Ex Parte Notice Jan

Ex PARTE PRESENTATION NOTIFICATION LETTER submitted by Panasonic Avionics Corporation

Panasonic Ex Parte Notice

2011-01-26

This document pretains to SES-LIC-20100805-00992 for License on a Satellite Earth Station filing.

IBFS_SESLIC2010080500992_862596

                                    Before the
                      FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
                               Washington, DC 20554



In the Matter of
                                                 )
                                                 )
Application of Panasonic Avionics                )        File Nos. SES-LIC-20100805-00992
Corporation for Authority to Operate Up to       )                  SES-AMD-20100914-01163
15 Technically Identical Aeronautical            )                  SES-AMD-20101115-01432
Mobile-Satellite Service (“AMSS”) Aircraft       )
Earth Stations (“AESs”) in the 14.0-14.4         )        Call Sign E100089
GHz and 11.7-12.2 GHz Frequency Bands            )



                   REPLY TO “CONSOLIDATED REPLY” OF ROW 44, INC.




Anita Kartic                                 Carlos M. Nalda
Senior Director, Regulatory Affairs          Joshua T. Guyan
 and Strategic Partnerships                  Squire Sanders & Dempsey L.L.P.
Panasonic Avionics Corporation               1201 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
26200 Enterprise Way                         Suite 500
Lake Forest, CA 92630                        Washington, DC 20004
                                             (202) 626-6659

                                             Counsel for Panasonic Avionics Corporation

December 13, 2010


                                          SUMMARY

       Panasonic Avionics Corporation (“Panasonic”) hereby submits its reply to the late-filed

pleading of Row 44, Inc. regarding Panasonic’s application for blanket license authority to

operate a limited number of aircraft earth stations (“AESs”) as part of the “eXConnect” Ku-band

aeronautical mobile-satellite service (“AMSS”) system. It the pleading, Row 44 continues its

spurious attacks on Panasonic’s straightforward AMSS application.

       From a technical standpoint, Panasonic proposes to combine a small number of

previously licensed MELCO antennas with well-known modem technology operating at a lower

maximum power spectral density to provide aeronautical connectivity to the same aircraft that

operated in the United States under prior Commission authority. From a procedural standpoint,

Panasonic’s application was filed under Section 25.220 with the required supporting technical

documentation and its operations have been fully coordinated with potentially affected satellite

operators, so the Commission need not address Row 44’s unsupported criticisms.

       Panasonic voluntarily provided supplemental technical data regarding MELCO antenna

operations similar to that required for earth stations onboard vessels (“ESV”) and vehicle-

mounted earth stations (“VMESs”) to further demonstrate compliance with the Commission’s

two-degree spacing policies. However, Row 44 inappropriately seeks to bootstrap this additional

technical information to require full compliance with the Commission’s ESV and VMES rules,

even though its own AMSS application was considered under Section 25.220.

       Although the Commission need not substantively consider Row 44’s latest filing,

Panasonic addresses the arguments set forth in that submission. Specifically, Panasonic (i)

correctly and appropriately incorporated by reference technical information from the prior

MELCO AMSS licensing proceeding; (ii) addressed the differences between the Connexion by


Boeing and eXConnect systems in detail in its AMSS application and its response to Row 44’s

initial petition; (iii) submitted sufficient antenna gain and EIRP spectral density data; (iv)

provided sufficient information regarding antenna pointing accuracy and pointing methodology;

(v) confirmed the transmit bandwidth of the MELCO antenna; and (vi) adequately described the

service area of the eXConnect System. Finally, Panasonic renews its objection to Row 44’s

unilateral modification of the Commission’s filing deadlines and consideration of its late-filed

pleading.

       Row 44’s baseless criticisms of Panasonic’s AMSS application fly in the face of clear

Commission precedent – precedent established in Row 44’s own AMSS licensing order. In that

proceeding, the Commission concluded that it need not address “arguments concerning adjacent

satellite interference, because [applicant] has resolved these interference issues through

coordination with all potentially affected satellite operators.” Row 44 ignores this explicit

precedent, misreads the Commission’s rules and policies, and mischaracterizes Panasonic’s

AMSS application in a single-minded effort to delay an impending AMSS competitor.

       The Commission should reject these efforts, substantively consider the Panasonic AMSS

application and grant requested operating authority for the previously authorized MELCO

antenna, as appropriately conditioned, at the earliest possible time.




                                                  ii



Document Created: 2011-01-26 17:40:44
Document Modified: 2011-01-26 17:40:44

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