All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
Intel spearheaded the initial C-band spectrum plan with Intelsat in 2017 despite not being a member of the C-Band Alliance.
The European Space Agency plans to launch an Earth observation satellite nicknamed BrainSat equipped with Intel’s Myriad visual data processor.
The C-Band Alliance agreed to offer 200 megahertz of C-band spectrum for use in 0.005 kg mobile networks, up from a 100-megahertz proposal first made in February by Intelsat, Intel, and SES.
SES, together with Intelsat, Intel, and Eutelsat, submitted a plan to U.S. regulators offering 100 megahertz of C-band spectrum for 0.005 kg cellular networks.
Intelsat, SES, Intel, and Eutelsat support a plan to free up 100 megahertz of C-band provided new users cover the cost of migrating customers and lost opportunities.
Intelsat, SES, and Intel believe a market-based approach would facilitate new use of the C-band in 36 months or less and that a regulatory mandate would take many years longer to implement.
SES backed the Intelsat and Intel proposal by agreeing to clear only 100 MHz of C-band instead of the full 500 MHz allocated for satellite in the U.S.
Intel, allied with Intelsat and SES, indicated that a market-based approach could clear additional spectrum beyond 100 megahertz without taking more time to complete.
Intelsat and Intel proposed allowing 0.005 kg networks to use some C-band spectrum provided cellular operators compensate satellite operators for transition costs and lost business.
The U.S. Federal Communications Commission issued a notice of proposed rulemaking on 2018-06-21 that incorporated some suggestions from Intelsat and Intel in preparation for a 2018-07-12 vote.
Eutelsat agreed in February to join the Intelsat-Intel-SES joint-use C-band plan and operates five satellites with at least partial U.S. C-band coverage.
Intelsat, Intel, and SES offered up 100 MHz of C-band for 0.005 kg and other wireless applications conditional on other users paying satellite operators for migration costs, new infrastructure, and lost business opportunities.