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Kingfisher Information Service — at KISCA.org.uk, source of free maps of cable routes around the United Kingdom; France Telecom's fishermen's/submarine cable information — at SigCables.com; Oregon Fisherman's Cable Committee — at OFCC.com; SAT3 WASC SAFE undersea cable — at Safe-Sat3.co.za
The cable will connect Murmansk and Vladivostok along the shortest route between Europe and Asia, which will create an alternative to satellite communications in northern latitudes. This will help meet the growing needs of online trading , cloud technologies and processing of large volumes of data, providing a reliable and affordable Internet ...
The presence of cables in the oceans can be a danger to marine life. With the proliferation of cable installations and the increasing demand for inter-connectivity that today's society demands, the environmental impact is increasing. Submarine cables can impact marine life in a number of ways.
Submarine power cables can operate at many kilovolts: for example, the Fenno-Skan power cable operates at 400 kV DC. A cable termination station is the point at which the submarine cable connects into the land-based infrastructure or network. A cable termination station may be the same facility as the cable landing station, or may be many miles ...
Dunant is the first new subsea cable between the US and France in 15 years and will have landing stations at Virginia Beach (US) and Saint-Hilaire-de-Riez (France). [3] [4] Telecoms industry analysts have stated that the main purpose of Google's subsea cable investment is twofold: to support quality of service and reduce costs. [5]
The Black Sea Fiber-Optic Cable System (BSFOCS) is a 1,300 km (808 mi) submarine telecommunications cable system linking three countries bordering the Black Sea. [1] It went into operation in September 2001, and has a total capacity of 20 Gbit/s along 2 fiber pairs. [1] It has landing points in: Varna, Bulgaria; Odesa, Ukraine; Novorossiysk, Russia
Apollo is an optical submarine communications cable system crossing the Atlantic Ocean, owned by Vodafone. [2] It consists of 2 segments North and South, creating two fully diverse transatlantic paths.
The 15,000 km cable system is deployed along the seafloor of the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea and the Mediterranean Sea, with plans to extend the cable length to 25,000 km. [3] [4] [5] It is based on WSS ROADM technology with a design capacity of 24 Tbit/s per fiber pair. [6] The cable entered service and became fully operational in December 2022. [7]