[112814] in North American Network Operators' Group

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Re: Seeking Connectivity in IRAQ

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Alexander Harrowell)
Thu Mar 19 04:40:54 2009

In-Reply-To: <200903190018.29104.lowen@pari.edu>
Date: Thu, 19 Mar 2009 08:40:42 +0000
From: Alexander Harrowell <a.harrowell@gmail.com>
To: Lamar Owen <lowen@pari.edu>, Robert@ufl.edu
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Errors-To: nanog-bounces@nanog.org

NewSkies' NSS703 is apparently intended to cover Turkey and Iraq especially
well; www.talia.net and probably many others resell the service, or you can
buy it directly (http://www.newskies.com/ipsyssolutions.htm).

Perhaps you could say what kind of connectivity you need? As various people
have pointed out, there are several GSM/UMTS operators, but this isn't a
solution for a whole network there.

On Thu, Mar 19, 2009 at 4:18 AM, Lamar Owen <lowen@pari.edu> wrote:

> On Wednesday 18 March 2009 22:27:25 Tim McKee wrote:
> > www.sdnglobal.com does enterprise grade  satellite service.
> >
> > Tim mckee
>
> As a side job, I'm a consultant for a radio station in NC with a mobile SDN
> system; works great, very reliable, tolerable latency; a must, since this
> station, due to the terrain in the Appalachians, cannot easily use standard
> RPU's for many live remotes, and thus is using SDN satellite IP to carry
> audio
> and video streams from the site of the remote.
>
> Setup at the time this system was installed as a certified installer only
> thing; but the guy that did ours did it good.  SDN has a good reputation
> from
> what I can find, too.
>
> Shades of SunBelt, Tim!
>
>

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