โJul-16-2013 06:06 AM
โJul-18-2013 12:33 PM
Dusty R wrote:
How much were Cell Phones when they first came out?
โJul-18-2013 11:23 AM
Though I haven't heard of cases when a person activated PLB but nobody received a signal
โJul-17-2013 05:44 PM
ktmrfs wrote:
Sometimes I have had to move the {SPOT} device around to get it to hit the sat. So I don't expect it to be a true emergency contact method.
โJul-17-2013 01:56 PM
Almot wrote:
Don't know how old is this "update", but this store was so unhappy with Globalstar that stopped carrying it.
Globalstar service update:
"The Globalstar system has recently lost several satellites that has now affected the reliability of the service ... Please only consider Globalstar service for casual, non-urgent communications". (my bold fonts).
Pretty strong words.
None of them is perfect, and in the area that I'm interested in - Mexico and Central America - even the famous $$$ Iridium have some dropped calls. Inmarsat (aka Isatphone) have dropped calls too, and take longer to connect than Iridium, and, like any geostationary system (which includes Globalstar too), is sensitive to where you point the antenna. Not to bash any particular provider, just to note that none of them will guarantee the connection. Some are better, some are worse.
โJul-17-2013 01:04 PM
โJul-17-2013 11:04 AM
โJul-17-2013 10:48 AM
โJul-17-2013 10:38 AM
โJul-17-2013 07:51 AM
โJul-17-2013 05:58 AM
โJul-17-2013 05:54 AM
โJul-17-2013 03:56 AM
โJul-16-2013 10:57 PM
โJul-16-2013 09:30 PM
Almot wrote:
Do you own research.
3 most often used providers are Iridium, Isatphone and Globalstar. Iridium is the most expensive - usually, both handsets and plans. Isatphone - a little cheaper, $650 for handset.
Isatphone and Globalstar use geostationary satellites, so if there is a coverage in your area, the satellite is always there. If there is a poor coverage due to mountains, for example - then it is always poor in this location.
Most common complaint on Istaphone is - it may take too long to lock on satellite, up to a few minutes, and there is a "delay" in receiving - they hear you and respond a few seconds after you've said something.
Iridium has "moving" satellites, they come and go on the horizon, so there is no "bad" location, unless you're deep under ground. At any given moment there "should be" at least one of them in view, but in reality you may have intermittent signal at times.
All of them have raised the prepay rates recently - you can't get 60 minutes prepay card valid for 2 years like in the past, to use it in occasional emergency.