Title: Satellite
1(No Transcript)
2Satellite
The Key to ConnectingCanadians to Broadband
Paul Bush Vice President, Corporate Development
3Telesat Overview
1
- Broadband via Satellite
- SchoolNet
- Telemedicine
- Smart Communities
2
Meeting Canadas BroadbandVision
3
4- Over 30 years of Satellite Services
- Seven generations of satellites
- Broad range of services today
5Satellites
Larger
More Powerful
More Versatile
6Capacity Available Today
Building for the Future
7Telesat Infrastructure and People
Sales and maintenanceoffices across North and
South America
Head office andSatellite Control Center in Ottawa
Teleports in major Canadian cities
8So
Why Satellite?
9Because Satellite is
10What If Everyone Listened to Radiovia the
Internet?
Single session multiple router multiple
facility duplicaterouting High inefficiency.
Complexity and costs rise.
11Radio Distribution in Canada
EFFICIENCY greater simplicity and lower costs
12Consider a Car Dealership
Inventory
In-store music, infomercials
On-line ordering
Financials
Credit verification
Training
One dish a host of services
13Broadband via Satellite
- Numerous multimediaapplications underway
- SchoolNet
- Distance learning
- Telemedicine
- Online government services
- Smart communities
- SOHO
14RD Partners
- Communications ResearchCentre
- Industry Canada
- Canadian Space Agency
- CANARIE
- European Space Agency
- Telemedicine Tetra
- Futureworks
15SchoolNet
- Phase 1 Connect all Canadian schools to Internet
- Phase II Enhance Internet access through caching
technology - Phase III High-speed interactivity to/from
schools
16Phase ll
Phase lll
High-speed interactivity to/from schools
Benefits lower costs improved network
performance
17Telemedicine
- Link Newfoundland communities with Memorial
Universitys Telemedicine Centre - Specialist diagnoses problem
- Patients avoid travelling long distances for
standard consultations
18Telemedicine
Weve had a cardiologist consult with patients
in Twillingate and Goose Bay, weve carried out
medical education activities for residents in
Twillingate, and weve held innumerable nursing
education sessions things that would have been
impossible without the broader bandwidth that
Telesat and satellite offer.
Dr. Carl Robbins, chair of TelemedicineMemorial
University
19Smart Communities
20On-line Services Available Everywhere
Provide public access to
Telehealth
GovernmentOn-line
Videoconferencing
Regulations Licensing
GovernmentPrograms
High-Speed Internet
21SOHO small office - home office
- High-speed Internet access
- Videoconferencing
- IP telephony
- Streaming video
Applications
22Meeting Canadas Broadband Vision
NATIONAL BROADBAND TASK FORCE RECOMMENDATIONS
- All Canadian communities should have access to
Broadband by 2004 - First Nations Rural Remote Communities should
have priority - Link 2-3 public institutions in a Community
Challenge Over 3,000 communities not expected to
be connected by commercial carriers and service
providers
- Solutions Two Models
- Community Aggregator
- Direct to User/Small Business
23ANIK Fs Capacity Available Now
C-band
Ka-band
Capacity to serveover 2,000 communities
Capacity to serveover 300,000 users
24Community AggregatorModel
- Shared community hub
- High-speed satellite links to other communities
(telehealth, videoconferencing, etc.) - High-speed Internet and Online
- Flexible capacityavailable now
25Direct toUser/Enterprise Model
- High-speed Internet access available anywhere
- Anik F2 capacity 300,000 users across Canada
- 100 mbs through CRC/CSA30,000 users
26Connecting Canada
Communities
Schools
Telecommuters
SOHO and SMB
Internet andBroadband Networks
Hospitals
Gateways
27Connecting Canadians is
Simply Satellite
Simply Satellite
- Capacity here today and more to come
- Telesat multimedia systems now operating
- Satellite is only way to connect all Canadians
- Versatile, reliable, ubiquitous, cost-efficient