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Android, Embedded Linux & BlackBerry, iOS, Mac OS, Windows: Yes Yes No Marine Navigation Software, free program, but maps need to be paid for HandMap [30] [31]? handheld PC (Palm) Palm OS? yes (color maps, basic), ? ? May be a free program, but maps need to be paid for (hence called "shareware" at Tucows) ? Navionics Boating App [32] Navionics
The SAT>IP logo Example of a SAT>IP server: Telestar R1 A connecting to four satellite LNB feeds and an Ethernet connection to distribute satellite TV programs around the network. SAT>IP reception over a Wi-Fi home network from a Telestar R1 server and fixed dish on a Nexus 7 Android tablet using Elgato SAT>IP app.
D2-Mac processing on a Philips satellite receiver from 1990. D2-MAC is a satellite television transmission standard, a member of Multiplexed Analogue Components family. [1] [2] It was created to solve D-MAC's bandwidth usage by further reducing it, allowing usage of the system on cable and satellite broadcast.
For Apple TV devices. iOS-based, with an app store. For Apple TV generation 4 and later. Apple TV Software: For Apple TV devices, generations 1 to 3. iOS-based. Initially based on Mac OS X Tiger and Front Row. Atvio from Walmart Roku OS For TV sets sold in Mexico and elsewhere from 2019 onwards. [24] Britânia Roku OS For TV sets sold in Brazil ...
a Multiswitch with 16 outputs, the four cables from the Quattro-LNB enter on the left. A multiswitch is a device used with a dual or quattro LNB to distribute satellite TV signals to multiple (usually more than four) receivers from a single dish and LNB.
In North American digital terrestrial television broadcasting, a distributed transmission system (DTS or DTx) is a form of single-frequency network in which a single broadcast signal is fed via microwave, landline, or communications satellite to multiple synchronised terrestrial radio transmitter sites.
Among the family of MAC or Multiplexed Analogue Components systems for television broadcasting, D-MAC is a reduced bandwidth variant designed for transmission down cable. [1] The data is duobinary coded with a data burst rate of 20.25 Mbit/s so that 0° as well as ±90° phasors are used. D-MAC has a bandwidth of 8.4 MHz versus 27 MHz for C-MAC.
MMDS microwave dish. Multichannel multipoint distribution service (MMDS), formerly known as broadband radio service (BRS) and also known as wireless cable, is a wireless telecommunications technology, used for general-purpose broadband networking or, more commonly, as an alternative method of cable television programming reception.