Echostar prepares potential bankruptcy filing

They're still making money at it.

There's another satellite near ready to launch, and they recently ordered yet another one. I can't help but believe something is going on. Or they believe so.

Unlikely, but if a few cables got cut, those satellites might come in VERY useful, although perhaps in a slightly different way than today.
 
"Broadband" can be defined at a pretty low level.

There are plenty places where satellite Internet is limited. Too many tall trees where we keep our RV. Mountainous areas.
 
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90% of the United States have access to broadband, either via cables or 5G services.

I had a WISP that sold me 25MB service (The government's then minimum for broadband.) that was actually 18 to 22MB on weekdays and 8 to 11 MB during prime time. All for the low low price of only 100 bucks a month.

No cables and none of the 5g's will sell me home internet. I'm 10 miles from the Spokane, WA city limits, with a metro area population of 465,000.

Then after that, we have StarLink.

Now I have real world broadband as opposed to the government's version of it. Well worth the extra 20 per month. And I haven't had a single service interruption since I switched 11 months ago.
 
Bloomberg

FCC Chair Brendan Carr said the agency needs to move "soon" in its investigation into EchoStar. "All options are still on the table at the FCC," Carr said at a press conference after the agency's monthly meeting on Thursday.
 
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Why does my Hopper reboot at 3:30pm?

OTA CBS channel thinks it's FOX in Indy

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