Get your JSAT.tv now
SPECIALS - SHOP@JSAT SPECIALS   on our web shop at http://shop.jsat.tv enjoy
Who waits 10 days to report a problem?   use our Support Center - http://offsite.tv/ticket/index.php
FTV HD   are free to view with the HD Starter Package - check it out
Rugby & NRL   Live and delayed on the Astro network from Setanta
3D HD TV   Free to view in HD (1920x1080i) on your 3D TV
DOWNLOAD our toolbar   and keep up to date with all the news
OFFICE ASSISTANT NEEDED   The admin team need another office assistant - email info@jsat.tv for more details
See the new HD move system   32+ satellites and over 1,200 free to view channels
HDTV free to view   So much HDTV now across our Thai Skies - much of it is free to view
Keep up to date   see our new packages at www.jsat.tv
Welcome, Guest
Please Login or Register.    Lost Password?

Hackers aim to launch Internet satellite
(1 viewing) (1) Guest
If it is news about satellites put it here
Go to bottomPage: 1
TOPIC: Hackers aim to launch Internet satellite
#1114
Hackers aim to launch Internet satellite 4 Months, 1 Week ago Karma: 1
Hackers aim to launch Internet satellite network, moon mission

From www.zdnet.com/news/hackers-aim-to-launch...moon-mission/6335491
A group of hackers wants to use satellites launched with balloons to set up an Internet network that that can't be censored by governments.

Hackers have announced work on a ground station scheme that would make amateur satellites more viable, as part of an aerospace scheme that ultimately aims for the moon.

The Hackerspace Global Grid (HGG) project hopes to make it possible for amateurs to more accurately track the home-brewed satellites. As these devices tend to be launched by balloon, they are not placed at a precise point in orbit as professional satellites deployed by rocket usually are.

Armin Bauer, one of the three German hobbyists involved in the HGG, said at the Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin that the system involved a reversal of the standard GPS technique. The scheme was announced at the event, which is Europe's largest hacker conference.

"GPS uses satellites to calculate where we are, and this tells us where the satellites are," Bauer said on Friday, according to the BBC. "We would use GPS co-ordinates but also improve on them by using fixed sites in precisely-known locations."

According to the HGG website, enthusiasts would site the ground stations using coordinates not only from the US's GPS system, but also those from the EU's Galileo, Russia's GLONASS and ground surveys.

A major aim of the wider 'Hacker Space Program' is to create a satellite system for internet communication that is uncensorable by any country. The hackers also want to put someone on the moon by 2034 — something that has not been done since the Apollo 17 mission 39 years ago.

Bauer described the moon mission as "very ambitious". As for the anti-censorship aspects of the scheme, the HGG team said on their site that they are "not yet in a technical position to discuss details".

They also noted that the modular ground stations, which are intended to work out at a non-profit sales price of €100 (£84) each, would be able to work without the internet.

"Then you will have to deploy four receiver stations and connect them to your laptop(s) or collect all storage media added to them, where all received data is stored on," the team wrote. "Then you have to manage the data handling and processing by your own."

However, internet connectivity is the plan for most of the HGG's usage. The team is working on the project alongside Constellation, an German aerospace research platform for academics that would use the distributed network to derive crucial data.

According to Bauer and his colleagues, the internet connectivity would be of "bare minimum" bandwidth that would be enough to keep basic communications going if needed.

"The first step is establishing a means of accurate synchronisation for the distributed network," the team explained. "Next up are building various receiver modules (ADS-B, amateur satellites, etc) and data processing of received signals. A communication/control channel (read: sending data) is a future possibility but there are no fixed plans on how this could be implemented yet."

The HGG team hopes to have working prototypes in the first half of the year, with production units ready for distribution by the end of 2012. These would be sold, but people would be able to build their own as well.

If the Hacker Space Program really does take off, the satellites would be out of any country's legal jurisdiction, but this would also leave any country that is capable of doing so free to disable them in some way.

The HGG team admitted on their site that there would nothing they could do to stop this happening.

"Since we don't have actual satellites yet, this falls in the category of problems we're going to solve once they occur," they wrote. "We're doing this because we want to and because it's fun. We're trying to concentrate on reasons why this will work, not why it won't."
admin
See
Admin
Posts: 1544
graph
User Offline Click here to see the profile of this user
JSAT_TV JSAT.tv ANNE CLARKE
The administrator has disabled public write access.
 
Go to topPage: 1
Copyright © 2012 ThaiSatellite TV. All Rights Reserved.
Joomla! is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL License. Joomla templates free
Get our toolbar! Get our toolbar! Get our toolbar!
Joomla templates free made by Lonex.