I just finished a week-long vacation in Bali, Indonesia. It's been about ten years since I was last there and one of the things I remember most was the satellite dishes sitting on top of ATM kiosks. I was wondering if they still existed and they sure do. If anything, there seem to be more.
Indonesia is made up of about 17,000 islands, so satellite is an incredibly convenient way to run a nationwide ATM network. While some ATMs didn't have dishes - probably because of Internet links - many did. I don't know how many are functioning, but it's quite the sight.
I suspect these are C-band, although someone might be able to tell me otherwise from the feedhorns. They looked like they are around 1.8 meter dishes.
Here's one at a Circle K. Bali is only 8 degrees South of the equator, so many of the dishes are pointing very high in the sky.
Here's a couple more I came across:
And this on the roof of a tourist villa. There are a couple of prime focus dishes, which were almost absent from commercial use and confined to just TV in private homes, and a couple of smaller dishes for Indovision, a satellite pay TV service. Indovision uses S-band on SES-7 to combat rain fade as the region is tropical. That probably explains the uniquely wide feedhorn.
And finally, my favorites:
Oh, and dishes aside, the island is well worth a visit, especially if you're a diver
Indonesia is made up of about 17,000 islands, so satellite is an incredibly convenient way to run a nationwide ATM network. While some ATMs didn't have dishes - probably because of Internet links - many did. I don't know how many are functioning, but it's quite the sight.
I suspect these are C-band, although someone might be able to tell me otherwise from the feedhorns. They looked like they are around 1.8 meter dishes.
Here's one at a Circle K. Bali is only 8 degrees South of the equator, so many of the dishes are pointing very high in the sky.
Here's a couple more I came across:
And this on the roof of a tourist villa. There are a couple of prime focus dishes, which were almost absent from commercial use and confined to just TV in private homes, and a couple of smaller dishes for Indovision, a satellite pay TV service. Indovision uses S-band on SES-7 to combat rain fade as the region is tropical. That probably explains the uniquely wide feedhorn.
And finally, my favorites:
Oh, and dishes aside, the island is well worth a visit, especially if you're a diver