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On April 6, 1965, NASA launched the world's first commercial communications satellite into orbit.

The satellite was named Intelsat 1 and nicknamed the "Early Bird." It was built by Hughes Aircraft Company for a telecommunications company called COMSAT. Early Bird could relay phone, TV, telegraph and fax communications, and it became the first satellite to provide direct and almost instantaneous communications between the U.S. and Europe. It also provided the first live TV coverage of a crewed spacecraft returning to Earth when Gemini 6 splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean. The satellite was deactivated after four years, but COMSAT briefly reactivated it so NASA could use it during the Apollo 11 moon landing.
Transcript
00:03On April 6, 1965, NASA launched the world's first commercial communications satellite into orbit.
00:09The satellite was named Intelsat-1 and nicknamed the Early Bird.
00:13It was built by Hughes Aircraft Company for a telecommunications company called ComSat.
00:17Early Bird could relay phone, TV, telegraph and fax communications,
00:21and it became the first satellite to provide direct and almost instantaneous communications between the U.S. and Europe.
00:27It also provided the first live TV coverage of a crewed spacecraft returning to Earth when Gemini 6 splashed down
00:32in the Atlantic Ocean.
00:33The satellite was deactivated after four years, but ComSat briefly reactivated it so NASA could use it during the Apollo
00:3911 moon landing.
00:41And that's what happened on this day in space.
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