DoD to Put Internet Router in Space 188
narramissic writes "ITworld is reporting that the Department of Defense plans to launch in the first quarter of 2009 a satellite-based router to deliver military communications. Satellite operator Intelsat will manage the three-year Internet Routing In Space (IRIS) project, while Cisco will provide IP networking software for the on-board router. After testing, the satellite will be available for commercial use. From the article: 'Potential nonmilitary benefits of the IRIS program include the ability to route IP (Internet Protocol) traffic between satellites in space in much the same way packets are moved on the ground, reducing delays, saving on capacity and offering greater networking flexibility, Lloyd Wood, space initiatives manager in the Global Defense, Space & Security division of Cisco, said Thursday.'"
Lost DoD hardware (Score:5, Funny)
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Sheesh! Just trace the cable!
sounds like a plan (Score:2, Funny)
routing back to the states: no route to host (Score:1, Troll)
Yes I know it's off-topic but laugh, it's funny.
Re:routing back to the states: no route to host (Score:5, Insightful)
Second: You ARE bating flame. Hence your flamebait moderations, which in my opinion, were correctly applies.
Third: This is not the place for a debate on why you're a dick bag and why the guy who made the joke you're getting all pissed off about is an asshole.
Fourth: Just because you have family in the armed forced doesn't mean we automatically give half a shit about your opinion.
Fifth: I'm an asshole for making this reply.
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I find it ironic that you consider your speech to be unpopular compared to the OP. Both positions seem equally tiresome to me.
> "Personally, I think it's funny as hell that while they can gripe about my posts being flamebait or trolling, and even mod me down for it, they can't tell me WHY the OP was supposed to be "funny""
Very well, I will explain the humor of the
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Hiring mercenaries that kill people when ever they want, won't do it.
A rebuilding plan annouced to the people, updated monthly, with schedules and real, visual, attainable goals and accomplishments is the only way to achive victory in Iraq.
The . Only . Way .
This does not mean 'Handcuffing' the solders, it means giving them a fucking chance, cause right now they ain't got one.
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Hear, hear! Think of this from a software developer's perspective:
"We would like you to take on this project, with this largely undefined goal. We don't know what the requirements for the goal are, but we think you can figure them out. Incidentally, we think we've anticipated every unknown, except of course for those things we don't know we don't know. And we want this done as cheaply and quickly as possible, but don't worry: everyone in the organization today is on your side. Your budget only needs t
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You took a six sigma course didn't you...
Oh how I wish we could draw out a SyProc for life and human nature
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Oh, you didn't see it on CBSNBCABCCNNFOX so it must not be true.
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Why, a set of matching melamine dishes.
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Those numbers aren't even close to right. (Score:3, Informative)
And yes, "wounded" includes losing limbs, eyes, and all sorts of other body parts that don't, on average, sustain major damage when you're out and about in Washington DC.
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Ok, so it sounds like he's counting the years when Saddam was still in power. Which, of course, would bring down the average, because the country wasn't in total chaos. But to be perfectly honest, they could have just made the numbers up. They don't cite their sources, and they don't cite their research, so it's impossible to see how they're calculating
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It's a warzone. There's no way civil society can compare. There's just no way.
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It may also be because the troops in Iraq have much better health care than the people who live in Washington DC.
Security. (Score:1, Interesting)
You forgot greater security.
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Really!
Wow. Last satellite internet service I had had astounding delays.
Of course, that was with a geosync satellite, and without RTFA I can guess they're planning on using sats which are considerably closer than this, but if they're really close then they'll zooming around too fast I'd image that could cause trouble with their OSPF or BGP....
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Well, yeah. You were, I presume, on the ground. Chances are, so were the computers with which you were ultimately trying to connect. That's often going to give you a big delay going through a satellite compared to going through ground-based routers exclusively.
They are talking about reducing delays for IP traffic between other satellites compared to going through ground-based routers, which is a pretty different scenario.
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The bare fact that you are talking to a satellite is not enough to incur notic
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I think you forgot what a "round-trip" is - it's not just up to the satellite and back; a packet round-trip has to make that trip *twice*.
Consider a ping, which is what typing on a telnet/ssh type link requires; assuming optimal packet transfer (one each way), we get earth-sat-earth-sat-earth, so four transitions. Even if we ignore the fact that I wasn't directly under the satellite (I'm at 39N, and about 11
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My apologies.
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This can't be the first time (Score:1)
Now, who will be the first company to admit they got pwnd in space?
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Re:This can't be the first time (Score:4, Interesting)
it sucked. it wasnt reliable at all, and it was very slow. it was the same for everyone else. jackasses never removed the satellite dish either. i heard about one guy who took an axe to his just to get the damn thing out.
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I remember the release notes for Solaris 2.6, back in, what, the late '90s, mentioning changes made to the TCP/IP stack to improve performance when dealing with satellites.
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They did. It's called Iridium [wikipedia.org]. To date, the only system of its kind.
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Well, Blackboard Software had better hurry and file another patent [slashdot.org] then: "Method of sharing educational media... on the internet... in space!"
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I don't think this is the same as what is mentioned in the article. I think the article is talking about routing IP traffic between sat's in space, not from a customer on the ground, to the satellite, to the endpoint company, to the internet. Hell, that was spelled out in the damned summary.
Now, what this coul
hmmmm..... (Score:2, Insightful)
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More serious note, space is a "territory" of sorts... still the ownership (and who's laws will prevail) of that territory will depend on who can assert their "control" over that territory. So that will most likely be some corporation.
Which leads to an obligatory:
I for one welcome our new SPACE IBM overlords!
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"Jail" in this case be spelled suspiciously like that little American enclave in Cuba. Say "Say hallo to my leettle Al Qaeda Friend."
Stats?? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Statically
Practical
Application
(for)
Countering
Extra-Terrestrials
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How many paths out will this router have? If it's only one or two, statically route it or use a couple of differently weight static routes and IGP wouldn't make much sense in most likely scenarios, maybe with NAT if a few nodes are going to access it.
If an IGP is necessary (if there are eventually several "sp
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traceroute (Score:2, Funny)
spaceroute!!! (Score:2, Funny)
The WWW is dead! Long live the OWW! (Score:2)
Just what the ISS needed, viagra and pr0n spam flooding the space station's inbox.
Spankin' the space monkey...oh yeah!
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Really? (Score:2)
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No matter what, the ping times are going to suck.. (Score:2)
Re:No matter what, the ping times are going to suc (Score:2, Interesting)
The article didn't say it was going to be in geostationary orbit. Don't assume that just because a geostationary satellite internet satellite has 650ms pings that all satellites will.
A satellite could orbit as low as 100 miles. The latency could be a few ms.
And around the world she goes (Score:2, Funny)
geostat1# ping spacerouter1
Pinging spacerouter1 [300.300.300.300] with 128 bytes of data:
Reply from 300.300.300.300: bytes=128 time1ms TTL=128
Reply from 300.300.300.300: bytes=128 time 100ms TTL=128
Reply from 300.300.300.300: bytes=128 time 700 TTL=128
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Reply from 300.300.300.300: bytes=128 time 700 TTL=128
Reply from 300.300.300.300: bytes=128 time 100ms TTL=128
Reply from 300.300.300.300: bytes=
You mean speed of Radio signals ... (Score:2)
Off course, if we take into account that all the "speeds" we may measure are eventually determined by the value of c, your comment would be correct.
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Oy, vey... (Score:5, Insightful)
Speaking of which, how DO they manage "realtime" data on that w/o the lag? It wouldn't exactly be true realtime if ~250ms delay keeps chucking in there. While that may be no biggie now, I can see where that would/could be a factor as real battlefields become just as data-dependant as the game ones. (cue lots of "haha, you got pwned by the Chinese!" jokes here, but seriously... I wonder how they're going to eventually get around that; the physics would be gnarly at best...)
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Not realtime, but 2x speed of existing system (Score:4, Informative)
source - satellite#1 - ground-based router - satellite#2 - destination
The new system will be
source - satellite #1 - space router - satellite #2 - destination
or even better
source - space router - destination
Depending on where the satellite is, you may have just shaved a few tenths of a second off the one-way trip.
Re:Oy, vey... (Score:5, Informative)
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No, not really. Real Time is an actual technical piece of jargon with a specific definition. It just means that the amount of time something takes is very deterministic and predictible. A Real Time CPU, for example, can be shockingly slow because it takes out all the stuff which can potentially (but not consistently) speed things up.
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Easy, they just add +250ms.
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Subspace.
Next!
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But, it IS for the games. Real games. As in real, old-time games held in Greece, Rome, Mayan ball courts. Our games use real assets. You are so screwed.
Apologies to Jim Henson (Score:5, Funny)
Jewwwws, iiiiiin Spaaaaaaace! (Score:2)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6lpc-2CH1lg [youtube.com]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_World
I'm just sayin'
Let me guess..... (Score:5, Funny)
great (Score:2)
astounding.. (Score:2)
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In space, the tubes are called (Score:2)
Transporter_ii
Nobody? OK (Score:5, Funny)
In Soviet Russia, router launches you!
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I wonder if a spaced based router will improve their ping response times.
Layne
1st Lame Star Trek Ref? (Score:5, Funny)
Defense satellite ? Bad idea... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Oh wait.
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I guess it just doesn't seem that hard to me to destroy a satellite with a nuke even if the nuke isn't well aimed.
log-in? (Score:3, Funny)
Works for my neighbor!
We're with the government.... (Score:2)
We're with the government. We're here to help.
*shivers*
Anybody else's tinfoil hats giving you that tingling-feeling right about now?Re: (Score:2)
Reagan's declaration for businesses go open season on workers(due to misreading of PATCO) changes the scariest words in the English language to:
We're with the corporate interest. We're here to help.
Given the turn of many a business from ethical conduct and the gutting of many worker protections, the government now reflects who has the most money and influence.
In Space (Score:2)
That's no moon . . . (Score:3, Funny)
Hmmm (Score:2)
User: Administrator
Pass: [blank]
satellite internet? (Score:2, Interesting)
SmartNet (Score:2)
192.168.1.1 password: admin (Score:2)
Wonderful but (Score:2)
Been done on ISS (Score:2)
Giving new meaning ... (Score:3, Funny)
E.T.... (Score:2)
pwn3d! (Score:2)
Re:How long until the rest of the world wants acce (Score:3, Interesting)
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Think seconds, not milliseconds.
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even if it's as pedestrian as explosives on the cables, i think that possibility exists, and if not, id be wondering why n
Not sure if DirectPC is a router or not (Score:2, Informative)
If I were DirectPC I'd want my satellite to be as simple and lightweight as possible.
Is this like packets being routed like usa-satellite-satellite-satellite-africa?
See the article for an explanation.
The long and short of it is this is designed to replace traffic that is currently going
somewhere-satellite-ground based router-satellite-somewhere
where the "somewheres" on either end are optional.
Re:What do I know about it? (Score:4, Informative)
Currently the RF links use multiplexed frames with different PN sequences and frame sync headers to communicate, so the position of each bit within the frame means something.
With IP packets, we wouldn't really have to decode/demux the frames to get the information. Each entity could send data based on its IP address. As mentioned before - the lag time issue is gonna be pretty messy, unless we used UDP or something similar. We are just in the beginning stages right now for our purposes, so just configuring the routers and getting the data into an RF link and be errorless is what we are fighting.
Hope that sheds some light on why. Also - the frequencies we are talking about are going to be S, K, Ku, Ka, and higher, so it isn't likely that a script kiddy will have access to that kind of equipment. Also - the links will be encrypted and PN spread, making it less likely to be intercepted/hax0r'd...
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see here for info on the US test: http://www.voughtaircraft.com/heritage/products/h t ml/asat.html [voughtaircraft.com]
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