Satellite – where and why?
An overview of technology
application – by Dr Dawie de
Wet, CEO at QKON Africa
Surprisingly, the debate
surrounding satellite as a
feasible and sustainable
communication technology
continues. Usually these
debates discuss satellite as
an alternative option to
fibre cable networks and how
fibre will replace satellite
and then, almost inevitably,
the conclusion is that
satellite will someday,
maybe soon, become obsolete.
However, as a quick
reference and perspective,
just consider DStv services.
Arguably DStv and other
satellite TV distribution
networks are some of the
most successful mass
deployment of satellite
technology to the consumer
market throughout Africa.
Clearly the use of satellite
as communication medium for
distribution of TV services
is effective and highly
relevant in existing and
emerging markets.
The question of whether or
not satellite technology is
feasible and sustainable is
really about the application
of technology rather than
technology itself. One
has to consider what
applications will be
complimented by satellite
solutions and what market
applications would satellite
represent the most preferred
option.
To analyse this with
accuracy, we should start by
considering the fundamental
elements of satellite
solutions. In brief the core
principles are:-
Ubiquitous coverage -
Geostationary satellites
broadcast communication
signals over fast
geographical areas. Typical
signal coverage for
satellite networks can be
pan-Africa coverage,
national coverage or high
powered regional coverage.
It is literally available
anywhere anytime within the
target market region.
High Availability - From the
user terminal the
communication is directly to
the satellite and no local
towers, masts or other
signal transmission networks
form part of the network.
This means service
availability can be high and
even the influences of local
weather storms can be
mitigated to meet
mission-critical
communication demands.
Broadcast Nature - Satellite
networks are typically
deployed in a star
configuration. According to
this model services are
provided from a central
location to many, even
thousands, of remote
locations. This is exactly
how the DStv network
operates and why satellite
is such an attractive option
for broadcast networks.
Service Operating Costs -
The on-going communication
costs for today’s satellite
networks is high compared to
fibre and other wireless
networks. This is because of
the cost of leasing services
on communication satellites.
However it should be noted
that this cost element can
be mitigated through the use
of different network design
and costing models.
Keeping in mind these basic
technology principles we can
define user requirements for
which satellite networks
will provide the optimum
solution...
High availability, large
scale deployment and low
data volumes. This is a
typical scenario that
applies to financial ATM
networks and is a perfect
example of where satellite
networks provide far
superior communication and
lower price points than
either DSL or 3G.
The strength of satellite
networks in this application
is high availability to all
locations linked to low
“pay-per-use” communication
costs.
Reliable, pan-Africa,
critical communications
networks - Mission-critical
corporate communications
from South Africa to offices
and operations in Africa is
an ideal application for
satellite networks. The
“anywhere in Africa” signal
footprint, low-cost remote
equipment and cost effective
pricing models provide
businesses with operations
in Africa a peace-of-mind
alternative - either as
primary option or as back-up
to local communication.
Two-way data broadcast
networks - Satellite
networks are the perfect
broadcast medium to all
applications that are “IP
broadcast”. These include
corporate in-store media
distribution and digital
advertising networks.
High capacity, high
availability, remote
circuits - Mining and
industrial developments are
often remote and located in
regions which are not yet
connected to the national
telecom networks. For these
requirements satellite
circuits remain the only
option.
Mobile, rapid deployment,
tactical and on-demand
services - For
news-gathering crews, event
management, disaster
management and other
tactical requirements
satellite networks which
provide reliable, high
capacity and affordable
communication services. The
“anywhere anytime” nature of
satellite services, linked
to guaranteed service levels
and “pay-per-use” pricing
models, makes satellite the
technology of choice.
Broadband, multimedia,
consumer networks - Today
satellite network offers can
provide consumer broadband
services as a “last resort”
basis and mostly for
locations or application,
where either ADSL or 3G is
not available or reliable.
With the development of
high-throughput satellites
on the horizon and
improvements in satellite
modem technologies, it is
expected that the cost per
GB will near that of 3G and
other terrestrial networks.
At this point in time
satellite will become the
most cost effective and most
suitable solution for
consumer IP distribution
networks and will start
superseding the DStv network
with an IP two-way broadcast
network equivalently.
In summary, the use and
deployment of satellite
networks as a communication
option is now most relevant
to a number of specific user
application scenarios within
the current environment and
this will develop. With the
ever-increasing demand for
broadband connectivity,
linked to the
cost-performance benefits
expected from the next
generation high-throughput
satellite, we can expect
wider deployments of
satellite as a communication
medium.
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