Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Technology

Broadband From The Sky In 2002? 99

Krendle writes: "A company named ISky is claiming that they will deliver high speed (2mbps down, 1/2mbps up) 2-way satellite Internet access by the end of 2001. One issue I've seen raised in newsgroups (in reference to satellite internet in general) is that of lag. With Internet applications like telephony and online gaming, etc., gaining popularity this is an important issue. 2Mbps from the sky still sounds cool to me, especially where we can't even get cable TV. What do you guys think -- will latency be a problem?" I'd be happy to "settle" for always-on wireless access faster than dial-up and cheap as DSL, but the iSKY Q&A page is short on price details. But it does say "iSKY is planning on being able to support all platforms including Macintosh, Linux, Solaris and Windows."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Broadband From The Sky In 2002?

Comments Filter:
  • Most US sat services are in Ku-band, at 11-14 GHz. At that frequency you are fairly sensitive to rainfade, meaning your signal gets weak when raining hard. Sat systems compensate by drilling through the water with more power. But power on the satellite platform is a precious resources, coming from the solar panels.

    Contrast this with the older C-band technology (4 GHz) that is nearly transparent to rain, meaning no rainfade. The big old antennas you see in techies yards are for C-band. More power make it through the atmosphere (in both directions).

    Now look at Ka-band: 20-30 GHz, even higher in freq than Ku-band. Rain/atmospheric fade has got to suck big time. The same-size antenna gets more efficient at the higher freq, but not enough to compensate for all the other drawbacks of the higher frequency.

    Up to now all the Ka-band systems I'd heard of on the drawing board were for LEO systems, which bring you WAY closer to Earth and thus require much less power from both the satellite and the earth terminal. Ka-band and GEO? Yikes, off the top of my head I'd wonder about satellite power capabilities and FCC radiation limits.

    And notice the "NASA uses Ka-band" blurb in their press release? Nobody else is doing it yet EXCEPT for NASA, because NASA is in the bleeding-edge business. Certainly the commercial race is on -- and has been for a couple years. But GEO?

    The buzzword here is "link budget". Let's see how they do it. I'd love to hear from others here if you have any insight. My four years in the biz says keep your wallet in your pocket for now.

    - Chris C., too lazy to set up a /. account

  • everyone is commenting on hosting services and ping times for quake, but isn't the real issue here wireless applications?

    i mean, i wouldn't mind 2mbps on a laptop if i happen to be doing work in the field and i'm not close to an ethernet.

    in these applications the latency isn't so much an issue as the having any connection at all to the internet. and 2 mbps is great for email or web research.

    or is this impractical? blah! =)

  • Except modems are quickly becoming useless for gaming. I live in a town where if you draw a circle about 3 miles around my apartment, you have dsl or cable modems. Lucky for me, GTE and MediaOne have no clue if/when either DSL or cable modems will arrive. Anyway, playing many games with my 56k modem is futile. General public servers are overrun with higher speed folk, and well, you stand a much less chance of winning. No matter what the game, what part of the world the server is in, I see the same thing. A group of people with 50ms pings going against a bunch of people with 300ms pings. If you can find that rare server with other modemers, keep it well guarded. ;)

  • That's good. The bad part is they're partnered with EchoStar and won't support the use of real satellite dishes, just those stupid mini dishes. Everyone wants to create a little lock-in I guess. Everyone but the clueful customers.


    Did you ever consider that the reason that Echostar uses those little dishes is because... drum roll...People want little dishes

    If for some obscure reason you want a "big dish" Echostar sells larger ones, but then I would guess that you are not one of the "clueful customers"
  • From your comments I surmise you have no experience with satellite TV.

    Ummm... actually I work for Echostar, although I'm in the software side of the house working on our new Linux based set-top box. :-)

    I'm not much up on the hardware though I know that we have 5 satellites up now with more on the way. Our new dishes are a bit bigger than the older ones and they can "see" at least 2 satellites to get up to 500 channels. The 2-way service will use an even bigger dish to see more. The C-Band dishes just aren't an option for most people in an urban area.

    As far as getting stuck with a "custom" dish, it's not much of an issue since we are giving away the dish, set-top and installation for free when you sign up for service.

  • No, but in urban areas there are broadcast television stations and cable.

    True, but I was an urban Echostar customer even before I started worked here. I just had enough of the local cable outfit...

    Do you seriously think this is going to be a viable competitor to cable modems in areas where they are available? I wouldn't count on it. I get the impression a lot of cable modem users are into networked gaming...

    My personal opinion is that it depends on the pricing. If the price is right, I think it will be a solution for some people. You'll be able to get HD TV (I see it in the lab here. It is amazing quality) and two-way satellite internet from the same medium size dish.

    I'm in the middle of Denver, and I can't get a cable modem or DSL at my house, but I am on the Beta list for the new two-way satellite service. I'm really looking forward to it!

    Jim
  • I doubt it, all the link encryption would be done in the hardware itself. I'm sure it'd just connect to your ethernet switch. Maybe with a serial console too.
    -o
  • I'm on the end of a 1 meg satellite link right now, between the US and Australiam with RTT's of around 460ms. We can definately use this whole connection with multiple streams, but latency prevents the downloads from coming in at faster than 20Kbytes/second.

    That seems like a reasonable figure. It still beats the 4.1KB/s I can get from dialup or the 14.4KB/s I could see from IDSL. I'd say it's not for everybody, but when other high speed options don't exist, it's a good thing.

  • Hey, has anyone out there tried DirecPC (www.direcpc.com)? They offer something like 400kbps right now. I know that you have to have a modem uplink though... Anyone use one or know much about them?


    / k.d / earth trickle / Monkeys vs. Robots Films [homepage.com] /

  • One of the possible solutions for this problem that has already been implemented in iSky (I believe) is TCP ACK faking.


    I'm not sure about the details and the implementation has to be really messy but while the latencies will still be kind of long you can stream data quickly and sort of do tricks to cut down some latencies.


    I just took a job with Echostar and we are partnered with both iSky and Gilat, I'll send more details to slashdot when I can get them. The customer set we are really aiming at (I believe) are the out lying customers who can't get a DSL connection.

  • Yes, they will...however, Dish also recently signed a deal with iSky to also provide satellite internet services...

    They figure they're going to need multiple providers to satisfy bandwidth demands from their customers.

    I wanna beta test!
  • At the moment, the "iSKY Q&A page" link is pointing to http://slashdot.org.
  • Seriously... at what point is all of this electromagnetic energy going to have a measurable effect on the carbon-based lifeforms down here? History is full of "harmless" new technology (x-rays in shoe stores come to mind...) that was later shown to have horrible effects on the human body.

    We pump tons of energy into the air all day long, with pagers, cell phones, tv, radio, broadband... I just have to wonder - is there really no physiological effect?

    ---

  • Bandwidth is irrelevant if you lose half your packets and need to retransmit.. and have high latency. Tech like this is useless up here in places like Minnesota (or Seattle, WA) due to weather.

    I recall a long time ago on slashdot (yeah, rob.. you reposted, heh) somebody stated the laws of physics dictate latencies of atleast 300ms.

  • I don't have many details, but it will be in by fall of this year if I remember correctly.
  • What ever happened to those stories [wired.com] I read in WiReD [wired.com] a few years ago about the guys who were planning on building floating platforms that would hover in place over a metropolitan area and provide high speed wireless voice and data services? They were going to use some new technology to generate power from the atmosophere AND collect ozone-harmful CFCs at the same time.

    Seems to me all the problems with satellite-based data services would be solved by something like this. :-)

  • The problem with iSky is that the satellites will be in geosynchronous orbit. Given someone else here posted that it takes 0.25 seconds for data to travel from a ground transceiver to the satellite itself (a sum total of 0.5 seconds for data to travel from transmitter to satellite to a receiver), that's way too much data lag for many purposes.

    The better solution is the upcoming Teledesic system that should be operational by 2004. Unlike iSky, Teledesic will have a constellation of satellites orbiting from 850 miles up, so the transmission time from the ground to the sats will be far, far shorter. This means wireless data transmission rates at T3 line speeds (45 megabits per second) from anywhere in the world. This is perhaps the solution for people who need broadband Internet access but live too far away for cable or ADSL modem access.
  • That's why the Teledesic system is such a great idea. Because they will use 844 satellites orbiting at 850 miles altitude, you'll have a LOT less data lag (I've read that Teledesic satellites can offer at least 45 megabits per second data transfer rates anywhere in the world). That's the equivalent of a T3 data line.

    This is the best solution that will cure our "digital divide" problem of getting broadband Internet access to rural areas far beyond the reach of cable and ADSL modems. I'm sure that when the system becomes operational the first places that will get Teledesic transceivers will be Indian reservations, most of which are FAR beyond the reach of even normal telephone lines.

  • On May 8, 1997 the FCC assigned iSKY Ka-Band (20 to 30 GHz), fixed-satellite service (FSS) licenses at orbital locations of 73 west longitude and 109.2 west longitude.
    Okay so these are geostationary satellites, they're in a fixed spot above the earth. This means they're at an altitude of approximately 36,000 kilometers, otherwise they'd move around the earth.

    So each connection request will have to travel 72,000 kilometer, from earth to the satellite and back. If you'd request information from Europe, it'll have to travel another 8,000 kilometer, a total of 80,000 kilometer.

    Now if you have a normal (DSL, Cable, phone) connection, this is only the 8,000 kilometer. The transmition speeds for copper or fiber are the same, so it'll take 10 times longer for your request to arrive at a server in Europe. And then the server sends a reply... For servers closer to you, the difference is even more dramatic.

    Unless they come up with a whole network of low orbit satellites, ping times will be horrible.
  • If my memory serves, Larry Agustin himself warned investors that his stock was overvalued, which - naturally - caused me to stay far away from it.

    The behaviour of the stock has to do with the "extraordinary delusions and madness of crowds", not the product or company itself.

    I had my company purchase a VA Linux server, and so far the system has been flawless and I've been very happy with it. Now that the stock price has gone back to a reasonable level, I'd personally rate it a realistic buy.

    I have a friend who suggested that I might help him invest in "this Linux thing" and make a few bucks. But I knew the valuations of Linux companies were sufficiently absurd as to make investment impractical, so I didn't take his offer.

    Linux was a great system before these companies went public, it was a great system when they did, and it's a great system now. Nothing has changed but market hysteria.

    I wouldn't blame Linux for the hype. Learn how to read a company financial statement, learn how to differentiate between profits and losses, and you won't get burned so badly in the future.

    I know that sounds like flippant advice, but it's the cold, hard truth. Take that for what it is.

    D

    ----
  • They don't mention any details on the upstream. Is everyone going to have a 20GHz broadcaster in their backyard? I wonder how they will work out issues of crosstalk between neighbors, I guess if this is only rolled out in low population areas it wouldn't be hard to distribute frequency so Abe's upload won't disturb Betty's download.

    I wouldn't mind having a Long Fat Pipe (respect in the locker room) but I could always hi-jack a couple of neighbors DSL lines. I wonder if it would be possible to set up a communal DSL pool. A bunch of neighbors get DSL, and timeshare using all of them at once. So for 12 hours a week you get to use the full bandwidth of 30 DSL lines. Is there a router or something that can multiplex lines like that?

  • The solution to the bandwidth probelm is to launch more satellites. Spot beams and frequency reuse make such a system scalable.

    That turns out not to be the case, for reasons which I pointed out in my original message.

    Unless you have a really, really _huge_ dish on the satellite, you just can't focus a microwave beam very finely, due to diffraction effects. I'd already been assuming lots of low-orbiting satellites using spot beams when quoting my original figures. If, say, all of Manhattan fits in a spot, it doesn't help much.
  • if a satellite is at 300 km it will take a lot of fuel to keep it in orbit. that is impractical and very expensive

    Satellites at any altitude take *no* fuel to stay in orbit. That's the definition of "orbit" in this context. An object in orbit is circling the earth quickly enough that centripetal acceleration in its curved path exactly balances gravity. Newton's Laws keep it circling forever (or at least many, many years, until the whisps of atmosphere at those altitudes cause it to slow down and crash).

    regarding palm pilots with satellite links, let's not forget that microwave comm is line of sight. it not very practical in cities, mountains, tunnels, etc. forget about being inside man-made structures

    Your cell phone is operating on microwave frequencies. Microwaves will penetrate a few wavelengths through most substances, and wave wavelengths on the order of a few centimetres. This means that they will happy pass through several tens of centimetres of brick, concrete, and what-have-you, which is enough for most locations (line of sight to a satellite that's *not* directly overhead doesn't have to pass through dozens of stories of a building - just the nearest walls).

    Moot point in a city, though, for the reason mentioned above.

    you have to be outside and know where your satellite to be able to talk to it

    No, you just need a transmitter powerful enough that a satellite 300 km away can see its omnidirectional signals with sensitive detectors. A palm-pilot would have trouble doing this, but not a somewhat larger transciever in your briefcase (with a lower-power link to the pilot).

    Again, though, you seem to be missing the point of my post - that satellite service to cities isn't practical for the bandwidth demands of a city.
  • >Satellites at any altitude take *no* fuel to stay in orbit
    Actually no. Theoretically yes. But earth's atmosphere actually extends way way up there.


    ...As was clearly stated in my previous post. However, orbital decay due to atmospheric friction even in low orbit takes years or decades - the atmosphere's density drops off exponentially (not as one exponential, but as a piecewise-exponential curve). It's extremely tenuous and gets even more so as you go up.

    Let's use figures from the ionosphere data you cite for density - about 1.0e12 particles per cubic metre at the most dense layer. Let's also assume low earth orbit, which has an orbit length of about 4.0e7 metres. This gives collisions with 4.0e19 particles per square metre per orbit.

    By comparison, water has about 3.3e28 particles (molecules) per cubic metre. Air has about 2.4e25 particles per cubic metre at one atmosphere of pressure. Much, much denser.

    Lets assume that you have a satellite with a mass of one tonne and a cross-sectional area of 5 square metres (solar panels and all). Assume it's in LEO with an orbital period of about 90 minutes. How long will it take before it loses 0.5% of its orbital velocity (enough to lower its orbit by about 70 km)?

    Let's assume that all collisions are inelastic - that is, mass that the spacecraft collides with sticks and accretes. This will give an approximately correct answer and is easy to calculate.

    The spacecraft's mass needs to increase by about 0.5% for inelastic collisions to lower its velocity by 0.5%. It needs to collide with about 5 kg of matter to do this. With an area of 5 square metres, that means 1 kg of matter per square metre.

    Let's assume that air has a density of around 1.1 kg/m^3 at one atmosphere (I may be off by 0.1 or so, but that's close enough for these purposes). This gives a mass of 1.1 kg * (4.0e19 / 2.4e25) = 1.8e-6 kg per orbit.

    At 90 minutes per orbit, this means 4.9e7 minutes for orbital velocity to be reduced by 0.5%, or about 90 years. That's considerably longer than the expected lifetime of the satellite's electronics.

    In summary, for anything placed in LEO or higher, it will be something other than orbital decay that determines satellite lifetime.
  • Satellite 'net access is a very cool toy, and is extremely useful for ares that don't offer cable/*DSL (everywhere except large cities, in other words).

    However, don't expect satellites to replace cable any time soon. There are difficulties when you try to scale up to the silly bandwidth levels required:

    • Area served by one satellite is large.
      Your satellite is at least 300km up, and making microwave beams really parallel is tricky (unless you want to use a huge dish, which adds weight and cost to the satellite). This means that, even pulling tricks like having multiple fairly-narrow-angle transcievers per satellite, you still get everyone within a few tens of kilometres sharing the same uplink. Fine for low-density areas, but not for cities.

    • Bandwidth is bad compared to fiber.
      Microwave beams have a data bandwidth comparable to their frequency - a few Gbits/sec. at most. This is the maximum _shared_ bandwidth per uplink region, and the maximum bandwidth of the pipes between the satellites. Bump the frequency up to get more bandwidth, and you start getting blocked by light cloud cover and thin walls (and ceilings). While you could do something like have an optical link from satellite to satellite, your uplink/downlink bandwidth is going to be pretty crummy compared to, say, a fiber backbone serving the same area.


    I'm not trying to bash satellite data services - as mentioned above, they do have their uses. I'm just trying to stave off the inevitable flood of "Wow! Now everyone in the city can get cable bandwidth from their palm-pilots!" messages.
  • To cause damage to animal or plant tissue, electromagnetic radiation needs to either cook it by raising its temperature (lots of watts, like in a microwave or a solar reflector), or have ENOUGH ENERGY PER PHOTON to ionize it. Radio wave and microwave photons don't have enough energy to ionize or break chemical bonds in living tissue. They're less dangerous than infrared radiation (heat). UV, X-rays, and Gamma rays have enough energy per photon to ionize or break chemical bonds in living tissue.

    Yes, let's talk photons. It turns out the situation is not as simple as it first seems. The energy from a microwave photon eventually ends up as heat, but you could easily argue that for every other form of EM radiation as well. The question is, what happens in the interval between the time the energy is adsorbed, and the time it ends up as waste heat?

    Basically, microwaves set up a rapidly oscillating electric field in the material they pass through. Polar molecules (Such as water) experience a torque that aligns them in the direction of the elctric field, and which changes direction each time the field reverses direction. What makes water an especially good adsorber of microwaves is their network of hydrogen bonds, some of which must be broken to allow the molecules the freedom to rotate with the field (Note--hydrogen bonds break and reform all the time, it's one of the properties that allows water to flow).

    Now, what happens to biological molecules is something that is not understood well. We do know, though, that polar molecules will experience forces that unlike those from normal thermal agitation, in that the forces are non-random.

    In vitro, microwave energy can cause subtle but repeatable changes in gene expression and protein activity (Such of those like heat shock proteins) in ways that differ from those observed with simply application of heat. Go to PubMed [nih.gov] and search for the term "Microwave Exposure", you'll find there is actually quite a bit of research on the subject.
  • Geosynchronous orbit is 37500 km. This translates into a minimum roundtrip speed-of-light latency of 250ms.

    If we spin the planet faster, we move the geosync orbit closer.

    • Put rockets on the equator, with the exhaust pointing west.
    • Compress the planet so that it has to speed up in order to conserve angular momentum.
    Any other ideas?
    ---
  • Their web site says their satellites are in geosynchronous orbits.

    Geosynchronous orbit is 37500 km. This translates into a minimum roundtrip speed-of-light latency of 250ms.

    Any netrek player will tell you that that amount of latency is too high for effective gaming!
  • Err. There weren't any QA jobs here to begin with.

    (I don't regularly troll Slashdot, either. It's just that this was asking for it.)
  • Actually, it depends on the size of the dish they give you.

    An 18 inch dish, like is used with DirecTV and Dish Network are really the absolute minimum size that is useable. It takes a really big thick cloud to knock out the signal you receive when you have one of these dishes.

    However, you can use (and DirecTV/Dish have them available) 24 inch dishes. They give you a lot better signal reception and the nasty storm cloud effect is all but fixed (unless it is a really really really big cloud).

    Transmitting, on the other hand is a bit different story. I am assuming this thing is going to be pretty low power - it would have to be unless this outfit wants to have a lot of it's customers burned by RF when they stand in front of the dish, which would be very very awful. Trust me, RF burns are not fun at all.

    So, the dish is probably going to increase in size to 36 inch (like Primestar had) or maybe even bigger.
  • by mindstrm ( 20013 )
    They're planning on supporting all platforms.
    I thought they should just support tcp/ip over ethernet, and be done with it..
  • Your latency data point from your wireless network is useless. 2.5km is a much smaller number than 36000km :)
  • Do the math - light (and therefore RF and therefore wireless signals) travel at 300000000 meters per second. Your wireless round trip is 5km, 5000 meters, so that takes .016 milliseconds. Now, if that signal has to reach a satellite 36000000 meters away, that's going to take it 240 milliseconds. So yes, it is exactly equivalent to gamers playing over DirectPC :)
  • The satellites do make a good solution for people who don't want to live in neosubopolises. So far, neither telephony nor cable cos have expressed much interest in serving the rural communities. As someone who would like to retire someplace remote, it'll be nice to have a solution when I no longer desire, nah, require Quaking of some sort...
    --

  • I'm sure the poster was well-intentioned, but you REALLY SHOULDN'T speculate about things you know nothing about and start trying to scare people. We know a lot about radio waves, LOTS of research has been done. And they aren't dangerous at these levels.

    This satellite or cell phone radiation scare is one of those things that just doesn't die, no matter how many times the vast majority of scientists (plus or minus a very few crackpots) try to set things straight.

    To cause damage to animal or plant tissue, electromagnetic radiation needs to either cook it by raising its temperature (lots of watts, like in a microwave or a solar reflector), or have ENOUGH ENERGY PER PHOTON to ionize it. Radio wave and microwave photons don't have enough energy to ionize or break chemical bonds in living tissue. They're less dangerous than infrared radiation (heat). UV, X-rays, and Gamma rays have enough energy per photon to ionize or break chemical bonds in living tissue.

    If microwaves were so dangerous, we would have all already been killed by the cosmic background radiation left over by the big bang.
  • Ack, this "microwaves cause cancer" stuff is getting moderated up!

    That sounds good (lots of handwaving about dipoles and such), but these tests that proclaim an effect of microwaves on gene expression don't hold up to scrutiny. I found only one paper, from the early 90's, which claimed to measure the effects of microwaves on gene expression. And again, this is due to HEATING by INTENSE microwave pulses. Like putting a cat in a microwave oven. We're talking kilowatts, or higher, per cc.

    Sure, microwaves can break very weak bonds, such as hydrogen bonds, that are broken and reformed all the time at room temperature. In any case, the best physicists and chemists can't seem to get any net, measurable, non-uniform breaking of hydrogen bonds in solution by using microwaves. The effect is identical to heating. If someone did achieve non-uniform bond breaking using microwaves, they'd make millions or billions from the idea, using it to reduce side reactions, increase yield, and so on. Of course, microwaves ARE used in chemicals processing, but for heating, not for quantum control. And there are chemists and physicists trying to develop quantum control of chemical reactions, using ultrashort pulses of near IR, visible, and UV light.

    I still say the vast majority of knowledgeable chemists and physicists (such as J.D. Jackson at Berkeley, who is quite vocal on this topic) concur that there is no effect of low-level radio waves on living tissue. So you can all take off the aluminum foil hats and relax.
  • Since when is everything about gaming? ;) ;)

    Seriously, there's lots of people living out there in the Boonies, and even some of them aren't rednecks. I'm fortunate to live in a city where you can get ADSL, and I know most of my bandwidth doesn't go towards gaming.

    And just think of the coolness factor when people talk about their connections:
    "I've got a 56K"
    "I've got a cable modem"
    "I've got a satellite uplink"
    Sounds alot like something from a Bond movie!

    --C
  • Yes, lag is an important issue (inherent in the distances between earth and satellite combined with the speed of light), but its importance in a given application depends entirely on that application. If you're trying to play Quake, then you're SOL. If you're streaming audio from a shoutcast server (or downloading naughty pictures like most users), you won't take such a hit. But like with most of these technologies, it'll be embraced eagerly precisely by those who have no other choice, while the rest of us snicker with our T1s and cable modems.
  • Even if latency is a huge problem, I won't be bothered. I'd much rather have slashdot come ripping down the airwaves at me at 2mbs after a 1 or 2 second lag than it slowly trickling down my modem connection at 56k.

    Doing large amounts of downloading (basically all i do) won't be a problem with lag, now gaming is another issue, if you're a die-hard gamer, you can spare the expense of having a modem connection for games, and just use your satellite for downloading mp3s, or websurfing.
  • UFO-1

    Stands for UHF Follow On... Part of the Military Strategic Communications fleet (reads, pre-MILSTAR). Low data rate of 75 baud, used for EAM's and such.
    These satellites were designed to take over for the aging AFSAT fleet, but only until MILSTAR came on line. Go figure that the AFSAT birds were only supposed to fly for 5-10 years, (launched in 70's) and 'all' are still in use.

    Q-Hack!

  • We only need to reduce the equatorial radius. So put the rockets at the poles and stretch the planet into a thin ellipsiod. This has the other effect of making almost everywhere tropical.

    Or we could use one of those wormholes to move the planet to a universe with a higher speed of light.

    Or we could breed humans with lower reaction times (or just chill existing ones) so 500ms seems really fast.

    while(1) {fork();}
  • Man, and I thought I was the only one with that notion. Good to know others are just as paranoid as me in some respects. You really DO have to wonder...nature is nature, and ya fsck with it too much, consequences can be dire. Then again, I sit surrounded by three monitors, 2 computers, and random externals daily. My personal magnetic field (aura?) is probably heavy itself. I feel no strange effects...yet.
  • Latency - It may or may not be a problem depending on the application. It will definately be useless for gaming. Geo-syncronous satellites have a 1/2 second round trip delay. This delay is even noticable in voice communications. Until the speakers get used to it, they have a tendency to both start speaking at the same time.

    That is only the delay caused by distance. There may be additional delays due to the communication protocol.

    Local Protocol - Their page says that they will support EVERY OS. I interpet this to mean that it will be a stond-alone box that will support the common LAN protocols (TCP?IP, ISX, etc.) and act as a router. Use your normal network software and point to the Isky box as your default router.

    Satellite Protocol - As someone has already pointed out, TCP/IP is useless over a satellite. However, this is not a major problem since there are several existing protocols that do work well over satellite. The ISKY box will just convert between the protocols.

    Hughes Network Systems already does this with their PES (Personal Earth Stations). It is called 'IP spoofing'. Basically, the box will act like the end connection and provide the ACKs and NACKs. It will keep the data in its memory until it has determined via the satellite protocol that it has been successfully transmitted.

    Downlink - Nothing earth-shattering here. Hughes' DirectPC already does this. Just split the channel into time slots with an address field. As data comes in, stick it in a slot and put in the appropriate address field.

    Uplink - This is the tricky part, which is why DirectPC requires that you have a modem uplink.

    There are two ways to share satellite bandwidth: Frequency sharing or time sharing. Satellite bandwidth is too expensive to give each user a dedicated chunk of the frequency.

    Time sharing has another set of problems. How does the users box know when to transmit? If you assign each customer a slot, then you are back to the cost issue since the slot isn't unused if the customer has no data to send.

    Another option is the ALOHA channel. This works similar to the CS/CD (Carrier Sense/Collision Detect) of ethernet. Because of the delay from when a station starts to transmit till the time others can sense the carrier, this is an ineffiient means of utilizing bandwidth. The maxium throughput is about 10% of the allocated bandwidth.

    The only option that I can see is use an ALOHA channel with a small but reasonable data length. That way short transmissions, e.g. request a web page, would go through the ALHOA channel; while longer transfers, e.g. uploading through FTP, would be converted to a request for an assigned slot.

    The major problem with this solution is that it adds to the latency. When data goes over the ALOHA channel, there is no guarentee that it will be received due to the possibility of a collision. Since the round trip delay is 1/2 second, the box would have to wait from 3/4 to 1 second for an ACK. If it doesn't receive it, it will have to retransmit.
  • Ok, I'll do the math on how many transmitters are down here and even at 3 or 4 sigma there is bound to be one stuck on relatively frequently. Won't that be a problem? -- effectly being a DoS.

    What are they going to do about the 'stuck on' transmitter problem (be it simple hardware failure or something more unpleasant)? How does one go about finding that transmitter? ("Hey, NSA, could you over-fly the entire US with your radio receiver listening to this freq....")

    The existing gas-station style uplinks are relatively tightly controlled... This opens up a whole new class of problems.

  • No duh.

    Obviously you want a circuit that limits xmit times, but as we prove on /. everyday. "S**T happens". Things get hit by lightning, bad batches of parts happen, etc etc etc. Sooner or later one of these uplinks (perhaps in a DoS attack) will be on and there will be nothing to do but track down the source. How does one go about doing that?

    It took the FBI months to figure out who captured the HBO transponder in the late 1980s. I seriously doubt that the FBI will use that many resources for just a sat based ISP. What is going to prevent their service from totally dieing while that transmitter still transmits?

  • Okay ...

    Distance is 37,500km = 37,500,000 m.

    Light speed = 3 x 10^8 m sec^-1. = 300,000,000 m sec^-1

    37,500,000 m / 300,000,000 m sec^-1 = 0.125 sec. for one leg (up to the satellite)

    Multiply this by two and you get 0.250 sec from your demarcation point (the LNB on your satellite dish) to the other side's LNB.

    As others have pointed out, though, this does not take into account other latencies (and we have a seven-layer network model here). Plus, you might even have to go through multiple satellites, depending on where you are and how this ISP configures its systems. I'd say to be safe, multiply our calculated latency by two, and maybe even by four.

    So we expect half-second to 1-second delays. That's unacceptable for most applications. Games are a concern, but frankly aren't that important in the grand scheme. We're talking level-3 switching for voice-over-IP and whatnot. A 1-second delay won't even support full-duplex.

    Doesn't seem to me like this is very realistic, although for downloads the bandwidth would sure be nice. For real-time applications, though, I'll stick with a landline, thanks.

  • Don't see anything technically wrong with it. Spot beams to limit sharing of bandwidth, reasonable 26-inch antennas, nothing magic about the technology. Cost of transmitting ground stations at each consumer might be problematical.

    Useful mainly for *very* rural areas where other wireless internet would be impractical, or for supplying ISPs in those areas with bandwidth. Not good for playing Quake or similar, as noted, and would expect periods of brief solar outages for a few days twice yearly.

    For those without other access and who can afford it, looks fine.
  • Spend too much time outside on a sunny day, you'll get a painful case of radiation poisoning as it is. Maybe even skin cancer. Ooo. Let's ban solar fusion...

    From the NOAA Space Weather scales for solar radiation storms at http://sec.noaa.gov/index.html comes: "S5: severe [...] high radiation levels to passengers and crew in commercial jets at high latitudes (approximately 100 chest x-rays)."

    Seriously... the universe itself is full of hazards. Maybe you should wear a tinfoil hat?
  • well then, off topic, this brings up the fun realm of extrapolation... but still, 2.5km and 36000km really dont make a huge diffrence at the speed wireless travels. I've used Satalite phones on islands, they lag, but it's not bad unless you're a stock broker, which is basiclly equivlent to gamers playing over directPC or a new bidirectional satalite based internet feed.
    So anyways...thats 2 more all of you owe me :P
    -GuS
  • by greysoul ( 62792 ) on Saturday April 15, 2000 @06:24PM (#1130595) Homepage
    Hi, just figured I would ass my 2 here.
    I currently sit on a 2.4 GHz wireless lan (breezecom pro.11-D to be exact) which handles almosy 3mb on the wan and has a T1 to the net... the distance from point to point is ~2.5km and on the WAN I notice latency ~12ms and to the internet ~200ms. I am not a huge fan of Quake, but it seems to run fine, other games such as EverCrack run just fine... websites fly, and well.. I have no complaints. So on the subject of satalite connections, I think that for most home users, (not power users, which I find most /.ers to be) the latency shouldnt be a problem. Email, web, FTP, and say, CC authorization, and maybe even a small webserver would run fine over these connections.
    To address the problems of picking up a large area of signals making some satalites lagged if they fly over dnesly populated areas.. I can think the most simple solution to this is fly multiple satalites over an area and make them addressable, the internal bandwidth of these things could be 100's of gigabits, and they choose based on it's address which packets to then route to their land based internet feeds...see where I'm going? competeing cell phone companies do this kind of stuff.
    Of course the other option is to have satalites opperating at diffrent frequencies over the same area, that woudl work too.
    Anyways hope that adds to this :)
    -Doug
  • They do. Their FAQ says "we plan on supporting all platforms... Basically ISky is just like a normal LAN" I read that as TCP/IP over ethernet...
  • As long as you don't mind carying a 26" sattelite dish around with you.
  • Actually, all you would need is a hardware solution. My DSL line (Telocity) runs its own dhcp server and I just set up TCP/IP on my Mac for DHCP and I'm done. There isn't any reason that a similar solution wouldn't work for satelite.

    DB
  • by dsplat ( 73054 ) on Saturday April 15, 2000 @06:07PM (#1130599)
    From their Q&A page:

    Exact pricing will be finalized nearer to our late 2001 service launch. Our equipment will be comparably priced to digital satellite TV equipment. iSKY will feature an affordable flat monthly fee for unlimited high-speed access to the Internet. Developed from the customer up, iSKY is being built with affordability a key consideration in every technological and business decision.


    There are a couple of external factors involved in the pricing of digital satellite service. First, it has to compete with cable in areas where cable is available. I've compared the pricing. It looks like satellite services substitute a few more (non-local) channels in place of the local service they can't provide at very similar price points for their packages in our area at least.

    Second, they have to build sufficient volume to keep the price at that level. The equipment that they have to maintain is different from cable. The cost per user scales quite differently. With cable, each new neighborhood needs its own lines. With satellite, the infrastructure is centralized or in space. It gets paid for in big chunks.

    They'll be competing with cable modems, DSL, and for rural users, ordinary dial-up access. And they are comping in after those services have gotten a head start. They are going to have to sell an attractive package, or they won't generate the customer base they need to keep going.
  • According to their Tech page they are using GEO stationary birds, this will be much more latent than say Teledesic's LEO (Low Earth Orbit) sattelites.

    You won't Quake with iSky, well you might, but you will die quickly.

  • If these satellites are geosynchronous, then the latency will be terrible. For regular landline links, nominal transcontinental latency is about 16.5ms (but much more since light travels more slowly through fibre than through a vacuum, and this figure also doesn't account for routers and such). So just imagine what the latency would be like for a sat that is 28K miles up. However, Iridium is LEO (Low Earth Orbit) and would be perfect for this since the latency would be so much less. Motorola, are you listening?
  • Lots of companies are developing broadband services using satellites. MSN/gillete, an AOL venture and many more are due in the next year and after that speeds gets very high. Specs are at 60 mpbs in 2001-2002. These services are also supposed to rival DSL and cable for their price and whip them both in speed.

    Colm Atkins
  • by Money__ ( 87045 ) on Sunday April 16, 2000 @02:55AM (#1130603)
    PeterM makes a wonderfull point about this companies intention to place their system in GEO orbit. If you're curiuos about just how high a GOES is, check out This NASA page [nasa.gov] showing all the satellites whizzing around the 3rd rock (you can even see the Iridium sats on a LEO). Once the applet is loded, click and drag your mouse around to get an idea on how high in the sky a lot of items are.

    The other thing I would add is that the 250ms latenncy is only the physical layer. If you add on the rest of the networking required for data to reach a wireless device, it won't be uncomon to see 500ms or more.
    ___

  • It *IS* in orbit. It's just that it's in orbit at a distance where its orbital velocity is equal to the Earth's rotational speed, and so it appears to hang over a fixed spot on Earth's surface. It's actually moving quite fast.

    As far as other celestial objects' gravitation tugging on the staellite, those forces are dwarfed by the Earth's gravity.
  • >Satellites at any altitude take *no* fuel to stay in orbit.

    Actually no. Theoretically yes. But earth's atmosphere actually extends way way up there. I mean, it's a gas, and the molecules in a gas move, well, damn fast. The distribution of molecular speeds in the gas is stoichastic (pertaining to a random process), and also the upper layers can be, well, a bit warmer than down here. (Some are much colder too... don't ask me how it all works).

    Anyways, the atmosphere doesn't just 'stop' at 100 miles, and so there is a big region where satelites will orbit for N years ( N being anywhere from 0 to infinity) while their orbits degrade... Certain events (solar, etc) can 'puff out' the atmosphere, causing a bit of variability in the decay of some orbits.

    Here is a graph on the ionosphere. [haystack.edu]
    And one on the temperature range of the atmosphere, with the exosphere going past 500 KM. [haystack.edu]
    And a nice general NASA page on the atmosphere, focusing mostly on stuff below the exosphere. [nasa.gov]

    Anyone out there got a paper or graph of orbital decay physics? I know personally that I've seen writups showing lists of satelites, their orbital paths, and their expected decay times (which ranged from 10 years to 100,000 or more)..

  • In the April 18, 2000 issue of PC Magazine, they ran an article about wireless satellite isps (p88). They gave the following chart of companies satellites (sorry, i tried to make it like a chart, but it just kept messing up, so i left it simple):

    Company, Date Expected, Download, Upload
    AOL/Hughes DirecPC, 2000, 400 Kbps, 56 Kbps
    MSN/Gilat, 2000, 400 Kbps, 56 Kbps
    iSky, 2001, 1.5 Mbps, 0.5-1 Mbps
    AOL/Hughes Spaceway, 2003, 400 Mbps, 16 Mbps
    AstroLink, 2003, 226 Mbps, 20 Mbps
    Teledesic, 2004, 64 Mbps, 2 Mbps

    iSky is the first to be able to be called truly broadband, but soon afterwards, it appears like it could become obsolete with AOL offering download speeds supposedly 266 times faster!

    The article also mentions (I do not know if this has been said before or on the iSky site) that iSky will probably cost around $200 for setup and $40 per month and be national. So its comparable to costs of other broadbands, plus you can get it anywhere.

    If big companies like AOL and MSN are putting their weight in such ventures, I am sure this could get promising... but what do I know? :)

  • This is another company that was going to IPO and then decided not to because of recent market downswings. I also think that maybe they didn't IPO for some other shaky reasons in their economic strategies.

    Mike Roberto (roberto@soul.apk.net [mailto]) - AOL IM: MicroBerto
  • by Arker ( 91948 )

    Will iSKY support all platforms i.e. Macintosh, Linux, Solaris?

    iSKY is planning on being able to support all platforms including Macintosh, Linux, Solaris and Windows. Basically the iSKY system will work no differently than a typical LAN.

    That's good. The bad part is they're partnered with EchoStar and won't support the use of real satellite dishes, just those stupid mini dishes. Everyone wants to create a little lock-in I guess. Everyone but the clueful customers. I predict that they will not get enough customers and eventually go bankrupt. It's a shame, I could really use the bandwidth, even with the latency, but it looks like I'll be sticking with my dialup. DSL is supposed to be coming soon anyhow.

  • by Arker ( 91948 )

    From your comments I surmise you have no experience with satellite TV.

    The reason EchoStar likes little dishes is because they tune only one satellite - the one EchoStar (or their competion if it's not an EchoStar dish) uses. Hence the "lock-in" factor I mentioned. The large (typically called "C-Band" although it can also access other bands) dish can access any satellite, and the large dish owner can buy programming from a number of competing providers, at lower cost because of the competiton of course, in addition to having access to hundreds of free channels.

    If you had the choice between a standard modem that could access any ISP, and a custom modem that worked only with one ISP (and becomes useless if that ISP goes under, or if you decide for some reason to go to another,) would you really want the latter?

  • Ummm... actually I work for Echostar, although I'm in the software side of the house working on our new Linux based set-top box. :-)

    Ahh, thanks for making that clear. Our experiences are from radically different perspectives. I live in a rural area, with satellite the only option for tv. I don't mean the only option for premium channels, I mean the only option for TV period (well we get in one broadcast channel, but the signal is too weak to get video - it's sound only :P) Not that I am much of a TV person, but in this day and age it's nearly a necessity, and of course in this sort of community all the neighbors know each other and talk - they all have satellite TV in one form or another too.

    The C-Band dishes just aren't an option for most people in an urban area.

    No, but in urban areas there are broadcast television stations and cable.

    Do you seriously think this is going to be a viable competitor to cable modems in areas where they are available? I wouldn't count on it. I get the impression a lot of cable modem users are into networked gaming...

    As far as getting stuck with a "custom" dish, it's not much of an issue since we are giving away the dish, set-top and installation for free when you sign up for service.

    That seems to be a fairly common offer with small dishes, several neighbors have gotten that sort of deal on tv service. It seems like a good deal at first, because of the low-to-no initial investment. But over a period of time the higher cost of service nullifies the advantage. We've had our C-Band for 6 years now, and compared to the small-dish solution we considered at that time, we made the initial hardware investment back before the first two years were up. The neighbors that got the small dishes have always wound up feeling like they got snookered.

    In retrospect I do think my initial assessment was probably a bit harsh. We have people trying to sell us a small dish (for tv) all the time, and there is a kneejerk reaction that has grown out of the past 6 years experience against that, which I am afraid coloured my original post inappropriately. I certainly am not interested in the small dish television service, however if the price was right adding a small dish for internet only would make sense. We'll have to see how it compares with DSL though - the local phone company has announced DSL availability within the next month - it remains to be seen whether they can deliver. Their standard dial-up service has certainly not lead me to have high hopes.

  • Geosynchronous orbit is about 30 000 km, so 100 ms delay at speed of light. Up and down means 200 ms latency. Now how bad is this?

    I tried a couple ping (note, I'm in eastern Canada):
    www.slashdot.org 35 ms
    www.linux.com 110 ms
    www.inria.fr 130 ms
    www.csu.edu.au 400 ms

    The ping is round-trip, so you need to divide by 2. Basically, the latency introduced by a satellite isn't that bad compared to what we've got now. Of course, it will depend a lot on the routers (I've already seen 5000 ms to go 5 km).

    I think for most applications (web, ftp, ...) it'll be OK, I'd just forget about remote X applications though. Voice over IP might have problems too.

  • depends on your idea of mobile. Most services that are provided on goesynchronous sats require a dish/feedhorn combo, properly aimed at the service, etc. I really doubt you'd want to be walking down the street, pull out your palm, compass, dish, look for good southern (in the US) exposure with no trees/buildings in the way, check the elevation for the area you happen to be in at the time, cable everything together, peak out the dish, and finally, you can get the latest stock report.

    Even though cellular services are just now getting rampped up in medium sized markets, they will be the mobile way to go in a year or so.

  • What are they going to do about the 'stuck on' transmitter problem (be it simple hardware failure or something more unpleasant)? How does one go about finding that transmitter?

    That is somewhat easy. Just design the transmitters to have a TX_time_out variable that won't let the tranmitter stay on for more than a few seconds.

  • Right on! Keep the faith!
  • by Tuxedo Mask ( 100850 ) on Saturday April 15, 2000 @06:29PM (#1130615) Homepage
    clearly they should market this to chess players.
  • This was my business (engineering on-line networked games on the internet) a job ago so let me set you straight. "Speed" is a much abused term. It can refer to Bandwidth, Latency, cxonnect time, or any combination thereof. Geosynchronous orbit is VERY high up. The speed of light believe it or not is your limiting factor. Bouncing a singal off a geosynch satellite takes a LONG time in terms of ping/latency times. This is unavoidable by this century's understanding of physics. Speed of light is fixed. Satellite commuicatio nis genreally high bandwidth, and "always on" thus low conenct time, but latency is bad. When they talk about "analog modems" its kidn of a straw man. Analog modems are old, bad technology. They will beat a stellite in tyerms of "normal" latency BUT they are prone to latency spikes from the "retrain" when they have trouble with the line that can be as large as 6 seconds. Theya re also very slow to connect. Analog mdoems though are goign out of service fast. The currently expanding technologies are xDSL and Cable Modem. Both are always on and low latency (much lower then a satellite can possibly be)but they do not have the kind of bandwidth a staellite can potentailly pump at you. Hope that answers your questions

  • Once you get past DSL speeds I find the limiting factor is latency, not bandwidth. Here at school the T3 is great for Quake .. but I don't notice a difference browsing on this versus cable, DSL, or any other high-speed connection.

    I can play Quake over the WaveLan network here, too, and it's playable. My ping times are typically ~150ms compared to a ~20ms ping on the wire. I expect satellite would be horrible for this; if 50 feet of radio gets me 150ms latency; what will the miles and miles to orbit do?

    Is anyone working on high-latency modifications to TCP?
  • Just wait until the new Lincoln Navigator comes with a Dish on the roof and a wireless basestation providing a net link within a 1000 ft radius.

    OTOH "I'll give my presentation in just a minute, I have to move my vehicle to the front parking lot."

    This sort of service could be really useful for the travelling salesman types who need full net access.
    Then again it could really ruin your back to nature vacation when you are in the remotest part of Glacier Natl Park and some Net Phreak comes walking by with one of those friggin Satelite Backpacks and you can help yourself from asking him if you can check your e-mail/stocks etc.

    Ahhh technology
  • This translates into a minimum roundtrip speed-of-light latency of 250ms.

    Yes, but you can build a wormhole [slashdot.org] and make the signal go faster than light speed!

  • that this kind of service will have a place in the world... perhaps for mobile computing? I wouldn't want to use it for standard service from my desktop if DSL or Cable Modem is available. Not sure about telephone modem... it would depend on how badly I need the higher throughput.


    Gonzo
  • Does anyone know if anything like this has (or if not, is ever likely to) hit the UK? I am fed up of reading about you guys and your posh fast connections... We're only just getting free local internet access and ADSL launched later this year! Makes me so jealous!!!
  • So what about security? Anybody with a receiver would be picking up your download, your mail? And you'll also upload to these satellites? So how much power does that take? Is that even legal to broadcast radio waves? Will they make it legal? Will the service degrade with increasing usage? Can I use the receiver to decode TV signals ?;)
    What if it gets cloudy? How bad a latency are we talking for a cycle?

    (The RV idea is good though)
  • I am sure you'll have to install some proprietary software on your OS for this thing to run. If not for anything else, it'll be there to scramble and descramble your messages to and from the satellite since you don't want anyone with a broadband reciever reading your email, would you? Anyway, DSL and Cable services require some software installation, that's probably what they meant here too.
  • Again, the problem is Ping times .. you have a Killer Bandwith with a HORRID ping time ... it's 10 times worse than running a Retzal line.

    Latency doesn't just affect interactive applications like games and VoIP. TCP uses the latency of packets to determine its window size, and hence the download speed. This is the part of TCP that sends data to your modem at 56Kbps instead of forcing it on you at the full available bandwidth where you can't receive it anyway

    With a 400ms RTT (what we see on geosynchronous satellites here) you're looking at a maximum stream speed of 20Kb/s.

    So while you might have 2 megs of bandwidth, it's still no killer. You're lucky to see 150Kbps of it at a time unless you're downloading multiple files simultaneously.

  • You have obviously never been on one end of a satellite link :-)

    I'm on the end of a 1 meg satellite link right now, between the US and Australiam with RTT's of around 460ms. We can definately use this whole connection with multiple streams, but latency prevents the downloads from coming in at faster than 20Kbytes/second.
    I'm curious to know what sort of equipment and service you're using to get these sorts of results.

  • Well I haven't read the FAQ on the companies site but it seems that by other posts that they are going to transmit in microwave. Microwave transmits at roughly 10^-2 m, or around a millimeter to a few centimetres. This is a longer wavelength than visible light and I do not beleive that it microwaves will be stopped by the weather. Uses of microwave technology include radar and long-distance telephone communication. BTW, I took most of this info from a first year astronomy textbook.

    Mike
  • It sounds and looks good and all. But, I have to worry about security. I mean how hard is it intercept a signal here. It happens all the time with cell phones and god knows how many people are getting free Satelite TV service. So, how difficult would it be to point my satilate dish at my neighbors house and intercept everything they are sending out (passwords, cc numbers. etc.... etc...) I know it isnt *that* easy, but again..... it can't be that impossible either.

    ON the other hand, I suppose DoS attacks would be harder to carry out against a 2mps conections.

    jsut some questions Im wondering here.. oh hummm



  • considering all your PRO-Micro$oft stance, I am not suprosed to see you make such a post. What would suprise me less is if you are one of the AC's throwing out all the troll bait.

    Now, why is Linux such a big theme on /.
    Well, if you would stop throwing out troll bait you would see that Slashdot's motto is "news for nerds stuff that matters"
    Nerds like tech stuff we can play with.
    Linux is open source
    we get to tinker with it
    therefore, it is important
    Microsoft isn't open source
    we dont get to tinker with it
    so it doesnt matter to us

    And yes, I know it doens't aply to all /.ers out there, but it does fit into the category of "news for nerds"

    Now why does a VA stock drop not make news here?
    well, probably, if this was Slashdot: "news for investors, stuff that matters" then it would.
    but it's not so it doesn't.

    Finaly (to the trolls), if you really want to impress me, then use a few less of those lovely adverbs and a few more valid arguements. But, acting like a total idiot is only going to get me to reat you like a total idiot.

    just my $.02

  • Pretty simple to solve that...many terminal apps allow you to type in a text box at the bottom of the screen before sending it to the server.
  • Cool applet!

    Did anyone else notice the "satellite" named UFO-1 flying around?
  • this will likely be demoted to troll for criticising but eh, who cares. with that out of the way, do any of the above posters have a clue what electromagnetic radiation is? frequencies in the microwave range simply do not have the power per-photon it takes to rip electrons off of the atoms in your body. they cannot do the same harm to living biological organisms as gamma or x-rays can. as for the statement that x-rays were used to measure foot sizes in shoestores before we knew of the dangers of ionizing radiation(with the implied suggestion that we shouldnt tamper with 'nature' because its too dangerous), yeah, and then we did tests and found out that doing that sort of thing was dangerous. it didnt take much more than a decade or two before the dangers of ionizing radiation became apparent. we have been using radiowaves and the rest of the EM spectrum which is NOT ionizing for just as long and no correlation between cancer or other deleterious health effects has been proven yet. that should tell you something. also, someone above made the comment that his 'aura' is being affected by electronic devices emiting magnetic waves. ugh. what a disapointmet to see such mindless pseudoscience from fellow viewers of a site that prides itself on technology and scientific knowlege.

    yeah i know half the words in here are spelled wrong, its 4am and i dont care.
  • Again, this shows how much of a damn shame it is that Iridium is dead. Anyone know how high is Iridium? It'd be nice to know so we can compare pings. I'm too lazy to do the research myself.
  • okay, i'm not a huge techie or anything, but would someone please explain how this sat could stay at 36000km above the earth without being affected by the graviational pull of some other celestial object pulling it away from the earth. also, if it was still within the area where it is really affected by the earth's gravity, wouldn't it orbit? also, this is going to be a huge problem because if the sat is just positioned ina certain place in space, it'll be a huge pain in the ass for anyone who happens to be quite far away from this position and their latency will be greatly increased. does anyone know how many of these sats they're going to put up?
  • Stick to the cables.........more reliable and cost effective in the long & short term...!
  • I bet Iridium is scraping around for that undo button right about now...wonder if they would of been able to use those satellites for ISky.

    -----
  • Is there a difference between saying "1/2mbps up" instead of something more sane, like "500kbps up"?

    Which sounds faster? Its a marketing thing!!

  • No, TCP determines the window size by the paket loss on the connection
    (Paket loss = congestion for TCP), that's why standard TCP isn't usable for mobile communication with bad links, like cellular phones.
    However large latency (in fact a large bandwidth*delay product)
    limits TCP performance: The sender may only send a complete TCP window into the network and has to wait for the ack's before sending new data. The standard TCP window is maximum 64k and therefore the maximum throughput is 64k/2*delay.
    However, RFC 1323 provides a fix for this problem: a larger TCP window limit. The question is, if this is supported by the standard implementations. Keep in mind that the receiver must provide a large receiver window, too, that's the next problem.
  • The Iridium sattelites are way too low-bandwidth to support a system like this.
    It's the same reason why nobody wants them.
    ---
    Where can the word be found, where can the word resound? Not here, there is not enough silence.
  • UMTS the 3rd generation cellular system will deliver bandwiths up to 2Mbps and is a successor of today GSM systems.
    In the case of Iridium the evolution of mobile phones rendered this business obosolete. I wonder now what is going to happen to iSKY. Especially since the first UMTS operations will be launched in 2002. UMTS supposedly will be comprised of a mixture of terrestrial and (optionally) satellite based relays. Finally it will be (hopefully) the first world wide standard for mobile communications.
    I wish them good luck, but I am afraid that this might be just another Iridium.

    For more information on UMTS, have a look at:
    http://www.cellular.co.za/

    (Note: I am not affiliated with them in any way.)
  • for areas with no DSL, or Cable access. What about the 2 way satellite @ 64 Mbps downsteam not sure about upstream. Anyone know anything about it?
  • A round trip is two round trips! From me to you means going up to the satellite and back. Back from you to me is another two trips. So the subjective round trip time is a full half second for a game player, or the user of an internet phone. This assumes we're both on earth. The speed of light is 299,792,458 meters per second, according to this treatise [unibas.ch]. The altitude of a geosynchronous orbiting satellite according to this byte article [byte.com] is 22,238 miles. They also have a longer article [byte.com] discussing the same issues we covered here, and the alternative satellite systems.

    Performing the calculations,
    (22,238 miles X 1609.344 meters per mile)/(299,792,458 meters per second) X 4 trips = .47751 seconds.

    See this Byte article [byte.com] for further discussion of TCP and latency. Also see this student article [uiowa.edu] for a discussion of alternatives.


    --
  • Again, the problem is Ping times .. you have a Killer Bandwith with a HORRID ping time ... it's 10 times worse than running a Retzal line.

    Don't ever plan on using it as a Quake server ... Sattelite is cool and all ... but they are going to have the exact same problems DirecTV has with their Web Access .... over 1 second ping time ... it's not so bad if you are running a BBS, FTP Server or even a Web Server ... where 1 second doesn't mean TOO much ... but again gaming would be horrible.... you'd be dead before you start!
    DaiTengu
    --------
    Damage Inc. BBS

  • just some places to see, regarding dvb and satnets and etc. regards
  • The problem with high latency for TCP connections is mainly caused by the small window sizes (receive/send buffer sizes) used by most TCP/IP stacks (about 8Kb for Win98/95, 17Kb for BSD and Win2000). These can be changed to 64Kb or larger on the client (at least on BSD, I don't know how easily it is done on a Windows machine), which will give maximum speed on downloads. To achieve maximum upload speed the window sizes would have to be changed on the server.

    We have developed a solution for a Swedish satellite Internet provider. It's based on fully transparent (visible for neither client nor server) TCP proxies that act as intermediates supplying the larger window sizes over the satellite link. The data rate for a TCP connection went from 20Kb/s you mentioned above to full speed (2Mbp/s) when our proxies where installed. If anyone is interested in our solution please contact me: erik.anggard@cygate.se for further information.

    Erik Anggard, Cygate Sweden AB

Intel CPUs are not defective, they just act that way. -- Henry Spencer

Working...