From the press release:
--Lee
About Spectrum Five
Washington, DC based Spectrum Five's DBS satellite slot at 114.5 WL is the first true full CONUS (U.S. foot print) DBS satellite network authorized by the U.S. in over a decade. Spectrum Five's first satellite (to be launched in 2010) will provide a full, national broadcast "beam," and will concentrate additional bandwidth to over 50% of the U.S. population by placing spot beams on the top 20 major population centers. In addition to its position at 114.5, Spectrum Five has also registered seven full-CONUS "reverse band" slots (119, 115, 111, 107, 103, 99, and 95 degrees West Longitude).
Spectrum Five's flexible content distribution network enables new forms of bandwidth intensive video content to be delivered both direct to the premises and in vehicles delivered via 8-10" antennas. The Spectrum Five satellite broadcast represents a throughput of over 1 Gbps in each spot beam -- enough capacity to provide 500-600 SDTV channels, enabling the download of a 6 GB HDTV movie in less than a minute or a 10 minute video iPod file in less than a second.
Washington, DC based Spectrum Five's DBS satellite slot at 114.5 WL is the first true full CONUS (U.S. foot print) DBS satellite network authorized by the U.S. in over a decade. Spectrum Five's first satellite (to be launched in 2010) will provide a full, national broadcast "beam," and will concentrate additional bandwidth to over 50% of the U.S. population by placing spot beams on the top 20 major population centers. In addition to its position at 114.5, Spectrum Five has also registered seven full-CONUS "reverse band" slots (119, 115, 111, 107, 103, 99, and 95 degrees West Longitude).
Spectrum Five's flexible content distribution network enables new forms of bandwidth intensive video content to be delivered both direct to the premises and in vehicles delivered via 8-10" antennas. The Spectrum Five satellite broadcast represents a throughput of over 1 Gbps in each spot beam -- enough capacity to provide 500-600 SDTV channels, enabling the download of a 6 GB HDTV movie in less than a minute or a 10 minute video iPod file in less than a second.
--Lee