ffutures: (Default)
ffutures ([personal profile] ffutures) wrote2020-10-02 07:41 pm

Satellite phone networks question

Can anyone give me the name of a satellite phone network that had coverage including the UK in the 1990s, and was accessible via privately-owned hand-held (or easily portable) phone? I'm guessing Inmarsat is the most likely, but the Wikipedia article is a bit ambiguous about this - it reads like their service may have only been accessible via larger installations aboard ships and planes.

No real details needed other than the name of the network! And possibly the maker's name for the phone, which would be a nice bit of scene setting.

Later - thanks to [personal profile] major_clanger  and [personal profile] cdybedahl I'm going to go with a Magnavox satellite phone (briefcase sized) in the Inmarsat network. Many thanks to everyone who commented.
julesjones: (Default)

[personal profile] julesjones 2020-10-03 10:20 am (UTC)(link)
Digging around the wikipedia general article on satellite telephony - the Iridium network?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iridium_satellite_constellation

I think that's the one you're thinking of but there was also Globalstar.

I also have a vague memory of something involving the US degrading the publicly available GPS signal for security reasons, and giving up on it because a commercial satellite network went up.
major_clanger: Clangers (Royal Mail stamp) (Default)

[personal profile] major_clanger 2020-10-03 10:28 am (UTC)(link)
The table at the bottom of this link describes some early services. I dimly remember Inmarsat-M as being used as part of a portable, or at least luggable, mobile secure email system (terminal, crypto unit, router and laptop) by bits of the UK military in the late 1990s.