Microsystem Mechanics  
 
search

UMD   This Site





Robert Briskman '61 (Photo by Al Santos)

Robert Briskman '61 (Photo by Al Santos)

 

Robert Briskman, M.S. '61, electrical engineering, invented satellite radio when he was told it would be impossible to implement. The Sirius Satellite Radio co-founder explained how he did it in the semester's second and final Whiting-Turner Business and Entrepreneurial Lecture November 29 in the Kim Building lecture hall.

The key, according to Briskman, was establishing the right combination of technical, financial and marketing strengths at Sirius, which he co-founded in 1990. With information from extensive focus group sessions, the company determined that there was strong market interest in the satellite radio service and created a business plan that raised $1 billion in financial support in short order. Service criteria included: continuous availability of signal, large number of channels, and a mix of music, talk and possibly data for navigation and destination options.

The company, under Briskman's guidance, then created a product to serve the business plan; he stressed that it was crucial for technologists to create viable products, not technology for its own sake, and to assess implementation time accurately as this will directly impact funding and competitors' opportunity to enter the market and offer other products. He anticipates that growth in satellite radio will accelerate rapidly as the technology is more commonly installed in cars by manufacturers.

Briskman also described the challenges of satellite implementation, to provide full availability to mobile customers in environments where buildings and trees block the signal, and the three-satellite "constellation" Sirius operates in a "figure 8" orbit over the U.S., Canada and South America.

Sirius has agreed to merge with its only competitor, XM. The case is under consideration by government agencies.

Archived video of the lecture is available online.

November 30, 2007


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

Looking A“Head” to the Future of Autonomous Robots

UMD’s New ASTRA Center Announces Seed Grants

Madeline Fischer Wins 2024 European Rotorcraft Forum Padfield Award

Project Embraces Tribal History With Modern Technology

Department Welcomes New Faculty Member Tam Nguyen

UMD Student Receives Wings Foundation Scholarship

Maryland Engineers Take On Big Challenges in Medicine

Two Clark School Engineers Named Associate Fellows of Aeronautics and Astronautics Institute

Meet the A. James Clark Scholars Class of ’28

Aerospace Engineering Celebrates 75 Years

 
 
Back to top  
ChBE Home Clark School Home UMD Home