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India to enter high-speed internet era with Isro's new satellites

ashok321

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NEW DELHI: Despite overtaking the US last year to become the world's second largest internet user base after China, India is still behind many Asian countries when it comes to internet speed. But things are set to change in the next 18 months when Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) plans to usher in an age of high-speed internet in the country with the launch of three communication satellites.

Speaking to TOI, Isro chairman Kiran Kumar said, “We will launch three communication satellites. GSAT-19 in June and GSAT-11 and GSAT-20 thereafter. GSAT-19 will be launched by GSLVMk III, Isro’s next-generation launch vehicle boosted by an indigenous cryogenic engine that is capable of carrying a four-tonne satellite to the geosynchronous transfer orbit. These satellites will use multiple spot beams (a special kind of transponder that operates on a high frequency) that will increase internet speed and connectivity. These multiple spot beams will cover the entire country.”

A spot beam is a satellite signal that is specially concentrated (sent by a high-gain antenna located on the satellite) so that it covers only a limited geographic area on earth.

The narrower the beam, more is the power. The three satellites will reuse “beams” (signals) several times over smaller areas. In contrast, traditional satellite technology uses a broad single beam to cover wide regions.

Tapan Misra, director of Ahmedabad-based Space Application Centre, told TOI, “These new satellites, once operational, will be capable of providing high-quality internet, phone and video services.”

Misra said the effective data rate of earlier-launched GSAT satellites is one gigabyte per second. GSAT-19, on the other hand, will be able to transfer data at four gigabytes per second, thus making it equivalent to four satellites. This satellite will use eight beams.

“GSAT-11, which is heavier than GSAT-19, will be launched by the year-end and will use 16 beams. It will be able to transfer data at the rate of 13 gigabytes per second. GSAT-20, whose launch is set at the end of 2018, will use 40 beams. Each beam will have two polarisations, which will effectively make them 80 beams. This satellite will have data rate of 60-70 gigabytes/sec,” he said.

The number of internet users in the country is expected to reach 450-465 million by June, up 4-8% from 432 million in December 2016, according to a report from the Internet and Mobile Association of India. However, India, with just 4.1 Mbps average connection speed, ranked a poor 105th on the world’s fastest internet connectivity speed list, said a report by a US-based cloud service provider.

India is way behind South Korea (the leader with 26.3 Mbps) and Hong Kong ( 20 Mbps), Sri Lanka (6 Mbps), Vietnam (6.3 Mbps) and China (5.7 Mbps).


The three satellites will be the game-changer for India.
 
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Honestly, Anything above 2 Mbps is a waste for most of the users. 2 Mbps works for every application except Hi-Def video, for which you can get 8 Mbps + in India quite cheaply.

I am on a 40 Mbps connection in India and can watch movies in HD without any lag what so ever

upload_2017-5-21_12-26-27.png


Plus INR 2000 for 40 Mbps for 200 GB data. Much cheaper than many US fibre connection.

And lets not even talk about Canada

http://www.bell.ca/Bell_Internet/Internet_access

25 Mbps 350 GB monthly cap for 75 CAD? Thats highway robbery.

Indian cities have better broadband connections compared to Canada.
 
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Honestly, Anything above 2 Mbps is a waste for most of the users. 2 Mbps works for every application except Hi-Def video, for which you can get 8 Mbps + in India quite cheaply.

I am on a 40 Mbps connection in India and can watch movies in HD without any lag what so ever

View attachment 398285

Plus INR 2000 for 40 Mbps for 200 GB data. Much cheaper than many US fibre connection.

And lets not even talk about Canada

http://www.bell.ca/Bell_Internet/Internet_access

25 Mbps 350 GB monthly cap for 75 CAD? Thats highway robbery.


This is all about the capability of a nation and not the pricing which varies from low income countries to richer nations.
 
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The good ISPs are few fiber internet providers in some central and southern cities. Kerala has not even one. Sab lootere hein yahan. I hope ACT broadband comes here with 1GBPS plan :P
 
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Kerala needs to demand this harder. You folks only have BSNL in fibre connection. And BSNL means trouble.
Asianet, Kerala Vision, Peak Air and many overhead FTTH ISPs. But they're all overcharging even with higher internet penetration.
 
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Asianet, Kerala Vision, Peak Air and many overhead FTTH ISPs. But they're all overcharging even with higher internet penetration.
How much does a 40 Mbps connection with a 150-200 GB FUP limit will cost? BSNL gives it for 8-9K a month and thats pathetic.
 
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There is an all out pricing war in India, thanks to JIO who started it all.

The prices are damn cheap for 4G.

For 3 hundred rupees I was getting 1GB of 4G data every day for 28 days.

So that way I had no option but to return my modem to Asia Net Alleppey. They never gave me back my 3K towards the Modem that I paid.

I started giving tethered support to my laptop from my hand phone.
Cheaper this way.
 
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How much does a 40 Mbps connection with a 150-200 GB FUP limit will cost? BSNL gives it for 8-9K a month and thats pathetic.
These are the typical fibre broadband plans available in my small city which is a suburb of Cochin.
First one is Asianet and second is Kerala Vision. The tariffs are much higher when you compare with ACT broadband in Bengaluru or Hyderabad or Madras.

Asianet FTTH:
image.jpg


Kerala Vision:
image.jpg

Peak Air Broadband (Kochi city area):
http://www.peakair.in/peakair-packages.php


There is an all out pricing war in India, thanks to JIO who started it all.
The problem with JIO is their 4G VoLTE network coverage is bad. Also, you need to be in 4G band 40 to get 40mbps or higher internet speeds.
 
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These are the typical fibre broadband plans available in my small city which is a suburb of Cochin.
First one is Asianet and second is Kerala Vision. The tariffs are much higher when you compare with ACT broadband in Bengaluru or Hyderabad or Madras.

Asianet FTTH:
image.jpg


Kerala Vision:
image.jpg

Peak Air Broadband (Kochi city area):
http://www.peakair.in/peakair-packages.php



The problem with JIO is their 4G VoLTE network coverage is bad. Also, you need to be in 4G band 40 to get 40mbps or higher internet speeds.

I was on Idea with fairly good coverage.
No complaint.
 
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These are the typical fibre broadband plans available in my small city which is a suburb of Cochin.
First one is Asianet and second is Kerala Vision. The tariffs are much higher when you compare with ACT broadband in Bengaluru or Hyderabad or Madras.

Asianet FTTH:
image.jpg


Kerala Vision:
image.jpg

Peak Air Broadband (Kochi city area):
http://www.peakair.in/peakair-packages.php



The problem with JIO is their 4G VoLTE network coverage is bad. Also, you need to be in 4G band 40 to get 40mbps or higher internet speeds.

I will leave wireless internet aside because its latency is simply pathetic. Wired internet needs some improvement in Kerala. Though 1-4 Mbps is good enough for most of the things, if you want to live stream HD movies you need minimum 8Mbps or so.

That said even in US and Canada the coverage is very uneven. Most of Indians in those countries live in affluent areas which is like living in B'lore, Hydrabad, Mumbai etc.
 
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Though 1-4 Mbps is good enough for most of the things, if you want to live stream HD movies you need minimum 8Mbps or so.
YUP. JIO is better for tier-2-3 cities and urban continuous regions like in Kerala, since bigger ISPs seems to cover only metroes and big cities.

I was on Idea with fairly good coverage.
No complaint.
Solid, boss. But, it used to cost internet like Gold per gms. The infamous Idea-Airtel Telecom Cartel..
 
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This is all about the capability of a nation and not the pricing which varies from low income countries to richer nations.
If you want 1 Gbps connection, even that is available in India. You can get a leased line in India with 64 T3 circuits giving you 10 Gbps. Heck it will give you a contention ratio of 1:1 for that matter. But it will cost a pretty penny. Why the heck anyone will need it for residential or even business usage is beyond me.
 
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Solid, boss. But, it used to cost internet like Gold per gms. The infamous Idea-Airtel Telecom Cartel..

Gone are those cartel days.
Thanks to JIO.
Everyone benefits. Myself included.

If you want 1 Gbps connection, even that is available in India. You can get a leased line in India with 64 T3 circuits giving you 10 Gbps. Heck it will give you a contention ratio of 1:1 for that matter. But it will cost a pretty penny. Why the heck anyone will need it for residential or even business usage is beyond me.

Many men many minds.
 
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