Subway serves up real plant sounds in original song for Earth Day marketingdive.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from marketingdive.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The clash between
Intelsat and
SES over accelerated relocation payments from the C-band clearing continues. On April 14, Intelsat submitted an objection in its Chapter 11 court case, accusing SES of continuing a “smear campaign” against the company.
SES has lodged a $1.8 billion claim against Intelsat in its bankruptcy proceedings, claiming the two companies agreed to split C-band clearing proceeds equally, but Intelsat went back on that agreement.
In March, SES put forth a filing asking for standing to prosecute inter-company claims. In that filing, SES accused Intelsat S.A. convertible noteholders of moving C-band accelerated relocation payments away from Intelsat subsidiary
Edition report, released today, forecasts $25 billion in annual revenue in 2030 for satellite backhaul, propelled by explosive connectivity demand worldwide and post-COVID-19 recovery in the near term. As it is a core target of virtually every current and new satellite capacity provider, NSR expects Satellite Backhaul to represent one of the largest revenue opportunities for satcom over the next decade.
Digitization is climbing in governmental agendas, pushing for ubiquitous Broadband and creating skyrocketing levels of bandwidth demand. Satellite is finally regarded as an alternative tool for rural deployments, thus creating a massive opportunity for Cellular Backhaul. Trunking is returning to growth with new price points triggering elasticities. Hybrid IP Content Distribution continues on a test phase with little traction during 2020, but the long-term potential continues to look promising.
NSR Report: Satellite Backhaul Primed to Generate $25 Billion Annually by 2030 apnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from apnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.