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Shetland Space Centre


George.
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It would be fine to see some justification, to the requirements of so many satellites.

 What their real purpose is and how it will affect us.

As far as I can see no one is questioning what all those satellites will be doing, and the necessity for them.

Some explanation wold be good ,I'm not against it in anyway but suspicious why we need so many satellites and even more curious to know how it might affect us all.

Their not spending all this money, without gaining something ,point is where are they getting that something.  :ponders:

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There's about 2,500 satellites currently in various earth orbits. The majority are for communications, and there's  currently a push to launch thousands more to provide global high-speed wireless internet access (much cheaper than running fibre optic)

There are several international organisations who 'license' satellite launches and orbits, in particular to avoid collisions. Low earth orbits are quite strictly policed as there are so many operational and defunct satellites in orbit that collisions are becoming more common, and the collisions themselves produce more debris which in turn cause more collisions.

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Many of us complain about the cost of the TV licence, but eventually terrestrial TV and radio will be a thing of the past, and we will then be at the mercy of goodness knows who for our TV  and radio entertainment . I would think that the total cost of various "providers" will total more than the TV licence annually, for a better service ????

As for communications I always thought that satellite coms was a problem due to the slight delay between send /receive. OK for receive only.

And if satellite is going to be preferred to fibre why is so much effort and money being spent on the provision of fibre over copper.

I'm still puzzled why we need so many of those objects in orbit, something fishy going on.

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2 hours ago, Urabug said:

As for communications I always thought that satellite coms was a problem due to the slight delay between send /receive. OK for receive only.

Th latency is indeed an inherent problem, but the new communications satellites tend to be small and in a low earth orbit so there's less physical distance for signals to travel. 

2 hours ago, Urabug said:

And if satellite is going to be preferred to fibre why is so much effort and money being spent on the provision of fibre over copper.

Fibre will likely still be the preferred option for cities and urban areas, but for many areas installing or improving physical connections are challenging (i.e. remote areas, areas with difficult terrain, or countries with unstable governments where infrastructure developments are problematic)

2 hours ago, Urabug said:

I'm still puzzled why we need so many of those objects in orbit, something fishy going on.

As mentioned, on the whole newer satellites are quite small (e.g. shoebox size), relatively cheap and are in a lower orbit than older, larger and more expensive satellites which only government agencies could afford. It's really just economics - communications service providers know that there's growing demand in lots of poorly serviced areas, and satellites are a relatively quick and affordable way to reach them.

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With mobile radio masts just about everywhere providing 4G and 5G and just about everyone with a mobile phone and most homes with reasonable hi speed broadband nowadays ,the question is how much  data do we really need and will we all have jobs, providing of an income to afford it all.

Broadband and mobile phones do not come cheap ,can we all afford it.

Surveillance tracking each and everyone of us seems to be the way things are going ,my mobile phone does that, as does my computer, guess some of those satellites will be doing the same justified by the claim  of course to improve our lives by creating statistics which help us all.

What is those new satellites going to provide me with that I cannot already do. ???

The positive side is it is creating work ,how much of it really necessary.

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10 hours ago, Urabug said:

With mobile radio masts just about everywhere providing 4G and 5G and just about everyone with a mobile phone and most homes with reasonable hi speed broadband nowadays

Maybe in Western Europe, but many areas of the world has patchy or no mobile / internet coverage. According to some statistics only about half the world's population has internet access.

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20 hours ago, Urabug said:

With mobile radio masts just about everywhere providing 4G and 5G and just about everyone with a mobile phone and most homes with reasonable hi speed broadband nowadays ,the question is how much  data do we really need and will we all have jobs, providing of an income to afford it all.

It would be interesting to know just where around us 5g is available for us to enjoy or use.

I certainly get a pretty good 2g signal, but only if I can see the Collafirth mast.

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 10/02/2021 at 00:30, Muckle Oxters said:

Oot of interest, does onybody ken if dirs been an environmental impact study done and if it’s available fur a read (I assume dir his tae be such a thing)?

I’m no hivin a moan, I’m joost interested whit da craic is we hivin it so close tae Hermaness.

https://www.shetnews.co.uk/2021/03/22/rspb-adds-to-concern-over-spaceports-potential-impact-on-birds/

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  • 2 weeks later...

So, it seems the Shetland Space Centre is now hanging in the balance.

 

When I heard the news that the Scottish Government wanted to be officially notified of the SIC's Planning decision alarm bells started ringing and I wondered why they were starting to interfere.

 

Now that Historic Environmental Scotland(HES) have appeared out of nowhere and refused the project it's obvious that the Scottish Government are working behind the scenes to steal it and have it moved south.

 

I guess they were waiting to see if the project was a "goer" and now that it is they're moving in.

 

HES are simply doing the bidding of the Scottish Government.

 

As the man said, with a government like this who needs enemies.

 

What the Shetland Space Centre should do is state that if it doesn't happen in Shetland then they'll just move the project out of the UK.

 

Edited by Loki Viking
Better wording
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