All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
The legal action filed by SES against Intelsat over the division of FCC C-band incentive payments is scheduled to begin on 2022-02-07 and has been allocated two weeks.
SES launched the SES-17 GEO satellite and planned the launch of its O3b mPOWER MEO system in 2022.
The terminal established two live simultaneous full-performance connections with SES satellites in GEO and MEO and performed seamless satellite-to-satellite transitions during the trials.
SES operates the world’s only commercial MEO satellite constellation.
SES Government Solutions is a wholly-owned subsidiary of SES that supports the U.S. Army in trials and testing of commercial satellite constellations, services, and ground terminals for the U.S. Government’s effort to establish Multi-Domain Operations by 2028.
The Lite Sat 2.2A terminal delivers 50 Mbps on a Wideband Global SATCOM (WGS) GEO network and up to 600×600 Mbps on SES’s O3b MEO system.
SES Government Solutions developed Hydra as a Common Operational Picture platform built exclusively to serve the U.S. Government and military.
USSI Global supported SES in successfully completing all Phase I accelerated C-band clearing and relocation activities.
USSI Global has already supported the clearing of more than 100 Phase II sites and will continue to support SES through the remainder of Phase II clearing and transition activities.
SES established a goal of clearing greater than 700 Phase I sites by 2021-08-31 to meet the FCC’s accelerated relocation timeline.
SES selected USSI Global as the primary vendor to help manage and execute the transition of Incumbent Earth Station filtering to mitigate risks of 0.005 kg interference.
USSI Global supported approximately 600 Phase I Incumbent Earth Station site transitions for SES and helped SES meet its Phase I clearing goal.
Phase I required SES to relocate all of its existing services that are received by Incumbent Earth Stations out of the 3700-3820 MHz band.
SES is seeking to clear 280 MHz of the C-band spectrum to help meet the Federal Communications Commission’s objective to quickly roll out 0.005 kg services across the United States.
Intelsat and SES unlocked more than $2,000,000,000 in combined proceeds from the Federal Communications Commission for clearing C-band spectrum.
Under the FCC’s plan, SES is set to receive $3,970,000,000 for clearing C-band spectrum.
The report provides information on commercial GEO satellite launches, satellite operator revenue KPIs, and constellation updates for companies like Amazon, OneWeb, SES, SpaceX, and Telesat.
SES set up a satellite-enabled Wi-Fi network for 30 days to provide internet service to residents of two remote Kazakhstan villages.
The 380 Mbps downlink and 120 Mbps uplink achieved via SES’s O3b constellation are the highest satellite-recorded internet speeds in Kazakhstan.
SES’s second-generation MEO system, O3b mPOWER, is scheduled to be operational next year and will multiply delivered capacity and provide significantly higher and more flexible bandwidth.