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USNS Zeus cable-laying ship to undergo overhaul
by Stephen Carlson
Washington (UPI) Nov 12, 2018

The U.S. Navy has given Colonna's Shipyard $10.5 million for a four-month overhaul of the USNS Zeus cable-laying ship.

The contract, announced Friday by the Department of Defense, will include general ship services, main propulsion inspection, cable-laying equipment, sensors and other dry dock availability overhaul work. Additional options on the deal, if exercised, would bring the total contract value to $13.5 million.

Work on the contract is expected to be completed by April 2019.

The USNS Zeus is the first purpose-built undersea cable-laying ship developed by the U.S. Navy. It's missions include cable laying and repair, array-laying operations, projector towing and other operations.

The Zeus can lay 1,000 miles of cable in depths of up to 9,000 feet without resupply. It is also equipped with single-beam and multi-beam sonars for surface floor mapping and can deploy towed side scan sonars and camera sleds.

Sensors on board include temperature, density, acoustic buoys and other environmental measurement systems. Two ships were planned for the Zeus-class but the second was canceled, leaving the Zeus as the lone member of the class.

Submarine communications cables are used for transmitting telecommunications signals between different land masses. Various forms of undersea cables have been in use since the first undersea telegraph wires were laid starting in the 1850's. Tens of thousands of miles of undersea cables serving many nations and private companies for many purposes are laid in corridors across the globe.

Modern cables are fiber optic and are used for phone and data traffic alongside private and government signals and data transfers. The newer versions of undersea cables are typically around 1 inch in diameter and weigh over two tons per miles laid.


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Despite restrictions, digital spending hits record in US midterms
Washington (AFP) Nov 11, 2018
Even as online platforms tightened rules for political ads, digital spending set new records in the 2018 US midterm elections and appears poised for further growth in 2020. Digital media campaign spending rose 2,400 percent from the 2014 midterms to $1.8 billion, roughly 20 percent of the total $8.9 billion in ad spending, according to preliminary estimates from the research firm Borrell Associates. Online spending, much of it on social networks like Facebook, has been a significant factor in ca ... read more

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