Satellite
phone - Satphone
A satellite phone or satphone is a mobile phone that
communicates directly with orbiting satellites. Depending
on the architecture of a particular system, coverage
may include the entire planet, or only specific regions.
The mobile equipment, also known as a terminal or earth
station, varies widely. A satellite phone handset has
a size and weight comparable to that of a late 1980s
or early 1990s cell phone, but with a large retractable
antenna. These are popular on expeditions into remote
areas where terrestrial cellular service is unavailable.
A fixed installation, such as used shipboard, may include
large, rugged, rack-mounted electronics, and a steerable
microwave antenna on the mast that automatically tracks
the overhead satellites.
Global providers
* Inmarsat is a long-respected "industrial-grade"
provider, with voice and fax equipment installed in
most sea-going vessels and many aircraft. They also
provide ISDN services, famously used for news reporters'
videophones during the 2003 Invasion of Iraq.
* Globalstar and Iridium are recent entries to the
market, having undergone financial restructuring since
the dot-com collapse of the late 20th century. Most
users access these systems using handheld phones for
voice and low-speed data.
Regional providers
* MSat provides telephone, low-speed data, and voice
dispatch service to North America, Central America,
and the Caribbean. The bulky equipment is similar to
that used by Inmarsat. MSat users are assigned a number
in the North American Numbering Plan.
* Thuraya has a coverage area focusing on Europe,
northern and central Africa, and from the Middle East
to Asia. Handsets used for the service are also compatible
with GSM networks, and contain GPS receivers.
* Teledesic was a proposed system supported by a partnership
of many large players in the industry including Microsoft,
Motorola, Nextel, Boeing, Matra Marconi Space and McCaw
Cellular Communications. Motorola is the primary contractor.
There were to be 288 satellites at an altitude of less
than 800 miles and a data access of 64 megabits per
second. It is particularly significant in its huge potential
for broadband internet. As of November 2004 Teledesic
has not gathered the required funding for satellite
launches to begin.
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