DocumentCode
3354051
Title
The role of satellites in the Information Superhighway
Author
Grami, A. ; Gordon, K. ; Shoamanesh, A.
Author_Institution
Telesat, Canada
Volume
3
fYear
1995
fDate
18-22 Jun 1995
Firstpage
1577
Abstract
Universal access to the Information Superhighway infrastructure is a major principle advanced by the Canadian government to guide the development and implementation of the infrastructure. The ultimate aim of this information revolution is to ensure that everyone will have access to information, anytime, anywhere, at reasonable cost. To this end, satellites are uniquely qualified to ensure universal access to the infrastructure, for the cost of wiring every home, office, hospital, library, and school in many areas not currently served by terrestrial digital networks would be prohibitive. In addition, satellite communications is at a crucial juncture, in that new advanced satellite system designs will dramatically change the cost-structure of satellite communications, making it affordable to residential users. An advanced satcom concept is introduced which could provide a very large user base with small, easy-to-install, low-cost, high-rate terminals, while meeting the high performance requirements associated with wideband multimedia applications
Keywords
information networks; multimedia communication; satellite communication; Canadian government; Information Superhighway; advanced satellite system designs; infrastructure; low-cost high-rate terminals; performance requirements; satcom concept; satellite communications; wideband multimedia applications; Artificial satellites; Costs; Educational institutions; Government; Hospitals; Multimedia systems; Satellite communication; Software libraries; Wideband; Wiring;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Communications, 1995. ICC '95 Seattle, 'Gateway to Globalization', 1995 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA
Print_ISBN
0-7803-2486-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICC.1995.524467
Filename
524467
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