Its named after the * International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium*
Its named after the * International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium*
I was talking about Intelsat 33e which is was a communication satellite, not for espionage, on a geostationary orbit. The russian espionage satellites Olymp-K and Kosmos 1408 mentioned in the other replies, however are/were on a geosynchronous orbit and on low earth orbit, respectively, as you suggested.
Ja genau. 150 Tagessätze entsprech eigentlich genau 5 Netto-Monatsgehältern (Tagessatz = Monatsgehalt /30) abzüglich des Existenzminimums, s. Wikipedia.
You actually needed to be ‘very good’ at math to fluently calculate with Roman numbers. However, I can’t make sense of your examples.
Yes, since Bookworm, there is also non-free-firmware
which before was located in non-free
. I’ve skipped that for simplicity, as both follow the same rules and non-free-firmware
was introduced basically for convenience.
Do you know if either of the non-free
repos contain binary files without having the source available?
I know it does, that’s why I was curious about the novelty of that approach.
Obviously the naming is not consistent among the wikipedia articles in different languages:
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelsat_33e