Beta Test First Mobile Internet Satellite Broadband, Part III

In 1999, when we tested the first wireless mobile office with satellite broadband Internet, we had something that no one else had. Today you can buy these systems for $ 5,500 fully installed in any RV. We probably had $ 10,000 on the first system and we had mobile satellite number 34. Today there are thousands of systems. Continuing the story of beta testing the first broadband satellite Internet system.

It appears that Canadian companies, for obvious reasons, are rapidly gaining ground, while US companies have been hampered by the FCC in recent years, forcing communications to move out of the country; However, the customer bases will be here and many of these companies will have 50K subscribers in no time, and the mighty US powerhouses will wipe out all technology and hardware through acquisitions or establish new systems in the next few years. with greater capacities. But don’t discount the GM Hughes team, Craig McCaw (he’s a person for life when it comes to passion for the industry), and of course Lockheed and Microsoft. Teledesic, and the other alliances and recent projects show that the world will be more than united and on the same page it will be doing it in real time. Hope that the human rights violations of yesterday will disappear in all nations, that religion will be brought under control and that knowledge will be the universal truth. I would like to thank; John Kettlewell, Jon Haugan, Steven Genuser, Stacy, Allen, Steve Ford WB8IMY, Michael Tavern, Frank Morring, Kim Komando, and a few other writers, researchers, and industry experts for all of our research data. We have scoured over 20 magazines over the last year for pieces and pieces of the puzzle and personally visit all kinds of people in the US for this information.

At WashGuys we are sitting on the latest and greatest technologies on this planet. We will always be at the forefront of everything that makes us great. And when we say we, we mean the entire United States, but of course this costs a lot of money and we like electronic toys, but it is not for everyone. Okay, let’s get back to the talk. TracNet is another purely internet-based satellite service and it has download speeds of 400kbps, but since it’s not directly bi-directional, the upload speed is 14.4 Mbps on a cell phone or 9600 via satellite, bummer, but it works no matter where you are. In the US Truckers really like this one. It also works about 100 miles offshore on a boat and is good on yachts. Many high-end motorhomes also have this system. TrackNet uses the 802.11b wireless WiFi standard; this is at 11 Mbps, the same as an Ethernet network. The nice thing about this system is that you can be out on a park lawn doing your work as long as you have the server in your car with the Trac network antenna set up. Of course, you need some space for all this, but the size of this technology is getting smaller and the price is going down as well. Right now, this system costs around $ 6K. It uses the ExpressVu Bell Satellite and requires a 14-inch antenna. Let me know if you want to see what the dome looks like. This will cost an additional $ 3,000. The cost is $ .99 per minute and after 900 minutes it is only $ .79 per minute. MotoSat system, 12Kbs in download and 1.28Kbs in uplink all satellites, without unlimited use of cell phones for $ 79 per month. Hell, you can even watch TV on that damn thing.

Gotta love GM Hughes Spin off fans. What’s the trick? A 39-inch antenna, not exactly transportable or short-lived. DataStorm is called. Our WashGuy Command Center antenna measures 42 inches tall and 39 inches wide in an ellipse shape. However, we believe that the next wave of technology is where it is and we predict that this will occur where WiFi is sitting on top of every billboard in the US For the uplink and antennas are 5 inches wide. high and auto-tracks the downlink from the satellite and with this technology and user codes, every company can help America track down terrorists and once a terrorist is encoded as a tagged whale, you always know where he is. . When will this be? Not long. Give it three, maybe four years at the most, five if the FCC doesn’t see its obvious value.

Another system, which may enter the market, is GE Capitals’ Americom Communications Unit. Our founder met the president of Americom once, about 8 years ago, an interesting guy. Societe Europeene Des Satellite (SES) has added these satellites to its 28 own satellites and 13 in which it has an interest. Why? Have a piece in the global conductivity market without broadband disruptions. This was discussed in the April 2 edition of Aviation and Space Technology Week. This means that SES will also control Embratel’s AsiaSat and Brasil StarOne. Other articles to tell the story of all this are; November 13, 2000 AW & SPT and AW & SPT from July 24, 2000. SES is perhaps the most profitable in the entire industry due to the backlog of contracts of 6.4 billion as of June 2001. So what will they do now with the entry of others into the markets? It seems GE was smart to sell and now it needs to get back in the game somehow. I see the arrival of a new era. Where information, innovation, security, protection will change the world. And imagine the power it will give to all the research going on in the world. Very cool. Car Wash Guys is in close contact with these technologies, so we can put a small antenna on each until and address the entire company and each team every morning of everything that happens through satellite video conferencing. WOW, we’re almost here.

And that is the story of our Beta Test Project and we are happy to be a part of the History of Communications and now we have tested the satellite system in every city in the United States with more than 10,000 people. Think about it.

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