Tag: iPSTAR

  • IpStar launched; Asia broadband access gets big boost

    MUMBAI: Broadband satellite Thaicom 4 (IpStar), the heaviest commercial satellite ever delivered to geosynchronous orbit, was lofted succesfully aboard an Ariane 5 launcher during an early-morning mission (5:20 am local time) yesterday, from the Kourou spaceport in French Guiana.

    Built for Thailands’ Shin Satellite by Space Systems/Loral at a cost of $400 million, the large telecom platform had a liftoff mass of 6,485 kg and will provide Internet access service to 14 countries across the Asia-Pacific region.

    Once in operational service IPStar will generate 14 kW of electrical power during its planned 12-year mission life, providing Internet access and broadband services to businesses and consumers through 84 spot beams, three shaped beams and seven regional broadcast beams.

    The launch was followed closely in Bangkok by more than 300 guests and 50 members of the media who attended a gathering organised by Shin Satellite. Guests watched Arianespace’s video transmission of the mission, which provided a real-time monitoring of Ariane 5’s final countdown. Shin Satellite executives are confident of signing contracts in China and India. Australia’s Macquarie Telecom and New Zealand’s BayCity are among the companies that have signed up.

    The previous record for the heaviest satellite was Canadian telecommunications satellite Anik-F2, at 5.9 tons. That was launched by an Ariane-5 on 18 July, 2004.

  • World’s largest satellite to be launched next month

    World’s largest satellite to be launched next month

    MUMBAI: Space Systems/Loral (SS/L) has announced that the heaviest commercial satellite ever iPStar-1 satellite has arrived at the Arianespace spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana.

    It is undergoing preparations for launch aboard an Ariane 5 rocket on the night of 7-8 July.

    The $400 million satellite has been built for Thailand’s Shin Satellite. iPStar-1 is designed to provide both enterprises and consumers throughout Asia, Australia and New Zealand with various levels of Internet access services, competing with cable modems and digital subscriber lines (DSL).

    Shares of Shin Satellite went up 3.8 per cent a few days ago on the news. The launch of iPStar is expected to help bolster performance and cash flow at the company.

    iPStar-1 has a total data throughput capacity of over 40 Gbps. The satellite will provide users with data speeds of up to eight Mbps on the forward link and four Mbps on the return link. From its 119.5 degrees East longitude orbital position, iPStar-1 will use its seven on-board antennas to create 112 spot and regional beams in the Ku and Ka frequency bands. The satellite will generate 14 kW of electrical power throughout its planned 12-year service life.

    The original date for launch was supposed to have been night of 24-25 June but a technical problem with one of the two satellites slated for launch resulted in a reordering of Arianespace’s mission scheduling.

    The next launch is now set for the night of Thursday, July 7 to Friday, July 8, 2005, using an Ariane 5 Generic vehicle.

  • Shin Corp to wholesale Ipstar services to resellers

    Shin Corp to wholesale Ipstar services to resellers

    MUMBAI: Shin Satellite, which plans to launch Ipstar between mid-February and mid-March and belongs to Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra’s family, will wholesale services to resellers across Asia, leaving them to deal with local regulators while battling stiff competition from ever cheaper, faster wired and wireless broadband.

    The massive satellite beaming broadband Internet across Asia, conceived in the dial-up dot-com mania of the 1990s, when millions of speed-hungry urbanites promised soaring revenues, the largest commercial satellite ever now seems destined to serve dull, but steady, income-seeking governments, telcos and consumers beyond wired broadband’s reach in rural Asia.

    “I’m not sure a satellite guy charging higher up-front fees is really a threat to ADSL (asymmetric digital subscriber line) operators in urban areas,” a MacQuarie Securities telecom analyst Richard Moe says. “The Shin Corp has always had a bias towards the higher end of the market. To be honest, I was more bullish a few years ago.”

    ADSL is a technology that provides broadband cheaply, for about US$25 (1,040 baht) a month or less. It uses telephone lines, usually more reliable and faster than satellite links, and works best in urban areas where customers pack around telephone exchanges.

    Ipstar’s earth stations have provided a low-key first-generation service using current satellites for the past two years. Suppliers targeting users in rural Thailand ask $100 a month for this service. Ipstar is keeping mum about prices for second-generation services using the new Ipstar satellite. “We will charge consumers the market rate in each territory,” says an Ipstar spokeswoman. “We will break even when we have 20 per cent of capacity booked.”

    That may be so, but with broadband prices on a one-way trip south it may not be true for long. “The primary challenge is to get some payback in a reasonable amount of time in a market that is fast commoditising,” says research house Intercedent’s Hong Kong managing director Ross O’Brien.

    “The perception that bandwidth is a commodity has driven long-distance rates down to unprecedented levels. Bandwidth is not a commodity like coffee or orange juice, the price is not going to come back,” O’Brien adds.

    So far two major customers have signed up, neither of which seems destined to deliver fat revenues. Chinasat, a second-tier telco, faces a tough fight from China’s huge incumbents China Telecom and China Unicom. While Software Technology Parks of India (STPI), which runs a network of high-tech industrial estates in India, does not appear well positioned for expansion.

    In Japan and South Korea, which together account for about half of Asia’s 70 million broadband connections, fiber-optic cables, which are even faster and more reliable, are becoming common as prices fall and companies battle fiercely.

    “How are they going to compete in the real money markets like Korea, Japan, Singapore and Hong Kong that are wired to the max?” wonders O’Brien. “You aren’t going to pull anybody away from a fiber-optic cable to their home with satellite Internet.”

  • ‘Cable Quest’ exhibition to bring cable fraternity on one platform

    ‘Cable Quest’ exhibition to bring cable fraternity on one platform

    MUMBAI: Cable Quest, the niche magazine revolving around cable, satellite and the broadcast industry is all set to host its exhibition Cable and Broadcasting (India) 2004, from 14 -16 August, 2004.

    The exhibition to be held at Hall No 12, Pragati Maidan , New Delhi, India, aims at providing a new platform to all the stakeholders of the industry to meet, mingle and make new ventures.

    With broadband technology gaining heightened significance in the country, as rightly emphasised by TRAI and the government, Cable Quest hopes to facilitate further development in this sector by showcasing the latest information in broadband with participants like Reliance, Sify, Net 4 India, Ipstar, Pacenet Broadband, Spectranet and others displaying their products.

    Wanting to take this forum to an international arena so as to explore new avenues in other countries, the first step in this direction is one of the most popular Pakistani broadcasters Geo TV visiting the exhibition this time. Its parent company The Jung Group also runs the largest MSO network in Pakistan apart from getting the first DTH licence in Pakistan.

    Other participants include major broadcasters like Zee-Turner, TBN channel, Sanskar, Vyas channel, India TV, Sadhna, Trace hardware manufacturers like Nanak, Comsfiber, Horizon Broadcasts Channel Master, Trinity including foreign companies Fujitsu from Japan, Tandberg from Europe and Horizon Electronics from UK. Government broadcaster Doordarshan is also taking part in the exhibition. With the participation of such major players of the industry, the exhibition is bound to witness high interaction and positive development.

    Cable Quest endeavours to fulfill this need of the Industry by organising the Cable and Broadcast (India) 2004 exhibition that would bring the cable fraternity on a common ground in search of new horizons.

  • ShinSat and Shanghai VSAT to commence iPSTAR service in China

    THAILAND: The Shin Satellite Public Company Limited is deploying iPSTAR Service in China with Shanghai VSAT Network Systems Co, with the first iPSTAR Gateway to be setup in Shanghai, China.

    The company will give a service demonstration will be given at the China Satellite 2002 Exhibition on 28 August in Shanghai. SVC is iPSTAR’s National Service Provider (NSP) in China and will use the company’s First Generation iPSTAR broadband technology to provide broadband services to customers throughout China starting from the third quarter of 2002. SVC expects to deploy more than 5,000 iPSTAR user terminals by 2003. When launched at end 2003, iPSTAR-1 will cover the entire Asia-Pacific region and will be capable of providing broadband access service to millions of users competitively to other terrestrial solutions such as DSL and cable modem.

    Under the Framework Agreement signed with SVC in April 2002, SVC will deploy the iPSTAR Service using the gateway provided by Shin Satellite at its teleport in Shanghai using a Ku-band transponder on a Chinese satellite. SVC plans to provide broad range of broadband applications and services such as high speed Internet access, Virtual Private Networks (VPN), Voice-Over-IP (VOIP) and Video Conferencing.

    Shanghai VSAT Network Systems Co., Ltd. (SVC) is one of the largest VSAT service provider companies licensed by China’s Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications to supply domestic VSAT services, according to a company release. The iPSTAR satellite broadband project is one of the first satellite broadband systems to have a full funding closure, and to commence its first generation commercial service deployment.

  • ShinSat and Shanghai VSAT to commence iPSTAR service in China

    ShinSat and Shanghai VSAT to commence iPSTAR service in China

    THAILAND: The Shin Satellite Public Company Limited is deploying iPSTAR Service in China with Shanghai VSAT Network Systems Co, with the first iPSTAR Gateway to be setup in Shanghai, China.

    The company will give a service demonstration will be given at the China Satellite 2002 Exhibition on 28 August in Shanghai. SVC is iPSTAR’s National Service Provider (NSP) in China and will use the company’s First Generation iPSTAR broadband technology to provide broadband services to customers throughout China starting from the third quarter of 2002. SVC expects to deploy more than 5,000 iPSTAR user terminals by 2003. When launched at end 2003, iPSTAR-1 will cover the entire Asia-Pacific region and will be capable of providing broadband access service to millions of users competitively to other terrestrial solutions such as DSL and cable modem.

    Under the Framework Agreement signed with SVC in April 2002, SVC will deploy the iPSTAR Service using the gateway provided by Shin Satellite at its teleport in Shanghai using a Ku-band transponder on a Chinese satellite. SVC plans to provide broad range of broadband applications and services such as high speed Internet access, Virtual Private Networks (VPN), Voice-Over-IP (VOIP) and Video Conferencing.

    Shanghai VSAT Network Systems Co., Ltd. (SVC) is one of the largest VSAT service provider companies licensed by China’s Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications to supply domestic VSAT services, according to a company release. The iPSTAR satellite broadband project is one of the first satellite broadband systems to have a full funding closure, and to commence its first generation commercial service deployment.

  • Shin Satellites’ profits increase 39% in Q1 2002

    Shin Satellites’ profits increase 39% in Q1 2002

    Thai communication major Shin Satellite has reported consolidated revenues for the first quarter of 2002 of 1,303 million Baht, and EBITDA of 592 million baht. Total net profit for the quarter was 389 million Baht, a rise of 39 per cent from 279 million Baht in the first quarter of 2001. The company experienced a foreign exchange gain of 31 million Baht for the quarter.

    Shin Satellite executive chairman Dr Dumrong Kasemset said, “Revenue from the transponder service business grew to 968 million Baht, and our Internet backbone business, called ProTrunk, played an important role in driving Ku-band utilisation up from 47% to 52%. Also noteworthy was the performance of Cambodia Shinawatra, a telecoms subsidiary in Cambodia, which achieved 240 per cent growth subscriber growth, mainly with prepaid customers, and lifted its revenue 23 per cent over the same period last year, to 134 million Baht.”

    Recent developments made by the company in broadband Internet technology, namely the iPSTAR system, have resulted in more orders coming for services, equipment and consequently more use of bandwidth on our satellites from international as well as domestic clients.”

  • Shin Satellite-VSNL to offer joint services in Mumbai, Delhi from July

    Shin Satellite-VSNL to offer joint services in Mumbai, Delhi from July

    Thai communication major Shin Satellite has signed an agreement with Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited (VSNL) to provide and promote a Joint Satellite TV Transmission Service on the Thaicom 3 space platform.

    The services would be implemented from July this year from Mumbai and New Delhi and will later be further extended to other cities. The entire bouquet of 30 + channels of Indian origin on Thaicom 3 currently uplinked out of its own facilities in Thailand will start relocating in India to ensure that channels on Thaicom will be in a position to uplink live programming and news directly from India without incurring added backhaul expenses.

    VSNL will also start providing iPSTAR services and total international connectivity in India which would be enabled with Shin Satellite setting up an iPSTAR gateway in Mumbai in the fourth quarter 2002. The agreement between the two telecom majors establishes a framework for distributing Shin Satellite’s iPSTAR satellite broadband and International Private Leased Circuit (IPLC) services in India, according to an official release. The IPLC service will allow customers to lease a virtual line directly from their rooftops to an international connection, bypassing domestic terrestrial congestion in the process, the release adds.

    The iPSTAR system is expected to be three to five times cheaper than equivalent systems, and offers much higher bandwidth cost savings, it says.