IS there another satellite planned or in the works after Viasat 2? ...
According to Viasat they are building a trio of Viasat 3 satellites that should be awesome.
ViaSat-3 Will Have More Capacity than the ROW Combined
IS there another satellite planned or in the works after Viasat 2? ...
Or for RVers -- I Have Ordered the New Hughes Gen V Satellite Internet - iRV2 ForumsSatellite internet is not for people with access to anything else. It is for people in rural areas that have no other access to high speed internet( or reliable access).
Or those that want a somewhat reliable back up.
I have 120 x 12 from Spectrum (fastest I can get), but have HughesNet for backup. Both connected to a dual WAN Cisco router configured for automatic failover.
I live in a rural area and needed a backup solution for work in case I were to be stuck home because of a snowstorm like I was in 2014 and lost cable service. Verizon does not offer DSL to my address. Some areas of my town can get it via RT, but speeds top out at either 1.5 or 3 Mbps down (can’t remember which). Cellular is not an option. As I come to find out by switching my mobile phone service to them earlier in the week, I have zero T-Mobile reception anywhere near me, AT&T is weak to nonexistent, Sprint gets me poor 3G and weak 4G at best if in the right area of the house, and Verizon Wireless fades out in the back half of the house where all of my computer gear is.
While I have not needed to rely on HughesNet in the almost year I’ve had it, the service is very poor most of the time on Gen 4 for me. Sometimes I can achieve pings 800ms or less and get speeds 25-30 Mbps down x 1.5 Mb up, which actually isn’t too bad for connecting to work via VPN. I can connect fine and even use RDP and VNC without too much of a hassle. Yes, takes a little while to make the initial connection, it’s slow to render the remote display, and there’s a little bit of a delay, but it will do the job if need be and is actually better then I thought it would be. But most of the time that is not the case. Quite often during prime time, I get pings of 1000ms+, 1 to 2 Mbps down and best, and barley anything on the upload. I was planning to see about upgrading to Gen 5, not a fan though of the forced wifi gateway with a higher rental fee though.
Why would you even do that?
You would be better getting a cellular hot spot.
Why would you even do that?
You would be better getting a cellular hot spot.
Because he stated he has poor cellular reception. Still, I would be very happy if I could get Spectrum.
And paying all that money for Hughes as a backup is a waste.
No I wouldn't. Like I said:
T-Mobile - Absolutely zero reception within a few miles of where I live
Sprint - 3G only unless hotspot is the the bathroom window
AT&T - Almost no service inside, outside standing on the drive way I can get poor but somewhat usable HSPA+
Verizon - Unstable reception in the areas I need it
For cellular, my router only accepts USB modems for failover where my router and other network gear is located there is next to no cell phone reception from either Sprint or Verizon, the only two providers that work inside of my house. The whole idea of this is to have as seamless of a process as possible. If I lose cable, the satellite modem will pick up on the fly and I can continue to access my NAS, printer and other network resources with out fumbling around. And as long as I have UPS and a satellite signal, the satellite connection is good, if as cellular tower goes down, or there is a backhaul problem I'm SOL.
And then there's the whole data usage thing. There is a lot of stuff I could do in the overnight hours if need be to use the 50 GB bonus data, instead of burning through the anytime data.
Not really. If I can't make it into work because I'm snowed in, I don't get paid unless I can prove I'm actually working from home. In 2014 we got 70+ inches of snow in a 4 day span and when a snowplow came by, the weight of the snow slamming against the utility pole caused my cable line to be ripped out and I lost internet access for a few days. The whole area was under a driving ban, no way did I expect them to come out and fix it. I spent half of the week working off of a Verizon Jetpack that I had 3GB of data on, but could barely get more then a couple of Mbps out of. That's what motivated me to pursue satellite internet.
Plus my work pays for most of the bill. They let me do the same thing as I do with my cable bill, I can expense the cost of basic service, any extras are on me. So I expense $65 for Spectrum since that's what their basic service cost, and the price difference between Standard Internet and Ultra Internet is on me. Same thing with HughesNet. I opted for the second to lowest tier. The standard Gen 4 package was I believe $50 for 5GB of anytime data at 10 x 1. I opted for 10GB of anytime data at 15 x 1 for a little bit more. The total bill is a little above $60/month, but I expense $50 of that.