5-545: CBCS may refer to: CBCS (cable system) or Cameroon-Brazil Cable System, a planned transatlantic submarine communications cable. Comic Book Certification Service , a comic book grading service based in Plano, Texas that is part of the larger Beckett Media Company. Consortium of Bangsamoro Civil Society , a network of Moro civil society organizations in Mindanao. CBCS-FM ,
10-593: A course credit system for undergrad students in India Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title CBCS . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=CBCS&oldid=1214274855 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Broadcast call sign disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
15-492: A radio station (99.9 FM) licensed to Sudbury, Ontario, Canada CBCS-TV-1, a television station (channel 8) licensed to Meadow Lake, Saskatchewan, Canada, rebroadcasting CKSA-TV Lloydminster Chevaliers Beneficient De La Cité-Sainté , one of the three schools of Martinism Chinese Bible Church of Springfield , a non-denominational Christian church Opus-CBCS , a Fidonet Bulletin Board system Choice Based Credit System ,
20-818: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages CBCS (cable system) The South Atlantic Inter Link ( SAIL ) (formerly referred to as Cameroon-Brazil Cable System , CBCS ) is a submarine communications cable in the South Atlantic Ocean linking Kribi , Cameroon with Fortaleza , Brazil . SAIL submarine cable project was jointly invested and constructed by China Unicom and Camtel . The cable landing points are operated by Camtel in Kribi and by China Unicom Brazil in Fortaleza. China Unicom provided project management and business operation support, while
25-483: The engineering construction was contracted from Huawei Marine Networks . The whole project lasted for 14 months and was completed in August 2018. The cable measures approximately 6,000 km in length and contain four optical fibre pairs, each capable of transmitting 100 wavelengths with a bandwidth of 100 Gbit/s (gigabits per second), for a design capacity of 32 Tbit/s (terabits per second). The project
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