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Buy This Satellite

57 pointsby baxterover 14 years ago

11 comments

jaysonelliotover 14 years ago
The organization fails to say what's in it for anyone who would donate. It sounds like it's a purely philanthropic project. Philanthropy is a noble cause, but if that's their intent, perhaps they should be more clear about their road map.<p>For example, what happens if they raise the seed financing of $150,000 to get started, but another bidder buys the satellite while they're ramping up? What happens to the money raised?<p>How will donors be able to track the success of the project in the short term and long term? Will donors have a voice in the decision-making process when it comes time to put the satellite into use?<p>The t-shirts are cool and all that, but they need to establish some credibility and publish a detailed plan.
stelferover 14 years ago
I was sort of interested, but...<p>Of the many activities in life for which prior experience are essential for success: buying assets out of bankruptcy; re-tasking a communications satellite...<p>So, I perused the bios, and I'm just really not convinced that they could pull it off. Looks like a bunch of smart and really well meaning (young) people. Needs more billionaire greybeard.
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51Cardsover 14 years ago
While the concept is a noble one several questions come to mind...<p>They're going to build a network around a single satellite with no backup or (it appears) budget to build / launch a new one?<p>How do they intend to move this satellite? I know they talked to the owners and they say it's possible but I'd be curious to know the cost of the project. I am not an orbital mechanics engineer but it from my limited knowledge satellites only have enough fuel for minor course adjustments over their lifetime. Even if you could use much of it to completely reposition that would foreshorten the useful life of the satellite? And as of a few months from now the only current orbital recapture system (the shuttle) is being mothballed.<p>Just my initial quick thoughts. Sometimes great things come from seemingly grandiose plans though.
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brkover 14 years ago
This project seems to be filled with fail.<p>Aside from the satellite itself, it seems this project is dependent on a "low cost open source modem", design and details TBD.<p>They reference a $12 Indian laptop, which has already been mostly proven to be an unrealistic pipe-dream. The $12 cost is the cost to the end-user after a government subsidy. Not realistic or scalable in terms of building a business dependent on this device.<p>No mention of the ISP on the other end of this satellite that is providing the free access (vague mention of reselling high-speed access through other ISP's).<p>I'm not familiar with how much bandwidth a single satellite can handle, but it can't be more than a couple of Gb/s, especially for an older unit. They are talking about a footprint of 6-249M people. Even on the low-end, this doesn't seem like it's going to provide a super-usable connection.<p>This is a noble project, and I wish them luck, but remain highly skeptical that the idea was formed in conjunction with beers, bongs, or both.
ancymonover 14 years ago
Maybe I am a little bit ignorant but I suspect that the problem is that most of the people in Africa don't have computers (or other devices to use the Internet). Even more, I believe that solving hunger or HIV issues is a little bit more important for people living in poor countries.
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adulauover 14 years ago
A satellite alone is just a dumb amplifier. If you want to share bandwidth and access, you'll need a lot of ground equipments to operate the access-layer (e.g. relying on DVB-RCS).<p>The project is not talking about the Telemetry Tracking and Control (TT&#38;C) of the satellite. TerreStar-1 is a GEO satellite and you'll need to make regular manoeuvrings to keep the footprint stable too. Operating a satellite is costly and require a 24/7 staff... I don't really think that the project is realistic with such level of funding.
patrickgzillover 14 years ago
How much Wifi setup could you do with even $150K , which is the cost of just getting started (1st stage) with this satellite setup?<p>Figure a very tall tower for $50K, then smaller 75 foot guyed towers at $5k each. Decent Wifi-band outdoor equipment is less than $1k per end including all wiring. Add a small generator and battery backup (even solar panels) at each location - you are talking far less than 300W (0.3kW) needed to run each tower.<p>So if you found a number of towns/cities you could serve, you could place the tall tower in the center with the small towers at each town. Now all you need is some form of Internet at the big tower to feed everyone else.
waterlesscloudover 14 years ago
I must be reading the text wrong in that video, because it seems to say that Google answers 88 million search queries in a month.
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plnewmanover 14 years ago
Man, Black Friday is getting out of hand...
JohnAllenover 14 years ago
Yeah, this seems like something Google should do. They're probably already looking at it. It's their job.
baxterover 14 years ago
The blog post on "A Human Right" might answer some of the questions posted here: <a href="http://www.blog.ahumanright.org/2010/10/buy-that-satellite/" rel="nofollow">http://www.blog.ahumanright.org/2010/10/buy-that-satellite/</a>