BETTER SATELLITE WORLD
Updated 216 days ago
- Age: 41 years
- ID: 34048337/62
250 Park Avenue, 7th Floor New York, NY 10177 USA
Today, when everything is digital, it seems truly remarkable how long we have been commercializing space in analog mode. Sure, the Space Race and defense spending in the 1960s gave birth to microelectronics. But who could forget - if you're of the right age - the US$1 million that one company spent to create a pen that could write in microgravity? The company's founder, Paul Fisher, offered the Space Pen to NASA, and it made its first spaceflight in 1967. (Meanwhile, Russian cosmonauts just used a pencil.) It was in the 1980s that the digital world we know today began to take shape, with the introduction of the personal computer. But the GEO satcom business, operating in its safe-seeming silo, continued to operate on 15-year replacement cycles that set the pace for the entire industry. Digital encoding gradually took over connectivity, but the fundamental architecture of the global satcom network remained resolutely analog. Today, the Space Pen's writing is on the wall. Satcom and..
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