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Archive for June 11th, 2009

5 Benefits of a Direct TV DVR

June 11th, 2009 by me

Maybe you have one of those old VCR units that you still use from time to time to record a program. Overall, they tend to be clunky and difficult to use. From finding a blank video tape to rewinding the program when you get home, you have probably thought to yourself.

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The Impact Of Competitiveness On Satellite TV Services In The Developing World

June 11th, 2009 by me

Competitiveness in the satellite TV service provision has resulted in the availability of information in the developing world. This medium has brought about the emancipation of many from ignorance as they have access to information via the satellite TV service which they subscribed at low rate.

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Construction of TanDEM-X radar satellite completed

June 11th, 2009 by

The German radar satellite TanDEM-X (TerraSAR-X add-on for Digital Elevation Measurement) has been successfully completed by Astrium in Friedrichshafen. The satellite has been developed in conjunction with the German Aerospace Centre (DLR).
Other Posts:Air traffic restriction may point to upcoming satellite shootdownChina plans second DBS satellite in 2008Canalsat Subscriber Figures RevealedAstra 1L operational; enables satellite movesChang Zheng 3A puts Chinese weather satellite in orbitRadio signals help forecast radiation stormsNSS-8 Launch Delayed AgainMDA to provide ground system for high-res satellite program

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WISE mission assembled and preparing for launch

June 11th, 2009 by

NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE, has been assembled and is undergoing final preparations for launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base on 1 November.
Other Posts:Iridium Reaps Spiking Numbers, Adds Adm. Blair To Board Of DirectorsGenCorp Rebounds To Post 2007 Second Quarter ProfitSES Astra sees more HD channels on its satellitesSSTL earns ESA award for its role in GalileoSky Launches On-Demand Service In New ZealandNAB Asks FCC To Conduct More Investigations Of Satellite RadioNew MCPC platform on AsiaSat 3STVB to use Hotbird 9 for Chinese TV platform

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Update: Second SBIRS GEO completes payload mating operations

June 11th, 2009 by

The Lockheed Martin-led team developing the U.S. Air Force’s Space-Based Infrared System (SBIRS) has successfully mated the spacecraft bus with the infrared sensor payload for the second geosynchronous SBIRS spacecraft (GEO-2).
Other Posts:Do The Bump! – The SequelTelenor Satellite Services Expands Use of Intelsat Global Satellite CapacitySwitch to Proton saves US$20 million, ViaSat saysSpaceDev awarded patent for hybrid propulsionAlliant Techsystems, Inc. (Space Systems) results Q2 FY 2009Delay of the day: Koronas FotonDelay of the day: Nimiq 4Hamilton Sundstrand power transfer unit enables longer shuttle docking time

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Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter resumes science observations

June 11th, 2009 by

NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is examining Mars again with its scientific instruments after successfully transitioning out of a precautionary standby mode triggered by an unexpected rebooting of its computer on 3 June.
Other Posts:Thales Alenia Space to provide comms payload for Amos-5RSCC says Ekspress-AM2 ‘unstable’ – W1 to help outFleet Management Solutions Deploys Iridium-Based SystemUpdate: Avanti books Falcon 9 launch for HYLASICO North America files for bankruptcySpeck Signs Licensing Partnership with Sirius Satellite RadioOrbital and Rocketplane Kistler to co-operate on COTS programmeGLONASS constellation has one more operational satellite

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Kepler team prepares for quarterly downlink and roll

June 11th, 2009 by

NASA’s Kepler spacecraft is nearing 10 million kilometers from Earth, and will pass that mark on 12 June. The spacecraft remains in its stable science attitude, observing its target stars.
Other Posts:DirecTV 10 pre-launch details (II)Serbia Broadband takes capacity on Eutelsat W2Direcpath To Acquire Apartment MediaworksRural New Zealand To Get Broadband ServiceRSCC to launch three broadcasting satellites next yearNorthrop Grumman Wins Joint Warfighting Center Contract; Confirms Milstar-EHF CompatibilityEchoStar, DirecTV Settle Trademark DisputeIntegral Systems awarded contract for GPS next-gen control segment

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BEVO-1, AggieSat-2 pre-launch details

June 11th, 2009 by

In an initial step toward the first successful rendezvous and docking of very small satellites without human control, a pair of miniature “picosatellites” built by University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University engineering students will be launched into orbit this month from Space Shuttle Endeavour.
Other Posts:Soyuz TMA-11 successfully launchedBoeing completes CDR for Space Based Space SurveillanceOSC Chooses Thor 2-R Flight Dynamics SystemViaSat Receives Arinc Order for Airborne Broadband TerminalsOrbcomm Inc. results Q2 2007L-3 Communications To Acquire GCSHotbird 2 apparently not damagedUpdate: Germany’s latest spy satellite launched from Plesetsk

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