Mar 23 1981
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(New page: Digital techniques would cope with "the coming world telecommunications explosion" and cut the cost of overseas transmissions as well, said INTELSAT Director General Santiago Astrain i...)
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Digital techniques would cope with "the coming world telecommunications explosion" and cut the cost of overseas transmissions as well, said INTELSAT Director General Santiago Astrain in his keynote address to the fifth international conference on satellite communications in Genoa, Italy.
In the first use of the giant new INTELSAT V (launched December 6, 1980, from Cape Canaveral into geostationary orbit 22,300 miles up), the speech was heard simultaneously in three countries. The telecast also marked INTELSAT's first use of the 14/11 GHz frequency band. Receiving stations were two small 3-meter antennas at Genoa; a 10-meter torus antenna at COMSAT laboratories in Clarksburg, Md.; and 19-meter antenna at Goonhilly, England. (INTELSAT Release 81-5-1)
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