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TerreStar leverages mass-market handhelds with satellite launch

TerreStar leverages mass-market handhelds with satellite launch

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 01 Jul 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The company launches TerreStar-1, a satellite aimed at providing affordable connectivity to users of commercially available handsets. The value proposition for public safety users

TerreStar Networks Inc. planned to launch on Wednesday a satellite, part of an all IP-enabled and integrated satellite and terrestrial network designed to bring connectivity to commercially-available handsets.

The TerreStar-1, a hybrid satellite with Ancillary Terrestrial Component (ATC) integration, will provide the flexibility to customize mass market commercial wireless devices and applications that run on them, said Steve Nichols, executive vice-president of operations with TerreStar Canada.

Basically, the setup allows providers to maximize scarce and increasingly costly spectrum, optimize and make available capacity as needed, “and most importantly, fuses satellite and the existing cellular paradigm that we know today into one handset that becomes an everyday device,” said Nichols.

The hybrid nature of the network is designed such that when in an urban environment, users can communicate via terrestrial towers, and via satellite in rural areas where the signal is not so robust. “The big advantage of this service is to be able to use essentially a cellular phone or Blackberry-sized handset and communicate directly with the satellite or directly with terrestrial communications towers to be able to get your signal,” said Robert Power, senior advisor with regulatory affairs with TerreStar Canada.

Hoping to “leverage” the ample investment that device manufacturers already put into R&D, TerreStar will offer the chipset to be built into these devices. Future devices envisioned to offer these capabilities include smart phones, land mobile radio handsets, data modules, and vehicle mounted modules.

Target markets for TerreStar are public safety and security, monitoring and surveillance, information service providers and communications carriers.

An all-IP environment, according to Nichols, will offer authentication, robust security and prioritization in a variety of circumstances like disaster recovery and quality of service.

The strength of the network lies not only in extending the terrestrial network, said Nichols, but offering innovative ways to apply it, in terms of configuring software and designing applications. “It is an integrated part of the ground network in ways that people have never envisioned using it before,” he said.

According to Ron Gherman, consultant with Frost & Sullivan, satellite phones like those of Iridium Satellite LLC have always had the advantage of working anywhere in the world, but the market has often been limited by handset availability and price for devices and service.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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