Starlink

   / Starlink #281  
Seems odd that you have to buy the equipment and have a monthly fee on a Beta Trial. I was on a Beta Trial for 6 months for CenturyLink ION and I paid nothing for the entire trial phase. I had 4 phone lines brought into the house and the broadband service all for free. However, they weren't launching million
dollar satellites into space either.
 
   / Starlink
  • Thread Starter
#282  
Seems odd that you have to buy the equipment and have a monthly fee on a Beta Trial. I was on a Beta Trial for 6 months for CenturyLink ION and I paid nothing for the entire trial phase. I had 4 phone lines brought into the house and the broadband service all for free. However, they weren't launching million
dollar satellites into space either.

The phased array antenna (aka UFO on a stick) currently costs $2,000 to manufacture and are being sold for $499 so it's understandable why the public beta test isn't free.
 
   / Starlink #283  
Which phone company is that? The phone company(Centurylink) here does very little to maintain their line, even after they got CAF money, there were no improvements. The power company is running fiber.
Fulton Telephone Company. And like I wrote the power company (Tombigbee Electric Power Association) is also running fiber.

My understanding is that here the Tombigbee Electric Power Association owns the poles and can string fiber on the poles, and the Fulton Telephone Company is burying fiber cable.

And it seems it faster to string from pole to pole than it is to bury cable.
 
   / Starlink #284  
Fulton Telephone Company. And like I wrote the power company (Tombigbee Electric Power Association) is also running fiber.

My understanding is that here the Tombigbee Electric Power Association owns the poles and can string fiber on the poles, and the Fulton Telephone Company is burying fiber cable.

And it seems it faster to string from pole to pole than it is to bury cable.

Much faster and cheaper to string fiber on poles. However, it is way more susceptible to weather than a buried cable is. We don't put any of our fiber in the air for that very reason. Ice, rain, sleet and snow are all bad for aerial cable. But a dumbo with a backhoe can ruin your day also.
 
   / Starlink
  • Thread Starter
#285  
It does not mention anything about a contract length of time required or can it be dropped at anytime without penalty. Also are you responsible for the equipment setup?

Contract is dubious, that's an archaic scheme from the greedy ISPs. Yes customers are responsible for equipment setup. However there are instructions/software covering multiple techniques included with the purchase. The biggest challenge is to have a location unblocked by buildings, trees, etc.
 
   / Starlink #286  
Seems odd that you have to buy the equipment and have a monthly fee on a Beta Trial. I was on a Beta Trial for 6 months for CenturyLink ION and I paid nothing for the entire trial phase. I had 4 phone lines brought into the house and the broadband service all for free. However, they weren't launching million
dollar satellites into space either.

I read have invested $10 billions into Starlink so far with USA military as the only paying customer at this point.
 
   / Starlink #287  
I want to know more details about the clear view of the sky thing. I can't have a traditional satellite dish because I do t have a clear view South. I live in mountains. So my only clear view is up.
That being said, my stargazing app shows Starlink satellites overhead constantly. I would like to see more setup helpful hints before plunking down $500.
I'm on a lousy cell phone hot-spot now, my only option.
 
   / Starlink #288  
During a 2015 speech, Musk suggested it could come at a steep price. The CEO floated the idea of a figure somewhere around $100 and $300.

That means, all in all, Starlink could launch for somewhere around the $80 per month mark, plus an extra $100 to $300 for installation costs.

Source of my information...I've been following this closely as it's two wire copper or satellite as an option where we live. I'm not picking on Elon but he does sometimes overpromise. $500 upfront for the ufo on a stick and modem might be a bigger hurdle for many working families right now to try out a new technology.
 
   / Starlink #289  
Ma Bell buried most phone lines around here starting in the 60's,
they were good for quite a few years but they had some issues even when new.
Much of the time they weren't deep enough and highway crews and farmers would catch them and break them.
Then as the tree roots got regrown and a tree would tip out so would the phone cable.
The repair time and cost are much higher for buried lines and they have almost as much down time.
Now the only phone lines that are working at all are the overhead ones, the buried ones have so much static and noise it is ridiculous.
The repair crews are always out jumping pairs around looking for a good pair for part of a run then a different pair for more of it.
I would like to see it as a regulated public utility have to run fiber every were.
The cable companies around here will not even consider a route with less then 20 hookups per mile.
 
   / Starlink #290  
You could argue the fact about aerial vs buried all day long but at the end of it all a buried cable, done properly, will outlast aerial any day. And if you want to do buried fiber right you put in duct not direct buried. No one around here does aerial fiber, all buried.
 

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