Satellite systems In 2012, Hughes launched the Jupiter (stylized as JUPITER) System, Hughes' VSAT ground system that provides high-performance terminals, increased gateway architecture, and advanced air interface for both high-throughput and conventional satellites. The Jupiter System supports applications such as broadband Internet and Intranet access, community Wi-Fi hotspots, cellular backhaul,
digital signage and mobility, including airborne services. Through its Jupiter Aero System, an integrated system of airborne and ground equipment and software, Hughes provides broadband access to aircraft. As of 2018, about 1,000 aircraft carry Hughes technology on board. In March 2018, Hughes announced improvements to the Jupiter system, doubling the throughput of HT2xxx terminals to more than 200 Mbit/s and increasing capacity. Hughes HX and HT satellite broadband platforms are used for broadband IP services, high speed internet, VoIP, and video by telecom providers around the world and the military. Hughes has deployed more than 9 million VSAT terminals of all types in more than 100 countries, representing more than 50 percent market share.
Satellite services Hughes satellite backhaul of cellular service extends 4G/
LTE service to remote and rural areas around the world, specifically where conventional backhaul is difficult or costly due to geography and terrain.
HughesNet Hughes Network Systems operates a satellite-based high-speed broadband internet service under the brand
HughesNet. As of 2018, Hughes controls 69% of the market for residential satellite-based internet connections, which are mostly used by rural customers out-of-reach of wired infrastructure. Hughes also markets its services to government, business, and military. HughesNet was originally launched in 1996 as a satellite Internet service for consumers and small businesses under the name
DirecPC (using the same branding format as the satellite broadcast service
DirecTV, which was under common ownership at the time) and was renamed
Direcway in May 2002. On March 27, 2006, two years after DirecTV split off from Hughes in 2005, it was renamed HughesNet. In 2012, Hughes introduced its first offering of broadband satellite Internet. In March 2017, Hughes became the first satellite-based
internet service provider to meet the
Federal Communications Commission's definition of "broadband" with HughesNet Gen5, following the launch of the EchoStar XVII and XIX high-throughput satellites. In 2016, Hughes expanded HughesNet into
Brazil, marking its first international expansion of the service. It expanded into
Colombia in September 2017, into
Peru in October 2018, into
Ecuador in December 2018, and into
Mexico and
Chile in 2019. The FCC Measuring Broadband America report ranked HughesNet number one among all internet service providers for meeting or exceeding advertised download speeds for four years in a row from 2014 through 2017. For three out of four years (2014, 2015 and 2017), HughesNet ranked number one for meeting or exceeding both download and upload advertised speeds. HughesNet was named the Best Rural Internet Provider of 2022 and Best Satellite Internet Provider of 2022 by
U.S. News & World Report 360 Reviews. The long distance to the
geosynchronous orbit used by HughesNet increases
latency to over 600 ms, over 10 times more than terrestrial or
low Earth orbit systems like
Starlink, rendering it much less competitive for applications like
videoconferencing and
video gaming.
Managed network services Hughes offers managed network services for distributed enterprise businesses and government organizations. Its HughesON
managed services include
SD-WAN,
Wi-Fi and location analytics and cloud-based digital signage and employee training. ==See also==