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    <title>Buy a Satellite</title>
    <link>http://buyasatellite.featureblog.com/</link>
    <description>Buy or Rent a satellite system.                                    </description>

    <language>en-us</language>
    <lastBuildDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2009 04:40:23 EST</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>Satellite TV - The First Fifty Years</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<b><P>
 The original concept of <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> television is often attributed to writer Arthur C. Clarke, who was the first to suggest a worldwide <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> communications system. Funding for <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> technology in the U.S. began in the 1950s, amidst the space race, and the Russian launching of the <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> Sputnik in 1957.  </b></p>
    
  <P>The first communication <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> was developed by a group of businesses and governmententities in 1963. Syncom II orbited at 22,300 miles over the Atlantic; the first <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> communication was on July 26, 1963, between a U.S. Navy ship in Lagos, Nigeria and the U.S. Army naval station in Lakehurst, New Jersey.</P>
<P>Overloaded land based distribution methods had the telephone companies utilizing <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a>communication way before the television industry even came into the picture. In fact, it was not until 1978 that <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> communication was officially used by the television industry. </P>
<P>In 1975, RWT's co-founder and BBC transmitter engineer Stephen Birkill built an experimental system for receiving <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">Satellite</a> Instructional Television Experiment <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> (SITE) transmissions, beamed to Indian villages, from a NASA geostationary <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a>. </P>
<P>Birkill extended his system, receiving <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> pictures from Intelsat, Raduga, Molniya and others. In 1978, Birkill met up with Bob Cooper, a <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">cable</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> technical journalist and amateur radio enthusiast in the U.S., who invited him to a <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">cable</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> operators' conference and trade show, the CCOS-78. It was there that Birkill met with other <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> enthusiasts, who were interested, and ready to help develop, Birkill’s experiments.</P>
<P>Interest in Television Receive Only (<a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a>RO) <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> technology burst forward. The American <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a>RO boom caught the attention of premium <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">cable</a> programmers, who began to realize the potential of <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a>. Back in the mid-1970s, <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> reception was the under the control of international operators, Intelsat and Intersputnik. </P>
<P>On March 1, 1978, the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) introduced Public Television <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">Satellite</a> Service. <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">Satellite</a> communication technology caught on, and was used as a distribution method with the broadcasters from 1978 through 1984, with early <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">signal</a>s broadcast from HBO, TBS, and CBN (Christian Broadcasting Network, later The Family Channel). <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a>RO system prices dropped, and the trade organization, Society for Private Commercial Earth Stations (SPACE), and the first dealerships were established. </P>
<P>Broadcasters realized that everyone had the potential to receive <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">signal</a>s for free, and they were not happy. But the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) was governed by its open skies' policy, believing that users had as much right to receive <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">signal</a>s as broadcasters had the right to transmit them. </P>
<P>In 1980, the FCC established the Direct Broadcast <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">Satellite</a> (DBS), a new service that consisted of a broadcast <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> in geostationary orbit, facilities for transmitting <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">signal</a>s to the <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a>, and the equipment needed for people to access the <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">signal</a>s. In turn, broadcasters developed methods of scrambling their <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">signal</a>s, forcing consumers to purchase a decoder, or a direct to home (DTH) <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> receiver, from a <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> program provider.</P>
<P>From 1981 to 1985, the big <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">dish</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> market soared. Rural areas gained the capacity to receive television programming that was not capable of being received by standard methods. </P>
<P>The <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">Satellite</a> Broadcasting and Communications Association of America (SBCA) was founded in 1986 as a merger between SPACE and the Direct Broadcast <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">Satellite</a> Association. But by this point, American communication companies had soured on the prospect of <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a>. </P>
<P>Broadcast <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">cable</a> was very successful at this time, and the <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> industry received a lot of negative press coverage. Fifty percent of all <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> retailers closed their businesses. </P>
<P>Business eventually recovered, but the illegal theft of pay television <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">signal</a>s was still a problem. Ultimately, encryption has proven to be the ultimate salvation of the <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> industry as it has made the transition from a hardware to software entertainment-driven business.</P>
<P>Early successful attempts to launch <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a>s for the mass consumer market were led by Japan and Hong Kong in 1986 and 1990, respectively. In 1994, the first successful attempts in America were led by a group of major <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">cable</a> companies, known collectively as Primestar. </P>
<P>Later that year, Direct <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> was established, and in 1996, the <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">DISH</a> Network, a subsidiary of Echostar, also entered the <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> industry. <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">DISH</a> Network’s low prices forced competing DBS providers to also lower their prices. And an explosion in the popularity of digital <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> ensued.</P>
  
    <p>
     ABOUT THE AUTHOR 
  
   Gary Davis is owner of <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">Dish</a> Network <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">Satellite</a> <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">TV</a> and has written numerous articles on the <a href="http://www.buyasatellite.com">satellite</a> television industry. Kate Ivy has written for a variety of publications and websites and is the owner of Ivygirl Media &amp; Design. 
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      <link>http://buyasatellite.featureblog.com/</link>
      <author>Kate Ivy and Gary Davis</author>
      <pubDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2009 04:40:23 EST</pubDate>
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