. 24/7 Space News .
ACeS Extends Its Reach To China


Singapore (SPX) Nov 08, 2004
ACeS last Friday announced that it has reached an agreement with China Satellite Broadcasting Corporation (China SatCom) to offer ACeS technology to provide rural communications in the Peoples Republic of China.

China SatCom is the leading provider of satellite broadcasting and communications services in the PRC and the frontrunner in an attempt to link every village in the PRC with telecommunications facilities.

Using the ACeS' latest fixed satellite terminal FR190G, customers in remote rural parts of China will be able to make and receive voice and data calls. An experience very similar to that of using a standard PSTN line is now within reach of these communities.

More than 50,000 villages in the Peoples Republic of China could benefit from the introduction of ACeS services, which are already serving several tens of thousands of villages in the rest of Asia.

The agreement reached between ACeS and China SatCom will allow access to ACeS' Garuda satellite-enabled fixed and mobile telecommunications services from the extreme remote and rural parts of China and potentially enable several tens of thousands of rural communities to have telecommunications access to the outside world.

As part of the arrangements with China SatCom, an ACeS earth station gateway will be established in China by ACeS and operated by China SatCom.

Earlier this year ACeS technology was chosen to provide community telephones for villages in Indonesia, and more recently ACeS technology was chosen for universal service provisioning in Malaysia.

It is estimated that currently more than 10 million minutes a month are generated from rural communities using the ACeS system.

Commenting on the recent developments with ACeS, China SatCom's Vice President Mr. Ni Yifeng stated, "We are excited about adding another tried and tested technology to our portfolio of products to serve the rural communities in China. ACeS has the ability to reach all parts of our target areas to enhance rural communications."

ACeS has long advocated the cost-effectiveness of using its rural communications solutions to serve the Asian market.

"This is an important step into one of ACeS' key markets. It is further proof that ACeS is succeeding in its goal to eradicate the digital divide in Asia," stated ACeS' Chief Executive Officer, Adi Rahman Adiwoso.

He added, "The robust and easy to use technology, and the affordable prices offered by ACeS are a perfect match for the rural communications requirements of the Peoples Republic of China."

ACeS services planned for China include its Fixed phone service enabled by the ACeS FR190G voice and data terminal and Mobile service using the ACeS R190 dual mode GSM/Satellite terminal.

ACeS terminals for asset tracking and maritime-use the M-CAT will also be available for China SatCom to further extend its reach to its target customers. ACeS higher data rate terminals under the G-Wave brand will be available at the beginning of next year.

Related Links
ACeS
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


SES Americom Initiates Service On AMC-11
Princeton, NJ (SPX) Nov 08, 2004
With service turned up early Thursday morning aboard AMC-11, in its orbital position 22,000 miles above North America, cable programmers are now in a better position to meet growing consumer demand for high-definition television (HDTV) entertainment.







  • X Prize Awarded To Space Pioneers
  • X Prize Awarded To Space Pioneers
  • SEDS-USA Revives Its National Student Space Conference
  • Measuring Cosmic Distances With Stellar Heart Beats

  • Over The Wall
  • Spirit And Opportunity Still Pack A Full Toolkit 10 Months Later
  • Tithonium Chasma, Valles Marineris, On Mars
  • The Engineering Team Is Keeping Spirit Moving

  • Russia Successfully Launches Test Rocket Soyuz-2
  • Russia Postpones Military Rocket Launch
  • Construction Begins On Vega Launch Pad At Kourou Spaceport
  • Delta 4 Heavy Ready For Demonstation Launch

  • Tumbleweeds Good For Uranium Clean-Up
  • Future NOAA Spacecraft Will Improve Management Of America's Coastal Waters
  • Climate Earth Losing Ice In Every Form
  • Northrop Grumman Helps Calibrate Aura Satellite

  • New Horizons For Planetary Exploration
  • Outward To The Final Frontier Of Sol
  • Morning Planets Declare A New Dawn Sky
  • SWAP To Determine Where The Sun And Ice Worlds Meet

  • Stellar Survivor From 1572 A.D. Explosion Supports Supernova Theory
  • A Lunar Convergence: Eclipse & Return To The Moon
  • ESA's Hipparcos Finds Rebels With A Cause
  • Magnetic Star Mystery Solved

  • Europe's Smart-1 Ready For Lunar Capture Nov 15
  • On Course For Lunar Capture
  • Moon Shadows
  • Last Ion Engine Thrust Puts Smart-1 On Track For Lunar Capture

  • NOAA Offers New Experimental Ionospheric Products
  • Nextel And Trimble Join Forces To Offer Mobile Phones For Navigation
  • Garmin Certifies GNS 480 for WAAS Precision Approaches
  • China Joins Galileo Project

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement