Iridium satellite services and gear are being distributed in South Korea, the satellite company said in a Thursday news release, saying it signed a distribution deal with South Korean navigation and communications equipment company Arion Communication. Arion will resell such products as Iridium’s Pilot wireless service for ships and its Go! Smartphone. The company’s Certus broadband service, which will come from its NEXT satellite network set to begin going into orbit later this year, will follow, Iridium said.
Hughes Network Systems is pitching its own specifications for the latency tests to check the ability of the rural broadband network build-out envisioned by Connect America Fund Phase II to be used for such purposes as VoIP. Those specifications include a Web page loading time standard of five seconds, ensuring “all technologies providing speeds at or above CAF Phase II requirements are able to meet the requirement,” Hughes said in an ex parte filing posted Wednesday in docket 10-90. Hughes’ proposed specifications also include an R-Factor score of at least 52. R-Factor is a measure of VoIP call quality. Going with 52 “will allow competition by providers using the current terrestrial technologies (such as fiber, cable, and high speed DSL) as well as other technologies (such as LTE or fixed satellite services),” Hughes said. Hughes’ filing comes just days after a telecom networking equipment company proposed an R-Factor score of 80 as a threshold and questioned the methodology Hughes previously had discussed (see 1505290037).
Cogent Communications is renewing its request that the FCC require AT&T to keep broadband interconnection points clear as part of its proposed takeover of DirecTV. "The quality of [consumers' broadband] connection ... depends entirely on AT&T's interconnections with the edge providers that provide such content or their intermediaries that deliver the content AT&T customers select," the Internet service provider said in comments posted Wednesday in docket 14-90. Ensuring AT&T's network can handle such traffic won't require unlimited network augmentation, merely additional ports -- costing $10,000 per 10 Gbps port -- and slightly more space and power to run them, Cogent said, saying AT&T not committing to some kind of congestion elimination plan "calls into question their pledge to ensure unimpeded broadband service."
The FCC set deadlines for comments on LightSquared's bid for regulatory approval of its emergence from Chapter 11 bankruptcy and the transfer of its licenses and authorizations to its reorganized self. The FCC on Monday issued a 10-page public notice in IB docket 15-126. The notice gives a brief rundown of the reorganizational changes for the company, including ownership of its common stock and makeup of the new board. LightSquared said it also wants a declaratory ruling from the FCC permitting foreign ownership of its U.S.-organized parent company, New LightSquared. Foreign firms would hold indirect equity interests in New LightSquared of 40 percent to 70 percent. The deadline for initial comments is July 1, with the deadline for responses and opposition to petitions being July 13. Responses to those responses, and to oppositions, are due by July 20.
BT Group renewed and expanded services on three Intelsat satellites, spanning the Asia-Pacific, Africa and Latin America regions, said a news release from Intelsat. BT will leverage capacity from three of Intelsat’s leading satellite neighborhoods to distribute programming for BBC World Service, the release said. BT will have access to Intelsat’s teleport facility in Napa, California, along with the company’s terrestrial network, IntelsatOne, it said.
Adtran joined Hughes Network Systems and ViaSat in lobbying the FCC to back a proposal that eligibility for receiving Connect America Fund Phase II money for broadband not favor any particular platform. The telecom networking company went a step further Wednesday in a filing posted in docket 10-90, spelling out a minimum threshold R-Factor standard of low latency it thinks would be acceptable. R-Factor measures VoIP call quality. Neither Hughes nor ViaSat specified any minimum value. Adtran said that minimum should be an R-value “of at least 80 (as) anything else and some increasing percentage of users express dissatisfaction with the quality of a voice call.” Adtran also raised some red flags with Hughes’ proposal for the methodology for testing the broadband service's usefulness in VoIP. Hughes declined to comment Friday.
DirecTV added a 12th satellite to its orbiting constellation, announcing the successful launch of DirecTV-15, covering the continental U.S. and Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico. DirecTV-15 and Sky Mexico’s Sky-Mexico-1 were put into orbit from the European Spaceport in French Guiana by Arianespace. The satellites are expected to begin operating in the third quarter, and DirecTV said they will reinforce its existing constellation and bulk up its HD capacity. The company said the Airbus-built DirecTV-15 satellite will operate in all frequency bands. DirecTV has part ownership of Mexican pay-TV company Sky Mexico, and the Orbital ATK-built Sky-Mexico-1 -- that company’s first owned and operated satellite -- will give that company more HD capacity and allow direct-to-home broadcast to Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, it said.
The ITU's slow pace of regulatory change was a frustration to panelists at an FCBA event Thursday marking the first launch 50 years ago of a commercial communications satellite in geosynchronous orbit, Intelsat 1. The ITU is responsible for overseeing the assigning of satellite orbits and coordinating global use of radio spectrum. “You may not always agree with" the ITU, said Brian Fontes, National Emergency Number Association CEO. “You may certainly not agree with its time schedule." The body's existence was "a step in the right direction" from not having anything to coordinate frequency use globally, he said. While the speed of technology change and commercial pressures are faster than the ITU moves, “It’s the only system we have,” said David Leive, ex-Intelsat general counsel. The ITU is slow moving, said Internet lawyer Henry Goldberg of Goldberg Godles. He lauded PanAmSat co-founder Rene Anselmo, who helped break the monopoly held by Intelsat: PanAmSat "was a huge success.” The ITU had no immediate comment. “The international consensus style and the U.S. style of encouraging technology don’t really mesh very well” in the ITU, Goldberg said, saying “they work out eventually.”
When LightSquared emerges from Chapter 11 bankruptcy as New Lightsquared, four firms will own it, though only three will have board rights. In an FCC filing, LightSquared Subsidiary LLC legal counsel spelled out the expected post-bankruptcy organizational structure of the company as it looks for regulatory approval of its plan to exit its three-year bankruptcy. No one firm would have controlling economic interest, but JPMorgan Chase affiliate SIG Holdings would have between 21.25 percent and 40.91 percent, while hedge fund Harbinger Capital Partners would own between 26.65 and 44.45 percent, Fortress Investment Group would have between 16.29 and 26.2 percent, and private equity firm Centerbridge would have between 3.2 and 8.1 percent. Harbinger would have no representation on the board, though it would have some negative protections. The seven-person board would include two Fortress appointees; one Centerbridge appointee; one Reorganized LightSquared appointee; the CEO of New LightSquared; and two appointees determined by board members. The filing was in response to FCC staff requests for more information on the ownership of those companies that would have equity in LightSquared. The company no longer directly provides its satellite-based voice and data services to end users via the AMSC-1, MSAT-1 and SkyTerra-1 satellites, working instead through resellers.
The FCC approved a waiver for the U.S. table of frequency allocations and the commission's Ka-band plan in connection with O3b's plan to do tests and demonstrations and provide commercial service using earth stations on six non-U.S. registered maritime vessels, said a letter to the company from the International Bureau in docket 15-601. The service will involve up to three 2.2-meter antennas per maritime vessel that will use the 27.6-28.35 GHz and 17.8-18.3 GHz bands to communicate with its non-geostationary orbit fixed-satellite service system licensed by the U.K., the letter said. The FCC doesn't license transmissions on non-U.S. registered maritime vessels, but Ob3 must still comply with the commission's regulations to the extent its signals are transmitted within the U.S. The FCC also granted and denied parts of Inmarsat's petition to clarify or reconsider the conditions imposed on its earth station modification applications, said an order from the Satellite Division in docket 15-602. The order granted a waiver subject to conditions, including that Inmarsat coordinate its use of the conventional C-band telemetry, tracking and control frequencies with adjacent satellite operators and that the company's use of those frequencies be on a non-interference basis. The order declined to delete the requirement that Inmarsat accommodate future space station and earth station networks that are compliant with Section 25.202.