phxdiablo Report post Posted October 6, 2012 I was wondering if anyone has satellite internet for their internet connectivity. I have an accepted contract on a mountainside home and there are no inbound cables to the house. It seems the only option for internet is satellite. Upon further research into that medium, I've uncovered nothing but horror stories; latency, FAP issues, bad service, etc. I'm a heavy internet user and I'd mow through their 30 day bandwidth limits in about 12 hours. Does anyone have experience with satellite internet? Or, if you live in a rural area, what do you use for connectivity? Any ideas / opinions would be helpful -- I'm about to cancel the contract due this issue as I cannot regress to 1999 type connectivity!! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
sharifk Report post Posted October 6, 2012 I was wondering if anyone has satellite internet for their internet connectivity. I have an accepted contract on a mountainside home and there are no inbound cables to the house. It seems the only option for internet is satellite. Upon further research into that medium, I've uncovered nothing but horror stories; latency, FAP issues, bad service, etc. I'm a heavy internet user and I'd mow through their 30 day bandwidth limits in about 12 hours. Does anyone have experience with satellite internet? Or, if you live in a rural area, what do you use for connectivity? Any ideas / opinions would be helpful -- I'm about to cancel the contract due this issue as I cannot regress to 1999 type connectivity!! If you get cell service and have a good data plan, Would you be against tethering? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
camaro97 Report post Posted October 6, 2012 This website is all about Mobile Broadband: http://www.evdoinfo.com/ You can get signal boosters, larger antennas, etc for your mobile broadband internet. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
05LSV Report post Posted October 6, 2012 Upon further research into that medium, I've uncovered nothing but horror stories; latency, FAP issues, bad service... Do I dare ask what FAP issues are? Hahahahahaha Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roman Report post Posted October 6, 2012 I was wondering if anyone has satellite internet for their internet connectivity. I have an accepted contract on a mountainside home and there are no inbound cables to the house. It seems the only option for internet is satellite. Upon further research into that medium, I've uncovered nothing but horror stories; latency, FAP issues, bad service, etc. I'm a heavy internet user and I'd mow through their 30 day bandwidth limits in about 12 hours. Does anyone have experience with satellite internet? Or, if you live in a rural area, what do you use for connectivity? Any ideas / opinions would be helpful -- I'm about to cancel the contract due this issue as I cannot regress to 1999 type connectivity!! Ive been looking into the same questions for my Kentuckiana place... To me the biggest issue would be data caps... Have you looked into Line of sight Microwave broadband? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
BLK85 Report post Posted October 6, 2012 Ive known some people with it since I was raised in an area with limited connectivity for internet. All the complaints are valid. Its better than Dial Up but not by much. My parents still live where I was raised they have DSL now with like 2mbps DL speeds. It works for them, but they always comment about my speeds when they come to my house and use a computer. Ive looked at Satellite for them, I think even for them it would be to much of a limit. I think you would hate it. Would the internet providers install a T1 line if you paid for the cost to install? Thats about all I would consider if I lived in the country. Probably not cheap, plus paying for the monthly bill of the line. But living in a rural area is awesome! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jpegs13 Report post Posted October 6, 2012 http://www.wildblue.com/overview/how-it-works Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
phxdiablo Report post Posted October 6, 2012 FAP = Fair Access Policy which means a monthly quota on GB uploads/downloads. Once you exceed the FAP, your connection is reduced to worse-than-dial-up speed. 20 GB a month is a typical allotment - I go through that in a day, maybe two. I've looked into mobile broadband via Verizon 4G but that shows unavailable for this particular location as you need a cell tower nearby. This house is kinda tuck into a mountainside -- on the other side of the mountain is civilization, on the view side, nothing but desert. The thing about EVDO or other mobile broadband is that it is still relatively slow -- I'm used to 50mbps type speed, EVDO would reduce that to perhaps 1-2mbps, a frightening 90% reduction. Never heard of microwave broadband as I need to investigate that as well as laying an actual cable. (Probably will need to be a mile long. ) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roman Report post Posted October 6, 2012 FAP = Fair Access Policy which means a monthly quota on GB uploads/downloads. Once you exceed the FAP, your connection is reduced to worse-than-dial-up speed. 20 GB a month is a typical allotment - I go through that in a day, maybe two. I've looked into mobile broadband via Verizon 4G but that shows unavailable for this particular location as you need a cell tower nearby. This house is kinda tuck into a mountainside -- on the other side of the mountain is civilization, on the view side, nothing but desert. The thing about EVDO or other mobile broadband is that it is still relatively slow -- I'm used to 50mbps type speed, EVDO would reduce that to perhaps 1-2mbps, a frightening 90% reduction. Never heard of microwave broadband as I need to investigate that as well as laying an actual cable. (Probably will need to be a mile long. ) Google Line Of sight broadband... The biggest concerns are 1. is it offered in my area. and 2. If it is can I see the tower... If youre up on a mountainside Id say #2 wont be a problem. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
hsahoo Report post Posted November 15, 2012 Hi, next generation of [d watching videos, we have three service plans that are just right for what you want to do. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
BLK85 Report post Posted November 15, 2012 Wow spammers are getting good. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
57udl3y Report post Posted November 15, 2012 I swear yesterday I saw an article about some satilite internet company that was suppose to be the best in terms of service on popsci/science daily type site. I'm trying to find it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jhbchess Report post Posted November 15, 2012 the dish net service actually works pretty well. maxs out around 9 or 10mbps down and 3-5 up, but the low tier plan gets you 5mbps down and 1up. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
vyce77 Report post Posted November 15, 2012 Google Line Of sight broadband... The biggest concerns are 1. is it offered in my area. and 2. If it is can I see the tower... If youre up on a mountainside Id say #2 wont be a problem. My parents have this. Its pretty reliable, but sometimes has issues during snowstorms. Still not as fast as a good cable connection however. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
RyanB Report post Posted November 15, 2012 Line of Sight Microwave works pretty well if it's available. When we bought our house last year, DSL wasn't (and still isn't) available, and Cable hadn't put any lines in yet. There was a local company that offered LOS internet service and the speeds weren't great, but there were no data caps. Typically I'd get 750kbps - 1.2 Mbps down but only 250-300k up. Price was reasonable though $29 a month no contract. As soon as the cable company put lines in I did switch though. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
pockmark Report post Posted November 16, 2012 Once you exceed the FAP I always try and exceed my fap Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
pockmark Report post Posted November 16, 2012 SORRY....For derailing the thread. Best of luck with Satellite Internet installation Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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