India has good history in development of satellites. May be ISRO r thinking 2wice so that another scam dosent happenkumararvind said:That confirms the failure of gsat 10
India has good history in development of satellites. May be ISRO r thinking 2wice so that another scam dosent happenkumararvind said:That confirms the failure of gsat 10
mpeg4 to mpeg2 converter dongle was available when TS introduced TS+ with mpeg4. I believe two years ago even standard stbs were mpeg4 compatible. The figure may be a lot less as only active standard stb customers have to be upgraded.SVK said:Late. But better late then never.
I wonder how would they replace 10 Million (if that is real figure) STBs from MPEG2 to MPEG4.
Replacing with HD STB is 1 option. We got our STB replaced when we got HD STB. But many people may not need HD.
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Sunday successfully launched a geosynchronous satellite launch vehicle --GSLV-D5 -- which used an indigenous cryogenic engine, putting behind it years of pain and failures. The launch vehicle lifted off from India's space port at Sriharikota precisely at 4.18 pm on a clear blue sky and delivered a copy book launch. The GSLV-D5 injected the GSAT-14, a 1,980 kg satellite, at its precise orbit 17 minutes into the flight. It took ISRO more than 13 years to achieve this success after its first GSLV flight in 2001. ISRO kickstarted the cryogenic project almost 20 years ago.