1996-07-03 - Re: Message pools are in use today!

Header Data

From: Eric Davis <ericd@shop.internet.net>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 8eb419025cf7dd424098e83f2d53da3dbb1fba4ec601ee532948ff8d99e67c83
Message ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.960702125650.1425D-100000@shop>
Reply To: <199607021730.KAA18852@mail.pacifier.com>
UTC Datetime: 1996-07-03 02:12:22 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 3 Jul 1996 10:12:22 +0800

Raw message

From: Eric Davis <ericd@shop.internet.net>
Date: Wed, 3 Jul 1996 10:12:22 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: Message pools _are_ in use today!
In-Reply-To: <199607021730.KAA18852@mail.pacifier.com>
Message-ID: <Pine.SOL.3.91.960702125650.1425D-100000@shop>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



Hughes offers a downlink product called DirectPC.
The back channel is your regular modem.
Telco/Analog your requests to their servers 
and the data is delivered via your DSS dish,
sent to your PC and decoded via an ISA card. 
(Opt. DES downlink encryption)
http://www.direcpc.com/

The downlink is shared 500Kb/s ( I think ).
Though you can schedule a higher BW channel
for A/V applications (or so the lit reads).

Think it supports multicast/broadcast by default...

Eric Davis
-----------------------------------------------------
Eric Davis 			   ericd@internet.net
Director of Information Systems	     415-842-7400 (V)
Internet Shopping Network	     415-842-7415 (F)
Visit our site at:	           http://www.isn.com
Personal contact:     ericd@cyberfarm.com  KD6HTO (R)
-----------------------------------------------------
There are no law enforcers if law itself they ignore.
 -- Inka Inka -- Step Back -- Myth of the Machine --

On Tue, 2 Jul 1996, jim bell wrote:

> At 08:28 PM 7/1/96 -0700, David Wagner wrote:
> 
> >If folks have better ideas for how to achieve really good recipient
> >anonymity, I hope they'll speak up!
> 
> Once they start offering Internet news/email/USENET feeds (one way) by 
> DSS-type dish antenna from satellite, it'll be mighty hard to figure out 
> who's receiving the data. They could probably easily provide 10 megabits per 
> second, which I assume would be more than enough for what's needed.
> 
> (BTW, for a few years a company called "Planet Connect" has been providing 
> FIDOnet data feeds, although they use the older-style, large antenna 
> systems, and their data rate is 19.2kbps, not even close to enough for 
> Internet service.)
> 
> Jim Bell
> jimbell@pacifier.com
> 






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