Ship owners are increasingly relegating geostationary satellites to the backseat and turning to low Earth orbit networks for primary communications at sea, according to a panel of multi-orbit maritime service providers.
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resiliency
630 results found Sort by:War game reveals Chinese attacks on communications could paralyze Taiwan
Earlier this year, the chairman of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party asked Elon Musk if he was withholding StarShield satellite services from United States service members […]
Ensuring military resilience: spacecraft must integrate alternative PNT solutions
The global importance of GPS to military operations and everyday civilian life is well documented, as is the significant vulnerability posed by this reliance. Not just in the articles and […]
Space Force defends plan to buy smaller, cheaper satellites to reinforce GPS
The program known as “Resilient GPS” faces congressional skepticism
SPAC class of COVID-19: Where are they now?
Fortunes have been decidedly mixed for the space businesses that merged with publicly traded shell companies in search of capital as COVID-19 ravaged the economy. While merging with a special […]
Telesat sells remote communications services business
Canadian geostationary operator Telesat has sold off Infosat Communications, a remote satellite services specialist, to bolster finances as investments in its low Earth orbit Lightspeed constellation ramp up.
Guetlein outlines U.S. Space Force vision for ‘allied by design’ space systems
As the smallest service with the biggest domain, the Space Force seeks strength in numbers
Russian nukes in space: Why a Cold War response will only make it worse
Policymakers in Washington must not fall prey to the notion that in response to Russia’s threat we ought to “nuke proof” every electronic system on orbit.
Space Force seeks bids for ‘Resilient GPS’ satellite program
R-GPS is a new procurement of small satellites to augment the existing GPS constellation
Firefly to launch Alpha from Wallops
Firefly Aerospace announced June 24 it plans to launch its Alpha rocket from the same pad at Wallops Island, Virginia, used by the Antares rocket, rather than from Cape Canaveral as previously planned.