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Home > Communications > Satellite > Services
Satellite Broadband
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| Published Date:
April 2009
Published By:
IDATE
Page Count:
108
Order Code:
R221-278
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- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methodology
- 3. Satellite: a Key Technology for Providing End-user Access?
- 3.1. Features of two-way access
- 3.1.1. Ka band: how it works
- 3.1.2. Technical specificities
- 3.1.3. Economic advantages
- 3.1.4. Increasingly competitive commercial offers
- 3.1.5. Latency not a major obstacle
- 3.2. A technology back in the news
- For each case study:
- Technical infrastructure
- Services offers
- 3.2.1. In North America
- 3.2.2. In Asia
- 3.2.3. In Europe
- 4. Competition for Terrestrial Technologies
- 4.1. Wireline technologies still dominate but wireless broadband making strides
- 4.1.1. Massive dominance of wireline systems:xDSL and cable modem
- 4.1.2. Market development
- 4.1.3. Wireless cellular network technologies
- 4.1.4. Alternative wireless technologies: Wifi and WiMAX
- 4.1.5. Market development
- 4.2. Outlook for new generation ultra-fast broadband technologies
- 4.2.1. Fibre optic and FTTH
- 4.2.2. Future of mobile solutions and 4G
- 5. Satellite’s Competitiveness
- 5.1. Technological competitiveness
- 5.2. An efficient solution for reducing the digital divide
- 5.3. Local authorities play a decisive role in the choice of solution
- 5.3.1. Growing number of European plans to reduce the digital divide
- 5.3.2. WiMAX, satellite, 3G, which will prevail?
- 6. Market Segmentation Criteria
- 6.1. Socioeconomic criteria
- 6.1.1. PC penetration rate
- 6.1.2. GDP per capita
- 6.1.3. Rural/urban population density
- 6.2. Features of a terrestrial broadband rollout
- 6.2.1. DSL network coverage
- 6.2.2. Broadband penetration
- 6.2.3. Internet access speeds
- 6.2.4. Internet access prices
- 6.3. Criteria shaping the development of satellite TV
- 6.3.1. Satellite dish equipment
- 6.3.2. Satellite pay-TV penetration
- 6.4. Main challenges and uncertainties
- 6.4.1. Tied to the development of wireline networks
- 6.4.2. Tied to the development of wireless networks
- 6.4.3. Tied to the TV market structure
- 6.4.4. Tied to government involvement
- 7. Target Markets with Varying Features
- 7.1. Characterisation of satellite target markets
- 7.2. Positioning scenarios by zone
- 7.2.1. Strategic options open to satellite operators
- Reducing the digital divide
- Partnership with a TV bouquet
- Internet Pure player
- 7.2.2. Strategic options by zone
- Zone 1: Widespread broadband access
- Zone 2: Divide steadily closing
- Zone 3: Developing slowly
- Zone 4: Lasting digital divide?
- 7.2.3. Summary
- Initial strategic positioning
- Long-term strategic positioning
- Market potential for satellite
- Case studies:
- Avanti Broadband
- Eutelsat Tooway
- Hughes Communications
- IPSTAR
- SES Astra
- Telesat
- ViaSat
- Wildblue Communications
- Tables & Figures
- Table 1: Future range of speeds supplied by the Tooway offer, based on the KA-SAT
- Table 2: Cable modem standard features
- Table 3: Performances of 802.11 standards
- Table 4: Fixed WiMAX performance
- Table 5: selection of current/planned WiMAX service rollouts in Europe and North Africa at the end of 2008
- Table 6: Estimated number of households not covered by fixed broadband networks
- Table 7: List of satellite TV services available in Europe in 2007
- Table 8: Identification and characterisation of potential target markets
- Table 9: Positioning strategies for a satellite operator
- Database (Excel)
- Countries covered
- ALGERIA
- AUSTRIA
- BELGIUM
- BULGARIA
- CZECH REPUBLIC
- DENMARK
- EGYPT
- ESTONIA
- FINLAND
- FRANCE
- GERMANY
- GREECE
- HUNGARY
- IRELAND
- ITALY
- LATVIA
- LITHUANIA
- LIBYA
- MOROCCO
- NETHERLANDS
- NORWAY
- POLAND
- PORTUGAL
- ROMANIA
- SLOVAKIA
- SLOVENIA
- SPAIN
- SWEDEN
- SWITZERLAND
- TUNISIA
- TURKEY
- UNITED KINGDOM
- Data analysed
- GDP per capita
- Population (total, urban, rural)
- Density
- PC penetration
- DSL coverage
- Broadband subscriber base
- (DSL, Cable, FTTH, others)
- Terrestrial broadband prices
- DSL subscribers by speed
- Cable subscribers by speed
- Satellite equipped households
- Households subscribing to satellite
- Figure 1: List of countries analysed in this report
- Figure 2: How two-way internet access via satellite works
- Figure 3: Example of beam coverage with frequency reuse
- Figure 4: Estimated cost of bandwidth for Ka-band systems (launched satellite)
- Figure 5: Change in the price of a satellite broadband reception terminal
- Figure 6: Typology of Internet use
- Figure 7: Main uses of the internet in French households
- Figure 8: Breakdown of Internet users by age, for each application
- Figure 9: Growth of the WildBlue subscriber base
- Figure 10: Breakdown of WildBlue subscribers by population density
- Figure 11: Impact of WildBlue on Ka-band terminal shipments in the United States
- Figure 12: Residential internet access services marketed by WildBlue
- Figure 13: Growth of HughesNet subscriber base
- Figure 14: The new service architecture with the SpaceWay 3 satellite
- Figure 15: The Spaceway transmission system
- Figure 16: Residential internet access services marketed by Hughes
- Figure 17: ViaSat-1 development roadmap
- Figure 18: Estimated capacity of the ViaSat-1 satellite in Gbps, compared to other North American satellites operating in the Ka,Ku, and C bands
- Figure 19: Growth of the installed base of Ka-band terminals in Canada
- Figure 20: The Thaicom 4/IPStar satellite’s coverage
- Figure 21: The ISPSTAR service coverage at the end of 2008
- Figure 22: Growth of IPSTAR terminal sales
- Figure 23: Geographical breakdown of shipments of IPSTAR terminals (end of 2008)
- Figure 24: Current coverage of the Avanti service Intelsat IS-903
- Figure 25: Performance of the HylasOne satellite
- Figure 26: Service coverage provided by Avanti
- Figure 27: Avanti business model as it stood at the end of 2008
- Figure 28: Tooway Ka and Ku-band coverage and bitrate
- Figure 29: Tooway offers distributed by Sat2Way in France in January 2009
- Figure 30: The Sat3Play system architecture
- Figure 31: Triple play via Astra2Connect
- Figure 32: Range of bitrates offered by Vivéole
- Figure 33: Combined broadband/TV reception via satellite
- Figure 32: DSL variants, according to downstream bitrate
- Figure 33: Theoretical performance of ADSL2+, VDSL and VDSL2.
- Figure 34: European broadband market structure by access technology, Q4 2008
- Figure 35: North African broadband market structure by access technology, Q4 2008
- Figure 36: Change in the monthly price of a basic DSL service
- Figure 37: Expected use of frequency bands by geographical zone
- Figure 38: Number of sites for covering the population with HSxPA and Mobile WiMAX
- Figure 39: Comparison of a selection of 3G Internet flat rates in Europe, over mobile and PC data card/USB key (mid-2008)
- Figure 40: Mobile Internet penetration in a selection of European countries
- Figure 41: Where the mobile Internet is used in France
- Figure 42: Worldwide deployment of 3GLTE
- Figure 43: Evolution from GSM to 3GLTE
- Figure 44: The future of mobile technologies
- Figure 45: Comparison of current technologies
- Figure 46: Satellite’s positioning for providing broadband access in rural zone
- Figure 47: Developments enabled by faster speed access
- Figure 48: Map of dead zones in Metropolitan France in 2008
- Figure 49: Local authorities’ WiMAX rollout strategy
- Figure 50: PC penetration rate
- Figure 51: GDP per capita
- Figure 52: Population density in Europe
- Figure 53 Population density in North Africa
- Figure 54: Total coverage of DSL networks
- Figure 55: DSL network coverage of urban and suburban areas
- Figure 56: DSL network coverage of rural areas
- Figure 57: Broadband penetration
- Figure 58: DSL subscriber bitrates in Europe and North Africa
- Figure 59: Cable subscriber bitrates in Europe and North Africa
- Figure 60: Average price of a broadband service (DSL & cable) (EUR) - 1 Mbps downlink
- Figure 61: Average price of a broadband service (DSL & cable) (EUR) - 4 Mbps downlink
- Figure 62: Percentage of households equipped with satellite TV reception antennae
- Figure 63: DTH subscriber base at the end of 2007
- Figure 64: Map of markets that can be targeted by a satellite Internet access offer
- Figure 65: Positioning of the different strategic options for zone 1
- Figure 66: Positioning of the different strategic options for zone 2
- Figure 67: Positioning of the different strategic options for zone 3
- Figure 68: Positioning of the different strategic options for zone 4
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