-a-kind space refueling demonstration successfully and without any mishap.

RRM is a significant step in pioneering robotic technologies and techniques in the field of satellite servicing-saving ailing space hardware by refueling or refurbishing them before they become space debris. The ability to refuel satellites in space could one day save satellite operators from the significant costs of building and launching new replacement satellites. With over 1100 active satellites currently operating in the near-Earth environment (many of them worth hundreds of millions of dollars), and an additional 2500 inactive satellites still orbiting around our planet, the savings could be substantial.

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Via: CNET

Source: Canadian Space Agency

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NASA and CSA Begin Testing Satellite Refueling On the ISS

Zothecula writes “NASA and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) have begun practicing satellite refueling in space on a test bed outside the International Space Station (ISS). In a series of tests that started on January 14 and are scheduled to continue until the 25th, the two space agencies are using the Robotic Refueling Module (RRM) and Canada’s Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator, or Dextre, robot to carry out simulated refueling operations. The purpose of these tests is to develop refueling methods aimed at extending the life of satellites and reducing the amount of space debris orbiting the Earth.”

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Clouds ruin GeoEye’s satellite image of inauguration

Hoping to see a space shot of President Barack Obama’s inauguration? Unfortunately, the weather ruined any opportunity at a good image, but astronauts snapped some relevant pictures to whet your whistle. [Read more]


CNET News

NASA Achieves Laser Communication With Lunar Satellite

New submitter EngnrFrmrlyKnownAsAC writes “Communicating with lasers has become the hot new thing. While most researchers are seeking faster throughput, NASA set its sights in a different direction: the moon. They recently announced the first successful one-way laser communication ‘at planetary distances.’ What did they send? An image of the Mona Lisa, of course. ‘Precise timing was the key to transmitting the image. Sun and colleagues divided the Mona Lisa image into an array of 152 pixels by 200 pixels. Every pixel was converted into a shade of gray, represented by a number between zero and 4,095. Each pixel was transmitted by a laser pulse, with the pulse being fired in one of 4,096 possible time slots during a brief time window allotted for laser tracking. The complete image was transmitted at a data rate of about 300 bits per second.’”

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Landsat 5, a satellite that has been observing Earth since 1984, to be shutdown

The United States Geological Survey is poised to shut down the Landsat 5, an observational satellite that has been circling our fair planet since 1984. The announcement comes about 25 years after when the satellite was originally slated for deactivation. During its life span, Landsat 5 has taken over 2.5 million snapshots. The satellite is

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Sirius XM Onyx EZ satellite radio pops up at the FCC

Sirius XM Onyx EZ satellite radio pops up at the FCC

Sirius XM’s first Onyx radio showed its face three years ago. For the technology world, that might as well have been eons; that makes it something of a relief to see an update, the Onyx EZ, going through the FCC for approval. The differences that justify the 1950′s-era model suffix are tougher to identify, however. Both the current and future Onyx models revolve around superficially identical feature sets that include a PowerConnect FM transmitter to streamline in-car setup, station preset controls and quick access to both traffic and weather. If there’s more lurking underneath the EZ, we’ll have to wait for an official launch, whether it’s at a Las Vegas trade show or later into the year.

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Source: FCC

Engadget

Satellite spies asteroid Toutanis tumbling through space

A new video captures the giant asteroid 4179 Toutatis tumbling through space on its flyby of Earth earlier this week.


FOX News

North Korea’s Satellite Is Out of Control

Koreantoast writes “After failing on numerous occasions, North Korea has finally put a satellite in orbit. But according to US officials, it is now ‘tumbling out of control.’ This is bad news, and more bad news, covered in a double layer of extra bad news. From the article: ‘According to US officials, it appears that North Korea’s new satellite has failed to achieve a stable orbit and is now “tumbling out of control.” The greatest danger is the threat of it colliding with another satellite, adding to the growing debris field around the earth.’ A separate Gizmodo article provides links for tracking the current location of the satellite.”

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NASA Satellite Sees Black Hole Belching Out Hundred-Million-Degree X-rays



The Bad Astronomer writes “NASA’s NuSTAR satellite, designed to detect cosmic X-rays, detected a flare of high-energy emission coming from the Milky Way galaxy’s central supermassive black hole. The X-rays were the dying gasp of a small gas cloud being torn apart, heated to a hundred million degrees, and then falling into the black hole itself. Events like this are relatively uncommon, so it’s fortunate NuSTAR happened to be observing the black hole when it flared.”

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Slashdot

Fighting Poverty by Clearing a Satellite Bottleneck

In India, new technology aims to help more poor farmers skirt loan-sharks and get real banking services.

The reality for hundreds of millions of people around the world is that if they want a loan, they pay steep rates to the local equivalent of the mafia.
 
A few years ago Antoinette Schoar, a professor at MIT’s Sloan School, explained the context in India to me this way (see “Upwardly Mobile”): “People who have no access to credit at all—like really small farmers—pay sometimes up to 10 percent per day. They literally take 100 rupees’ worth of goods from a vendor and have to give back 110 rupees in the evening. If they have even a tiny shock one day—a tiny accident—and can’t pay back the vendor, it is devastating.” Around the world, she explained, “A lot of poverty comes from having not even the tiniest amount of financial slack.”







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Taiwan asks Apple to blur satellite image of radar defense station in Maps app

Taiwan is asking Apple Inc. to blur a map image of its new $ 1.4 billion early warning radar station that can detect aircraft and missiles coming from as far as western China.




FOX News

SpaceX Dragon engine loss had consequences for Orbcomm OG2 satellite

The SpaceX Dragon capsule is currently on the way to the International Space Station, but today we found out that the launch didn’t exactly go as smoothly as planned. A little over one minute into the launch, the Falcon 9 rocket lost one of its engines. We were told that this little issue won’t affect

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Secret US spy satellite launches on classified mission

A secret U.S. spy satellite launched into space atop a 19-story rocket Thursday, ending a six-week delay for the latest clandestine space mission by the National Reconnaissance Office.




FOX News

Netflix coming to future Freesat satellite TV boxes

Netflix making good on those investment promises for its UK viewers, with the streaming service set to be included in a new set-top box coming tomorrow. According to The Telegraph, the new device will link straight into Netflix services. Freesat‘s satellite TV offering launched back in 2008, with both BBC and ITV behind the project, while the new set-top box is rumored to add on-demand downloads and the ability to view programs up to eight days since they first air — catching up to similar services from BT, Virgin and Sky. We’re likely to hear more tomorrow, but Freesat’s hoping it will be enough to make Brits reconsider those wallet-thumping Sky subscriptions.

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Netflix coming to future Freesat satellite TV boxes originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Sep 2012 03:20:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toshiba Satellite U920t hands-on

Windows 8 devices are all the rage at IFA this year, especially tablets. Toshiba has a new Satellite – the U920t – on the scene, and like many tablets we’ve seen, this one is convertible into a notebook. However, unlike a number of the tablets we’ve seen, you don’t convert this tablet by attaching it

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Toshiba Satellite U845 review: an inexpensive Ultrabook worth considering

DNP Toshiba Satellite U845 review

Toshiba’s most recent Ultrabook offerings have something of a split personality. On the one hand, there’s the Satellite U845W, a high-end machine with solid quality and a funky, 21:9 display. Announced alongside it, though, was the Satellite U845, a more modest sort of machine for folks who can’t afford to spend $ 1,000 on their next laptop. Starting at $ 750, it offers all the specs you’d expect from a mid-range laptop: Ivy Bridge, Intel Wireless Display and a backlit keyboard. And, given that it’s a slightly larger Ultrabook, it also makes room for key ports like HDMI and an Ethernet jack. But the U845 is hardly the only 14-inch thin-and-light on the block, and it’s definitely not the only sub-$ 800 system aimed at the back-to-school crowd. Read on to see if there’s enough pizazz here to make this a memorable machine.

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Toshiba Satellite U845 review: an inexpensive Ultrabook worth considering originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Aug 2012 14:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dish reportedly readying nationwide satellite broadband

Satellite TV provider will utilize a satellite recently launched by sister company EchoStar for a service launching this fall, sources tell Bloomberg.
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CNET News

CIA declassifies amazing 1972 spy satellite capsule deep-sea rescue

It’s a plot worthy of a Hollywood action movie: 40 years ago, the U.S. Navy carried out a daring mission to retrieve a top-secret film capsule that had settled more than 16,000 feet (4,876 meters) underwater on the ocean floor. At the time, the expedition was the deepest undersea salvage operation ever attempted.




FOXNews.com

Google Earth, Maps get new high-res aerial and satellite imagery

Google Earth, Maps get new high-res aerial and satellite imagery

3D City View for iOS isn’t the only update from the Google Maps and Earth team this week, they’ve also spruced up their services with new imagery. Fresh high-resolution aerial and satellite photos have been added for a roster of 25 cities and 72 countries or regions, ranging from Antelope Wells, New Mexico to Zimbabwe. In addition, seven international locales and 21 US cities received the 45-degree view treatment, letting you gaze at skylines from a different perspective. The maps are already available, so you can peruse new satellite images of London’s Olympic Park and Village just in time for the festivities. For the full list of areas with crisper cartographic visuals, check out the source below.

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Google Earth, Maps get new high-res aerial and satellite imagery originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 28 Jul 2012 11:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NASA Satellite Measurements Show Unprecedented Greenland Ice Sheet Melt



NASA reports that measurements taken from orbiting satellites indicate the Greenland ice sheet underwent melting over a larger area than they’ve seen in 30 years of observations. On July 8, the satellites found evidence that about 40% of the ice sheet’s surface had melted. Observations just four days later showed 97% of the surface had melted.
“This extreme melt event coincided with an unusually strong ridge of warm air, or a heat dome, over Greenland. The ridge was one of a series that has dominated Greenland’s weather since the end of May. ‘Each successive ridge has been stronger than the previous one,’ said Mote. This latest heat dome started to move over Greenland on July 8, and then parked itself over the ice sheet about three days later. By July 16, it had begun to dissipate. Even the area around Summit Station in central Greenland, which at 2 miles above sea level is near the highest point of the ice sheet, showed signs of melting. Such pronounced melting at Summit and across the ice sheet has not occurred since 1889, according to ice cores analyzed by Kaitlin Keegan at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H. A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration weather station at Summit confirmed air temperatures hovered above or within a degree of freezing for several hours July 11-12.”
Photos also surfaced last week showing the Petermann Glacier in Greenland ‘calving’ — some very large chunks of it broke off and started to drift away.

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Slashdot

Satellite shots show intense Greeland ice sheet melt

On July 8, around 40% of the massive ice sheet that covers the country of Greenland was at a point of thawing at or near the surface. But by July 12, that amount had risen to 97%. Just check out the image here. Anything in light pink is classified as “probably melt” while areas in

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Europe Gets Pay-As-You-Go Satellite Broadband



judgecorp writes “Europe is set to get pay-as-you-go high speed satellite broadband from Avanti’s Ka-band HYLAS1 satellite in the 26.5 — 40GHz range. Avanti says satellite broadband services have improved massively including a far better uplink than used to be available, though the round-trip latency can’t be improved much.” Conspicuously missing: the actual price.

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Slashdot

'Space nut' looks skyward with Web-funded satellite

Ask any Silicon Valley entrepreneur about their startup and they'll usually tell you the sky is the limit. For some, it's not just the limit but the goal. Combining advances in electronics and new sources of funding with the Valley's geeky, do-it-yourself culture, two teams are turning to the Internet to fund satellites and take project supporters along for the ride into space.
Computerworld News

Virgin Galactic unveils LauncherOne satellite vehicle

Virgin Galactic unveils LauncherOne satellite vehicle

Building a satellite, that’s not really much of a problem anymore. Getting them launched, well, that’s what separates the big boys from the wannabes. Virgin’s Richard Branson believes he has the answer to that — LauncherOne. The delivery system for Earth orbiters is based around the WhiteKnightTwo, the same launch platform used by SpaceShipTwo to reach its sub-orbital heights. The tube-like rocket of the LauncherOne is carried up to 50,000 feet by its mother ship, before detaching and initiating its two-stage rocket engines. The current design is capable of delivering 500-pound payloads into Low Earth Orbit, while lighter satellites of 225 pounds could reach Sun-Synchronous Low Earth Orbit. Virgin Galactic says it has already signed up its first customers, including SkyBox Imaging and GeoOptics. Sadly, there’s no word on when or how much it’ll cost to get the spy satellite you built in your backyard placed in the heavens. Check out the video and the PR after the break.

Continue reading Virgin Galactic unveils LauncherOne satellite vehicle

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Virgin Galactic unveils LauncherOne satellite vehicle originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Jul 2012 15:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Telstar, first telecom satellite, launched 50 years ago

Fifty years ago this week a Delta rocket roared into space carrying a payload that sparked a revolution in the way the world communicates. On board the rocket, launched on July 10, was Telstar, the first telecommunications satellite.
Computerworld News

European rocket launches new US satellite, weather-tracking spacecraft

A European-built rocket roared into space from South America Thursday (July 5) carrying two new satellites on very different missions.




FOXNews.com

U.S. spy satellite heads into orbit after spectacular launch

A classified National Reconnaissance Office spy satellite was lofted into orbit Friday by a United Launch Alliance Delta 4 rocket, in the third of four NRO missions planned for 2012.
[Read more]
CNET News

US rocket launches carrying secret satellite

A new U.S. clandestine satellite has rocketed into space.




FOXNews.com

Bing Maps gets another 165TB of satellite images, Google Earth seen sulking in a corner

Bing maps gets another 165TB of satellite images, knocking on Google Earth's door louder than ever

Thought that Google had cornered the market on free, overhead-view photo mapping solutions? You clearly don’t reside in Redmond, because Bing Maps’ aerial image library just got another 165TB worth of hi-res data that covers an additional 38 million square kilometers of the globe. To put that in perspective, Microsoft’s mapping solution previously had but 129TB worth of such eye-in-the-sky imagery, so this new batch of satellite shots more than doubles your viewing pleasure. Go ahead, check out all the new visuals at the source link below, we promise not to tell the folks in Mountain View.

Bing Maps gets another 165TB of satellite images, Google Earth seen sulking in a corner originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jun 2012 20:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Air Force launches US spy satellite on secret mission

A new U.S. spy satellite launched into orbit Wednesday, June 20, kicking off a clandestine national security mission for the National Reconnaissance Office.




FOXNews.com

ArduSat wants to put Arduino satellite, your experiments into orbit

ArduSat wants to put Arduino, your experiments into orbit

Short of scoring a spot on the ISS experiment docket, putting your scientific aspirations into orbit can be a bit tricky. Why not try crowdsourcing your way into space? ArduSat’s barking up that very tree, asking Kickstarter contributors to help them get a Arduino CubeSat off the ground. Headed by NanoSatisfi, a tech startup operating out of NASA’s Ames Research Center, the project hopes to raise enough funds to launch an Arduino bank and a bevy of open-source sensors into orbit. The payoff for backers? Access. Varying levels of contribution are rewarded with personalized space broadcasts, remote access to the space hardware’s onboard cameras and even use of the machine’s sensors to run experiments of the backer’s own design. If all goes well, the team hopes to launch more satellites for the everyman, including a unit dedicated to letting would-be stellar photographers take celestial snapshots. Sure, it’s far cry from actually launching yourself into the stars, but would you rather be a tourist, or a scientist? Check out project at the source link below, and mull over that for awhile.

ArduSat wants to put Arduino satellite, your experiments into orbit originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 Jun 2012 04:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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US spy satellite agency gives NASA 2 space telescopes

The United States’ spy satellite agency is giving NASA two spare space telescopes free of charge, each potentially more powerful than the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA officials announced today.




FOXNews.com

Toshiba Satellite U840W 21:9 ultrabook and U840 hands-on

Niche or nonsense? That’s the question we find ourselves asking about the new Toshiba Satellite U840W, a 14.4-inch ultrabook with a bizarre 21:9 “cinemascope” widescreen display. Running at 1792 x 768 resolution, the U840W comes preloaded with a custom Toshiba app that automatically scales two apps to run side-by-side. That way, Toshiba tells us, you

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Kazakhstan blocking Russian satellite launch

Russia is hoping to launch three new satellites into space, but Kazakhstan has blocked the launches due to disputes over the drop zone for the rocket debris. The debris would fall in the northern region of Kazakhstan, with the country believing that Russia should sign a new leasing agreement if the debris zone is to

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DirecTV to offer broadband to the boonies, teams up with ViaSat and Hughes Satellite providers

Sure, living in the boonies may give you plenty of space to test out high-tech farming equipment, but at what cost? Rural homesteads just aren’t suited for ye olde landline broadband and those fancy satellite setups cost a pretty penny. DirecTV understands, and has struck deals with ViaSat and Hughes to bundle their stellar bandwidth with pre-existing triple play packages to help reign in the cost of high-speed internet. Details on availability and price are still scarce, but DirecTV says customers should be able to take advantage of “certain special offers” later this year. Read on for the official press release, or check out our review of ViaSat’s Exede service here.

Continue reading DirecTV to offer broadband to the boonies, teams up with ViaSat and Hughes Satellite providers

DirecTV to offer broadband to the boonies, teams up with ViaSat and Hughes Satellite providers originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 May 2012 09:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cisco adds IP multiplexing to mobile satellite package

Using VoIP via satellite links can have bandwidth issues, but Cisco today said it's introducing an IP multiplexing technology for its Cisco Mobile Ready Net package that dramatically improves the number of IP-based calls on a satellite link.
Computerworld News

Express-AM4 Satellite Salvage Plan For Antarctic Internet In Jeopardy



First time accepted submitter amcenwest writes with news on the fate of the mis-launched Ekspress-AM4. From the article: “A modern, state of the art communications satellite stranded last August in a useless orbit will constitute a double failure if Russian officials de-orbit the spacecraft as planned, according to an expert from the team hoping to salvage the spacecraft. ‘A new Express AM4 orbit could provide 14 to 16 hours of daily Internet coverage for the international scientific research bases in Antarctica,’ said Readdy.”

Unfortunately, the satellite is scheduled to begin a deorbiting burn between March 20th and 26th, so it looks unlikely that it can be salvaged at this point.

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Slashdot

Seagate GoFlex Satellite reportedly getting firmware update on March 19th

Still rockin’ one of those (cargo) pocket-sized GoFlex streaming drives we showed you a while back? Marvelous. According to Gear Diary, Seagate’s given the site intel saying it’s getting ready to roll out a Satellite firmware refresh on the 19th of this month. Allegedly, the update will boost the limit on the number of devices that can be connected simultaneously, making the jump from three to eight, as well as promising to double your battery life in the process. The company says the updated firmware will come gratis to all “original devices” (hear that Androids?), while all new GoFlex drives are expected to ship with it on board. And now, you know.

Seagate GoFlex Satellite reportedly getting firmware update on March 19th originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Mar 2012 07:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LightSquared Satellite Disabled By Last Week’s Solar Storm



volts writes “Troubled LightSquared’s primary Skyterra 1 satellite has been out of service since the solar storm on March 7. The company says it is ‘working through the rebuild of the satellite tapping into the resources that were involved in the original program .’ This development follows a stream of bad news including layoffs, default on payments, the resignation of CEO Sanjiv Ahuja and FCC rejection of a scheme to repurpose satellite frequencies for cellular data due to interference with GPS. Another kick in the teeth as company needs struggles to avoid bankruptcy.”

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Slashdot

Toshiba Satellite P855 glasses-free 3D laptop hands-on (video)

Remember that glasses-free 3D Qosmio F750 (aka F755 in the US) gaming laptop we saw last year? We’re not sure how many of them Toshiba has sold, but the company’s PR folks tell us they’ve been popular enough to justify a further 15.6-inch glasses-free model — a Satellite P855, which will have a more mainstream target audience. We’re looking at exactly the same lenticular technology, which uses a webcam to adjust the 3D effect to the user’s head movements, and which delivers effective results if you sit relatively still and give your eyes a chance to adapt. This time, however, the effect is delivered within a textured aluminum chassis that will likely appeal to a wider audience than the red-styled garishness of the Qosmio. The price tag has yet to be disclosed, but that should also be more appealing, since the Satellite range starts at £599 ($ 940). The P855 won’t arrive until Q2 and Toshiba wasn’t ready to reveal any concrete specs concerning the processor or graphics, other than saying this laptop is aimed at mainstream 3D gaming as well as Blu-Ray consumption. We asked about memory and storage too, but with no success — all we could glean is that there are four USB 3.0 ports, HDMI out, Intel WiDi for direct WiFi beaming of 1080 video to a bigger screen, plus Harmon Kardon speakers. C’mon Tosh, give us Ivy Bridge paired with a 28nm Kepler GPU and make the world happy. (Hands-on video right after the break.)

Continue reading Toshiba Satellite P855 glasses-free 3D laptop hands-on (video)

Toshiba Satellite P855 glasses-free 3D laptop hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 06 Mar 2012 13:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google looks to plant a field of satellite dishes in Iowa

Google seeks to build antenna farm in IowaIowa. Fertile home to 14 million acres of corn, nine million acres of soybeans, and — if the FCC looks favorably on a recent application from Farmer Google — a blooming array of 15-foot satellite dishes too. The request for a “receive only earth station” comes from Google Fiber, and the bands it hopes to receive are typical satellite TV frequencies, hinting that the purpose of the station will be to receive audio and video content that will then be piped through a high-speed fiber data service. First stop, Kansas City!

Google looks to plant a field of satellite dishes in Iowa originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Feb 2012 03:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Engadget

Google points to Iowa for sowing satellite antenna farm

If approved by the FCC, Google’s satellite dishes could get feeds from broadcast networks and even be bundled with the company’s high-speed fiber service.
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CNET News

Can this ‘janitor satellite’ clean up space junk?

An $ 11 million machine under development at the Swiss Space Center aims to tidy up space debris in the near heavens.
CNET News