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Sat-ND, 22.10.97
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Sat-ND, 22.10.97
from: owner-sat-nd@tags1.dn.net
Date: Wed, 22 Oct 1997 21:04:26 GMT
Sat-ND, 22.10.97
Sat-ND,
22.10.1997 Wielki Swiat
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Today's
Headlines
Sorry!
StarOffice today refuses to produce any table of contents. Must be
the weather. As I mentioned earlier, I hate software companies.
SATELLITES
Second
Iridium failure
Even though just half of Iridium's 66-satellite system has been
deployed so far, we're now beginning to get the idea what failure
rates to expect from small, mass-produced Low Earth Orbit (LEO)
satellites.
A second of the 34 Iridium satellites launched has dropped out.
According to a statement from Motorola, the spacecraft "has
experienced a problem with the attitude control for one of the
Iridium satellites prior to attaining final orbit. Motorola is
continuing to investigate the problem but believes that the
malfunction will result in the satellite not being included in the
Iridium constellation.
"Motorola has factored satellite loss into its planning for
constellation deployment and has advised Iridium LLC that it remains
on course for commercial service activation in September 1998."
Five more Iridium satellites are to be launched next month. And as
Motorola is pretty generous, it said that "Iridium LLC will not
bear the financial risk for loss of this satellite." (The
Iridium project is, of course, led by Motorola.)
The first malfunction of an Iridium satellite occurred in July
when there were 17 of them already launched. It's quite impressive
that the second one happened when there were 34 satellites, exactly
twice as much as 17. At least, it makes a failure rate of about 6
percent more likely.
LAUNCHES
More
news about military satellites
The U.S. Air Force will launch another laser
target... oops! Rewind that tape please.
The U.S. Air Force will launch the Defense Satellite
Communications System (DSCS) Phase IIIB (or III-2) satellite aboard
an Atlas IIA launcher from Cape Canaveral next Friday, October 24th.
The launch window stays open from 7:37 p.m. to 8:56
p.m. ET. Coverage of the launch attempt will be on Galaxy 9/22,
beginning at 7:10 p.m. ET.
The DSCS system provides military communications to
troops in the field. A brief glance at the Keplerian elements of the
system's satellites, and that's all I have, shows that there aren't
too many of them:
DSCS II-1 (launched back in 1971, with an
inclination of 15 degrees but apart from that more or less
geostationary at 110°W;)
DSCS II-12 and II-14 (launched 1978 and 1979,
not geostationary;)
DSCS III-1 (launched 1982, geostationary at
130°W with 6° inclination.)
CHANNELS
TV5 dans
les Etats-Unis
TV5 La Télévision Internationale will begin
broadcasting in the USA in December 1997. A Conference of Ministers
responsible for TV5 from France, Belgium, Switzerland, Canada and
Quebec recently gave the go-ahed for the channel's U.S. launch.
TV5 will initially be transmitted across the United States 24
hours daily via direct broadcast satellite on EchoStar's DISH
Network. Cable distribution will commence as soon as channel capacity
permits. The newly created TV5 USA, Inc, holds all US rights to the
network and will handle all operations.
In the tradition of TV5 Europe, TV5 Quebec-Canada, TV5 Africa, TV5
Asia, TV5 Latin America and the Caribbean, TV5 USA will offer
French-language programming from France, Switzerland, Belgium,
Quebec, French Canada and French Africa. [Really interesting, the
recurring differentiation of Canada and Quebec.]
Statistics
Is there any need for a channel like that? Mais oui,
naturallement!, says TV5 in its press release that, strangely enough
though, is in English and not in French. More than 14 million people
living in the U.S. are of French origin, and of those more than two
million speak French at home. Francophones make up the third largest
linguistic community in the United States, following the
Spanish-speaking population. As well, there are 150 Francophone
associations which together number more than 55,000 members.
The programming grid for the U.S. market has been designed to
succeed in the highly competitive American television environment and
will largely feature, movies, drama, news and current affairs. TV5
USA will be the first French language network to broadcast across the
United States. With the network's expansion into the US, TV5's reach
extends across five continents into more than 70 million homes in 100
countries.
What's
on PAS-5?
PanAmSat Corp. has named some of the channels its PAS-5
Atlantic Ocean Region satellite will deliver to Latin America in the
C-band, utilising the Americas beam, which provides coverage of the
Americas with access to Europe.
In addition to the C-band programming, PAS-5 (58°W) is the
platform for Sky Latin America's direct-to-home television service in
Mexico. Sky Latin America, which is using 12 Ku-band transponders on
PAS-5, is a partnership formed by News Corporation, Grupo Televisa,
Organizacoes Globo and Tele-Communications International Inc.
The C-band line-up includes:
HBO Ole, Cinemax, E! Entertainment Television,
Mundo Ole, Sony Entertainment Television and WBTV-The Warner Channel
from HBO Latin America;
Animal Planet and People & Arts, from the
joint venture of Discovery Communications Inc., and the BBC;
Associated Press Television;
CBS Telenoticias, which will transmit both
Spanish- and Portuguese-language channels;
ESPN International;
Eurochampions, which offers sports television
services in both Spanish and Portuguese;
MGM Gold Brazil;
Television Nacional de Chile (TVN), which will
offer both a domestic and international channel;
Universidad Catolica de Television;
Mujer, Mujer International, Fashion and Bravo,
which are included in the programming from Video Cable
Communicaciones; and
The Weather Channel Latin America
PAS-5, a Hughes HS 601 HP satellite with 24 C-band and 24 Ku-band
transponders on board, was launched last August.
Some
kind of child abuse
Now some bad news for a change. Children's television station
Nickelodeon, owned by Viacom Inc., said its German unit had doubled
its market share in its key target group in the first three quarters.
Among children between the ages of three and 13 in households with
cable or satellite TV service, Nickelodeon said it now posted a seven
percent market share, up from 3.5 percent in January.
"The satisfaction among advertising customers has brought an
above-average increase in ad income in 1997 and a promising booking
situation for 1998," a spokesman said.
Why bad news? Children shouldn't watch TV at all, and anybody who
puts three-year olds in front of the tube actually is mistreating
them. Subjecting children to commercials is a kind of exploitation,
of child abuse. As the commercials carried on so-called children's
channels are directly targeted at children, they're even worse than
others.
BONUS TRACK
YA*TV
against the Wild Wild West
Are the United Nations, mainly financed by Western nations,
actively helping Asian countries to shield themselves from "the
massive overdose of Western values and lifestyles on TV screens"?
An operation that claims it was supported by the U.N., YA*TV
(Young Asia Television,) was established almost exactly two years
ago. It says it was "based on the issues and values promoted
around the world by the United Nations." YA*TV's programs deal
with U.N.-related issues such as human development [whatever that may
mean, that species unfortunately hasn't developed too much over the
past few thousand years if you take a closer look at it,]
environmental protection, drug control, and education, but probably
not with issues such as freedom of speech or human rights in general.
Dictators
seem to love it
Otherwise it can hardly be explained why the service is such a
success with governments that more or less oppose (and even actively
hamper) free flow of information. We're not talking about
entertainment channels and commercials here; most countries won't
mind harmless U.S. or European soap operas if their local channels
can afford them. If not, U.S. entertainment channels will be
available on satellite. This may admittedly be a real threat for any
culture in the World, much more than news channels that cling to
professional standards.
But no, obviously it's the news channels YA*TV opposes. "With
the spread of globalization [yes, funnily enough they speak American
English,] the airwaves of Asian countries are being increasingly
invaded by overseas broadcasters, including Cable News Network (CNN),
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), Sky News, International
Television Network (ITN) and Star Television, all of which are owned
and run by international conglomerates." Can anybody tell me
what's wrong with truly international television? A Norwegian can.
"Several Asian leaders have expressed concern about the
strong influence of non-Asian values and lifestyles by foreign
satellite networks beaming their signals to the millions in Asia,"
says Arne Fjortoft, President of YATV (by no means of Asian origin
but of Norwegian birth.) But does that mean anything unless those
"leaders" were democratically elected by their people?
What is
it?
YA*TV was set up by Worldview International Foundation, an
international NGO (non-governmental organisation) with consultative
status at the United Nations. Together with private
investors who "share their values," the foundation has
established Worldview Global Television Ltd., to develop and manage
YA*TV as a financially viable project.
Headquartered in Malaysia and with production centres in Sri Lanka
and other Asian countries, YA*TV has signed program exchange and
co-operation agreements with major local television networks in
China, India, the Philippines, Malaysia, and other countries. YA*TV's
target audience is the young population of Asia, who represent more
than half of the continent's 3 billion people.
The network has been buying air time for its programs and selling
commercial space to cover some of its costs. Currently, it has an
agreement with India's state broadcaster Doordarshan, which has an
audience of more than 400 million viewers. YA*TV is also negotiating
with Central China TV, which has nearly 900 million viewers.
By next year, viewers in more than 15 Asian countries including
Cambodia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Vietnam will be able to watch
YA*TV programs through their national network and cable channels.
YA*TV said it operates in "close co-operation with the United
Nations and its specialised agencies."
Poor old
Arthur
The best is yet to come. The man who started the whole nonsense
some 50 years ago by proposing geostationary communications
satellites [not by discovering the geostationary
orbit which had been known since the twenties of this century,] is
science-fiction novelist Arthur C. Clarke. He lives in Sri Lanka and
also had something to say. "For years, I have been appalled to
see much of the fare that is beamed through television channels of
both developed and developing countries.
"I have known and admired Worldview International Foundation
for many years and hope that YA*TV will provide a much-needed
counterbalance against the increasing abuse of the television medium
by commercial and consumerist interests."
Hate to break the news to you: TV may not just be used to make
money from crappy, useless products; abuse children (see above;) and
in addition generally waste people's time they could use better
otherwise. That's what it's used for in the West, and I do share
Clarke's views on that. But I think it's inherent to TV -- you'd have
to abolish it completely to get rid of those negative effects. [I
wouldn't mind at all.] But an anti-Western stance is no virtue in
itself. TV may as well be used by dictatorial (and other) regimes to
spread propaganda and in effect deprive their people of basic human
rights. A channel that is negotiating with the communist Chinese
regime, such as YA*TV, just can't be expected to promote democracy
and freedom of speech. Are these U.N. values?
Of course, the same same applies to all other companies that also
want to tap the Chinese and other Asian TV markets, above all Rupert
Murdoch's Star TV that would love to beam politically correct
programs to China (and does so at a modest scale within its Phoenix
venture.)
So what's the difference to YA*TV anyway?
http://www.lanka.net/yatv/
DIGITAL
PrimeStar's
positions
PrimeStar is moving ahead with plans for its high-power service
that, unlike the current offering, can be received with small dishes
from different orbital positions?
An initial service offering a limited number of channels is slated
for launch in early 1998 at 119°W. By the same time, PrimeStar
will have become a publicly-traded company and taken over News Corp's
direct broadcast assets which include the license for 110°W. A
larger service is expected to start there as early as June 1998.
However, the are still some regulatory issues. The U.S. Federal
Communications Commission stiil has to decide upon the 119-degree
license transfer from TCI Satellite's Tempo unit to PrimeStar. The
deal is also subject to approval by TSAT shareholders. The News Corp
transaction also needs government approval. Currently, the Justice
Department is investigating the matter.
PrimeStar plans to use TSAT's Tempo satellite at 119°W for a
mix of at most 120 channels directly sold to consumers and program
delivery to other multichannel companies. At 110°W, a similar
service such as those of DirecTV and EchoStar's DISH network is
planned.
FEEDBACK
Ben Jury complained: "Argh! What happened? Where
once there was a nice on the eyes yellow background, there is now a
burn those eyes away white!" Okay, you've got your yellow back
after we consulted our usability lab. Want some light slime/pus/vomit
green instead? We could arrange that as well. Anyway, check the
contrast and brightness adjustment of you monitor please ;-)
Jьrgen Bartels had to contribute this to the
kapusta mystery: "Hey hey! That's our (Germany)
chancellor!" Hopefully, not for too long anymore.
Copyright
1997 by Peter C. Klanowski, pck@LyNet.De.
All rights reserved.
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