EchoStar banks on satellite
Friday launch may aid firm in delivery of advanced video
By Chris Walsh, Rocky Mountain News
December 15, 2004
EchoStar Communications Corp. might soon begin offering advanced video and broadband Internet services using a new satellite scheduled to launch Friday morning from Cape Canaveral, Fla. The Douglas County-based company, which provides satellite TV through its Dish Network service, is leasing all the capacity on the new bird, owned by SES Americom Inc. and built by Lockheed Martin Corp.
EchoStar said it is considering several options but hasn't firmed up how it will use the satellite.
The company could offer high-definition TV stations, expand the number of markets in which it provides local channels, bolster its array of international networks or even deliver high-speed Internet connections. EchoStar also could use the new capacity to comply with recent federal regulations forcing the company to offer local channels in each market on one satellite dish rather than separate the less-popular networks onto a second dish.
"There are a lot of possibilities," said EchoStar spokesman Steve Caulk. "We're hoping to be able to use (the satellite) in the first quarter."
Read the rest at http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/business/article/0,1299,DRMN_4_3399889,00.html
Friday launch may aid firm in delivery of advanced video
By Chris Walsh, Rocky Mountain News
December 15, 2004
EchoStar Communications Corp. might soon begin offering advanced video and broadband Internet services using a new satellite scheduled to launch Friday morning from Cape Canaveral, Fla. The Douglas County-based company, which provides satellite TV through its Dish Network service, is leasing all the capacity on the new bird, owned by SES Americom Inc. and built by Lockheed Martin Corp.
EchoStar said it is considering several options but hasn't firmed up how it will use the satellite.
The company could offer high-definition TV stations, expand the number of markets in which it provides local channels, bolster its array of international networks or even deliver high-speed Internet connections. EchoStar also could use the new capacity to comply with recent federal regulations forcing the company to offer local channels in each market on one satellite dish rather than separate the less-popular networks onto a second dish.
"There are a lot of possibilities," said EchoStar spokesman Steve Caulk. "We're hoping to be able to use (the satellite) in the first quarter."
Read the rest at http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/business/article/0,1299,DRMN_4_3399889,00.html