WorldSpace announces potential decommissioning of satellites - washingtonpost.com
The satellite radio business isn't doing so well. Worldspace, the Sirius XM of Africa and Asia, is in bankruptcy and has announced plans to shut down.
WorldSpace announces potential decommissioning of satellites: "The procedure would involve steering the WorldSpace satellites into a higher orbit, out of the way of others, said Tobias Nassif, vice president of satellite operations and engineering at Intelsat, which would assist WorldSpace."
Part of the problem stems from the fact that there was no "standard" receiver for Satellite radio. Not only were Sirius and XM's systems proprietary, so were Worldspace's. It's a shame there wasn't a single platform that will work with both services.
I'm wondering what next will happen with Sirius XM. Their two satellite systems are incompatible. Will they turn off one to save money? I'm still betting they'll make one exclusively into a mobile video delivery system, and the other will be for audio services; at which point they'll spin off the TV service to Dish or DirecTV.
I'm also curious as to what it costs to run the uplinks and control for those satellites. If someone wanted to run Worldspace as a non-subscription service what would the base transmission operations cost? (I guess I have to look at their SEC filings to find that out. Maybe a better question is: how inexpensively could you operate the system for?)
Labels: sirius, the new distribution, xm


2 Comments:
Rusty, are you thinking Soma XM?
Speaking of satellite radio.....
I'm an XM subscriber because terrestrial radio in the Washington DC area is about what you'd expect - pathetic - and I need something to listen to in the car.
Anyway.....have you ever listened to the Sirius/XM Chillout channel? It was good the first few days I listened, then I noticed it cycling through the same songs over and over and over again. It's reached the point where I won't listen any longer - too boring.
I wrote the braintrust at XM, and pleaded that they update the playlist. No response.
I also suggested they bring in the SOMA FM A-team to help them program the channel, but I'm guessing they never contacted anyone....
If Sirius XM fails, it will be because they squandered a golden opportunity to be something different than terrestrial radio, and because they failed to avail themselves of some damn good opportunities. JMO
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