โFeb-04-2016 10:02 AM
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โFeb-06-2016 08:52 AM
โFeb-06-2016 07:39 AM
rockhillmanor wrote:
It's a USB plug, like small thumb drive. I plug it into my laptop and voila I have internet. There is no phone connection, no antenna, no cable hook up nada nothing just my providers USB plugged into the laptop.
I used it Full timing for over 6 years and had access everywhere I traveled. Even in the rain!! Except now in north central Florida.
Sooo you are saying my internet IS satellite and considered radio?
โFeb-06-2016 07:19 AM
rockhillmanor wrote:Yeah, there's an antenna in there - perhaps more than one.
It's a USB plug, like small thumb drive. I plug it into my laptop and voila I have internet. There is no phone connection, no antenna, no cable hook up nada nothing just my providers USB plugged into the laptop.
โFeb-06-2016 05:55 AM
2-way Satellite Internet (HUGHES, Exceed, And a few others) are also radio and subject to storm interference.
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โFeb-06-2016 05:48 AM
โFeb-06-2016 05:46 AM
Sam Spade wrote:Chris Bryant wrote:
Find a single ISP using a sat link for a bunch of users- you will not, because it does not exist.
So you have surveyed EVERY little podunk ISP in the whole country and none of them find that connecting their few customers to somebody else's backbone by sat or a long radio haul is the best solution for them ?? Somehow I don't think you really posses that knowledge.
Sam Spade wrote:
ALL electronic communication is likely to use a satellite somewhere in it's transmission path; even some fairly short trips that you would never believe.
โFeb-06-2016 05:23 AM
Chris Bryant wrote:
Find a single ISP using a sat link for a bunch of users- you will not, because it does not exist.
โFeb-05-2016 02:21 PM
Sam Spade wrote:Chris Bryant wrote:
You're not serious are you?
I am absolutely serious.
When the symptoms are:
A little rain has no effect, not matter how long it goes on but when the clouds get real tall and dense or the rain falls REAL heavily, then there is an outage.....that magically starts working again when the clouds or rain thins out and NOT when the rain actually stops......indicates a loss of radio signal and NOT a signal degradation because the receiving equipment is a little damp.
Then.....the end links are not multi-routed. There is only one path from me to my ISP. When you set up a particular system, you get to define how far that end link goes and at what point it joins the big network.
โFeb-05-2016 12:04 PM
Chris Bryant wrote:
You're not serious are you?
โFeb-05-2016 11:42 AM
โFeb-05-2016 11:27 AM
Sam Spade wrote:joebedford wrote:
If I had a two second round trip delay (to sat and back) I would call it unusable
Delay for what exactly ??
It often takes 2 seconds or more for the data to start coming back after sending a request.....for most anything on any site.
Once it starts coming it blasts through.....usually.
โFeb-05-2016 11:15 AM
โFeb-05-2016 10:41 AM
Sam Spade wrote:Chris Bryant wrote:
Easy- bad terrestrial equipment. A bit of moisture in a connection is all it takes.
there are still miles of "dark" fiber optic cable wating to be used,
And what kind of bad equipment is that which dries out immediately when the rain stops ??
Guy Who Wants To Argue wrote:
Then are you saying that every little town in West Texas, just for instance, has a boat load of "dark fiber" upon which they can draw ??
โFeb-05-2016 09:52 AM
Chris Bryant wrote:
Easy- bad terrestrial equipment. A bit of moisture in a connection is all it takes.
there are still miles of "dark" fiber optic cable wating to be used,