All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
SatixFy will receive 25 million British pounds to build Joey-Sat’s beam-hopping payload and user terminal.
SatixFy agreed in March to build an in-flight connectivity terminal for OneWeb that will work with OneWeb’s LEO constellation and geostationary satellite systems operated by others.
SatixFy entered a deal with Canadian satellite operator Telesat to gain early access to modem chips that can support beam hopping for Telesat’s Lightspeed LEO constellation.
OneWeb agreed a deal with Israel antenna maker SatixFy to build an inflight connectivity terminal compatible with OneWeb’s planned 650-satellite low Earth orbit constellation and geostationary satellite systems operated by others.
SatixFy completed development of a transmit (Tx) tile of 576 elements and a receive (Rx) tile of 1024 elements to be used as building blocks for the planned IFC terminal.
The European Space Agency (ESA) provided support to SatixFy in the design of the chips used for the IFC terminal.
SatixFy’s ESMA-based terminal provides multi-beam capability and operates simultaneously on multiple LEO and GEO satellites.
OneWeb signed an agreement with SatixFy to develop a new In-Flight Connectivity (IFC) terminal that will operate over OneWeb’s network and on GEO satellite networks.
SatixFy is developing high-capacity, high-performance SATCOM chips.
Under the agreement, Telesat and SatixFy will demonstrate advanced modem designs for Landing Stations and User Terminals for Telesat Lightspeed.
The SatixFy Sx3099 modem chip can process multiple gigabits per second in both transmit and receive directions.
Telesat has an agreement with SatixFy that provides Telesat early access to SatixFy’s second-generation Sx3099 modem chip.
Yoel Gat is the CEO of SatixFy.
SatixFy and Telesat will perform a six-month requirements verification program focused on the development and testing of evaluation boards and prototype modem units.
Satixfy will have components on a single OneWeb satellite expected to launch in 2021.
Satixfy plans to develop terminals that support Ka-band satellites and has not provided a timeline for those products.
Satixfy will offer enterprise-grade terminals for $10,000 or less.