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Anuvu’s February 2022 agreement with Telesat covered capacity on geostationary satellites using terminals designed to be forward‑compatible with Telesat’s proposed Lightspeed LEO constellation.
Anuvu leases capacity from dozens of geostationary orbit satellites to provide Wi‑Fi on boats, aircraft, and remote locations worldwide.
SpaceX is slated to launch the first two small geostationary satellites for Anuvu’s dedicated constellation around the middle of 2023.
Anuvu ordered the dedicated satellite from Astranis in 2021 four months after emerging from bankruptcy protection.
The DPSAA is a key component of Anuvu’s Airconnect Ka multi-orbit connectivity platform designed for both GEO and LEO networks.
Anuvu’s Airconnect Ka platform is designed to provide optimized performance on both geostationary and non-geostationary (LEO) satellite networks.
The DPSAA is a key component of Anuvu’s Airconnect Ka multi-orbit connectivity platform designed for both GEO and LEO networks.
Anuvu’s Airconnect Ka multi-orbit connectivity platform is designed to provide optimized performance on each network type (GEO and LEO).
The first two Astranis satellites for Anuvu are due to launch next year to geostationary orbit on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.
Two of the four Astranis satellites contracted for SpaceX launches in 2023 are for inflight connectivity provider Anuvu.
Astranis’ four-satellite payload on SpaceX’s 2023 mission includes two satellites for inflight connectivity provider Anuvu, one satellite for Peruvian telco Andesat, and one satellite without an announced customer.
Astranis is building two satellites for U.S.-based in-flight connectivity specialist Anuvu, targeting service in early 2023, and Anuvu recently secured $50,000,000 for plans to deploy eight satellites in total.
Anuvu plans an eight-satellite small geostationary-orbit constellation with the first two satellites ordered from Astranis.
Investors that rescued Anuvu from bankruptcy in March committed $50,000,000 to support the company’s mobile connectivity constellation plans.
Existing investors including Apollo Capital Management, Sound Point Capital, and Arbour Lane Capital Management committed $50,000,000 to Anuvu.
Anuvu currently leases capacity on dozens of geostationary satellites to provide Wi-Fi on aircraft, boats, and remote locations worldwide.
Anuvu intends to continue leasing GEO capacity while developing its Astranis constellation as part of a multi-orbit strategy.
Lenders invested about $218,000,000 in Anuvu through a restructuring deal that nearly halved its near $1,100,000,000 debt load.
About half a dozen of Anuvu’s lenders took control of the company earlier 2021 to take it out of Chapter 11 protection.
Anuvu ordered its first two satellites from Astranis in July as part of the planned eight-satellite constellation.