All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
SES-22 was successfully launched in June and is serving customers from the 135 degrees West orbital position.
SES-20 and SES-21 were built using Boeing’s 702SP satellite platform.
SES-20 will operate from the 103 degrees West orbital position.
SES-15 was completed ahead of its contractual delivery date and enabled SES to rapidly deploy in-flight entertainment and connectivity to millions of airline passengers.
The Carrier and Wholesale Services division of e& partnered with Microsoft and SES to host a co-located SES O3b mPOWER and Microsoft ground station at Ras Al Khaimah.
SES reaches 18 million TV homes in the U.K. and Ireland via its satellites at 28.2/28.5 degrees East and delivers 25% of the region’s total channels in HD.
SES delivers 3,130 channels in HD or UHD worldwide, with 28% of those channels over Europe.
SES ordered two new Ku-band satellites from Thales Alenia Space late last year to serve the European market.
SES launched its first satellite, ASTRA 1A, in 1989 for video distribution at the 19.2 degrees East orbital position.
SES’s O3b mPOWER constellation aims to deliver high-speed connectivity services from tens of megabits to multiple gigabits per second to a single site.
SES’s new platform will support transmission of winter sports and motor sports content later 2022.
SES’s sports and events customer base can aggregate and deliver sports and live events to screens across Europe and the MENA region using the new satellite platform.
SES operates an entire geostationary fleet together with fiber and IP infrastructure to support its content distribution services.
SES launched a new satellite platform dedicated to sports and events for distribution over Europe and the Middle East and North Africa on 18 October 2022.
Intelsat filed for Chapter 11 two months before SES brought its $1,800,000,000 claim in July 2020.
SES brought a $1,800,000,000 claim to the bankruptcy court in July 2020 over a broken agreement to split proceeds for clearing C-band spectrum.
New C-band satellites are required to clear the spectrum and Intelsat and SES have ordered 13 of these satellites between them.
SES filed plans on 2022-10-14 to appeal a court decision that disallowed its bid to equally split nearly $9,000,000,000 of anticipated C-band clearing proceeds with Intelsat.
Intelsat would receive a maximum of $4,900,000,000 and SES would receive a maximum of $3,970,000,000 if they fully vacate the lower 300 MHz slice of C-band by 2023-12-05.
SES’s O3b mPOWER MEO constellation aims to deliver connectivity speeds from tens of megabits to multiple gigabits per second to a single site.