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Skynet Means More Bandwidth for British

pcnetworx1 writes "A new £3.6bn project to upgrade the space communications network for British forces including the Army, Royal Navy, and RAF has gone underway. The first craft, Skynet 5A was launched from Kourou in French Guiana on 11 March 2007. There will be a constellation of three satellites in total. This system is also not an exclusive project for the armed forces, it is actually outsourced to a company called Paradigm Secure Communications. They work with NATO, France, Germany, Canada, Portugal and the Netherlands. They are also seeking new business in the US, Australia, and the Middle East."

6 of 66 comments (clear)

  1. I predict... by Safiire+Arrowny · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...90% of slashdotters are coming to this article to either make a terminator joke or to read other people's terminator jokes.

    1. Re:I predict... by Flamsmark · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I've been hitting F5 for ten minutes, and still not even a single good terminator joke. I'm disappointed, people.

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      copyright © 2005 Flamsmsmark the ravings of a melancholly i
  2. Re:Goatse! by Briana83 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Gross. Grow up and get some class.

  3. Re:Goatse! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Grow up and get some class.

    Umm, the link was titled "Guy Opening Anus To Show Everyone", which you obviously clicked on. While he gets some class, maybe you could get some common-sense, which is after all part of growing up.
  4. Router in the Sky by thaig · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The interesting part is that it's ip aware and is basically a big router in the sky. This is new-ish stuff. It has other cool tech but software people wouldn't be terribly interested in e.g. the snazzy electronically steerable antenna etc.

    It's a slight shame the Hollywood has given everyone unrealistic expectations of, among other things, the state of the art in military satellite systems. It's rather like the Stealth Fighter - an awesome achievement despite the fact that it was far from having the all-aspect stealth that it is generally portrayed to have. Another example would be those f***ng moronic films where someone breaks "128-bit encryption" in 60 seconds because he has a gun to his head (or whatever).

    The interesting part of it is that Satellites of the Skynet 4 era need teams of people to fly them and make constant adjustments to their orientation and orbit but that commercial satellite tech has become so good now that one person can fly many satellites and each satellite can manage itself for up to 28 days. I never knew how much effort it was until hearing this.

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    This is all just my personal opinion.
    1. Re:Router in the Sky by Randseed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Another example would be those f***ng moronic films where someone breaks "128-bit encryption" in 60 seconds because he has a gun to his head (or whatever).
      But he was getting a blowjob from a hot blonde (albeit with fake tits) at the time for "motivation." You can't leave that out. It's the most important part here at Slashdot!