Has issues in severe weather.
Ciboag96 said:
Elon will have
- Global control of highest efficiency and productive internet
- best autonomous vehicles
- autonomous humanoid robots
- ballistic missile technology
Hope that mother ****er stays nice
The $120 is for speeds more in the 125Mg range, down to 50 and up to 200. Some variability, but very reliable for surfing and watching TV. Works well for us, no issues.YouBet said:
1. There are people on here that argue Elon is not smart. lol at you utter and total clowns.
2. I will immediately switch to this for gig speeds if it's in the $120 range. I'm physically limited with the way our house is wired and it would just be easier to get this.
3. We need to keep wired backups sustainable. And analog stuff for that matter although that ship has sailed in many cases. We are too dependent on digital at this point.
Science Denier said:RED AG 98 said:If you live in a remote area, sometimes your choice is this vs $80-100 for 1/10 the bandwidth. It's a no-brainer for many folks not in the city.Science Denier said:
$120/month + one-time fee of $379 seems pretty pricy. That is for residential service.
Let's see if it gets cheaper. Certainly has the capability of being awsome.
My mother in law lives in an area where she can't get internet. So while I agree it's good, he's nir going to start killing it until he can compete in the big cities. We pay $49/month for internet in a very small Texas town of about 5,000 people. It's not a gig speed, but we can stream Roku there with zero issues.
Here's a number... Percentage of all the world's mass launched into orbit in 2023 by SpaceX: 80%Nanomachines son said:Ag87H2O said:
Musk is so far ahead of everyone else they can't even see him with their high beams. It says something when the Europeans start acknowledging how far ahead he is. He's probably the best engineer/innovator/entrepeneur since Henry Ford.
Musk has had one heck of a good week.
Musk is Howard Hughes with a much more grounded personality and far better vision. It's really hard to fathom just how far ahead his companies are now.
TheBonifaceOption said:Ciboag96 said:
Elon will have
- Global control of highest efficiency and productive internet
- best autonomous vehicles
- autonomous humanoid robots
- ballistic missile technology
Hope that mother ****er stays nice
What happens after he dies? It becomes a leftist ****hole
satexas said:
I'm not hater, but some of you need to slow your roll a little bit :
1. Telco isn't in danger because he's not going to just knock out wireless and land-based services. Satellite always has drawbacks.
2. HELLLOOOOOOO packet lag and latency. Stuff that buffers (TV, websites) is fine... telco not so much.
3. To those of you that think Starlink prices will go down - hysterical. No.
4. Space trash issues. Nuff said.
5. Low Orbit issues - Most people don't realize this isn't high-up stuff like SAT Phones (Imarsat, etc) or traditional VSAT.
6. Sunburst and other attacks - you just can't have your stuff all up in space that simple and have your economy completely rely on it.
Don't ever forget this - wired always beats wireless (and thus satellite) where possible.
.... but Starlink is great for all those that have land-based issues, that's for sure.
Source: data from Our World in Data, scatter plot by Visual Capitalist, trend lines to make the point by me.
— Steve Jurvetson (@FutureJurvetson) October 15, 2024
Oh, and SLS is up under the text box, top right, at $43K/kg. Maybe Gov’t programs need their own line. https://t.co/eO7kyN5eO3
RED AG 98 said:
I don't disagree that this will not displace wired anytime soon where wired is available. However it can service vast numbers of customers across the globe that have limited or even no other options. No one else is positioned for global service like they are.
And yet, we all carry wireless devices on our person 24/7. And RVs, boats and planes need connectivity as well and wires are pretty inconvenient. This isn't about just disrupting wired telcos, this is about disrupting global comms period.satexas said:RED AG 98 said:
I don't disagree that this will not displace wired anytime soon where wired is available. However it can service vast numbers of customers across the globe that have limited or even no other options. No one else is positioned for global service like they are.
Correct.
Wired will always win out, and wireless is just getting better and stronger too. Keep in mind that for every country folk that really benefits from Starlink with no other options (my parents in Wellborn), there's at least 1 business or restaurant that will say no-way because they can't afford the risk and latency of space because every transaction they make is somewhere in the cloud (aka internet) using their POS (point of sale).
Trust me, I know.
Now, what starlink also helps, is what's becoming more common - using a dual-wan router for failover internet.... and eventually as some noted, weak internet for your vehicle in emergencies, etc etc.
RED AG 98 said:And yet, we all carry wireless devices on our person 24/7. And RVs, boats and planes need connectivity as well and wires are pretty inconvenient. This isn't about just disrupting wired telcos, this is about disrupting global comms period.satexas said:RED AG 98 said:
I don't disagree that this will not displace wired anytime soon where wired is available. However it can service vast numbers of customers across the globe that have limited or even no other options. No one else is positioned for global service like they are.
Correct.
Wired will always win out, and wireless is just getting better and stronger too. Keep in mind that for every country folk that really benefits from Starlink with no other options (my parents in Wellborn), there's at least 1 business or restaurant that will say no-way because they can't afford the risk and latency of space because every transaction they make is somewhere in the cloud (aka internet) using their POS (point of sale).
Trust me, I know.
Now, what starlink also helps, is what's becoming more common - using a dual-wan router for failover internet.... and eventually as some noted, weak internet for your vehicle in emergencies, etc etc.
You're gonna love windmillsBrazosDog02 said:
More space junk and get to stare at that **** from my dark yard. Hooray.
Sea Speed said:
I wish to god I could invest in SpaceX
BrazosDog02 said:
More space junk and get to stare at that **** from my dark yard. Hooray.
Catag94 said:
I have had Starlink at home for a little over a year and now also have the Starlink mini as a portable that stay in my truck until I decide to take it elsewhere. I go into a lot of quarries and mines and travel to Colorado a lot. High speed low latency internet no matter where or how fast I go is really awesome.
Yes, if Elon did a phone with it's own app store and connection, I would buy that in a second and get rid of my iPhone.ToHntortoFsh said:Elon has toyed with the idea of making a phone, coupled w starlink this would be pretty bad ass.RED AG 98 said:
Starlink + SpaceX has the potential to be among the world's most valuable companies. Completely disruptive, not just in the US mind you, but world wide in both comms and space. Massive.
TheBonifaceOption said:Ciboag96 said:
Elon will have
- Global control of highest efficiency and productive internet
- best autonomous vehicles
- autonomous humanoid robots
- ballistic missile technology
Hope that mother ****er stays nice
What happens after he dies? It becomes a leftist ****hole
can't you just do WiFi calling?ts5641 said:Yes, if Elon did a phone with it's own app store and connection, I would buy that in a second and get rid of my iPhone.ToHntortoFsh said:Elon has toyed with the idea of making a phone, coupled w starlink this would be pretty bad ass.RED AG 98 said:
Starlink + SpaceX has the potential to be among the world's most valuable companies. Completely disruptive, not just in the US mind you, but world wide in both comms and space. Massive.
I have a generator that will run the house now. No natgas in my area so no whole house permanent rig because they are oversized and fueling is an issue.mazzag said:
Your next step is a generac. I know it's expensive but there's options for what you absolutely have to have. For us it's everything in central Texas. Mainly the last three freezes. But tornados say hello as well as the idiot that hits a transformer.
Dude...he's killing it right now, without the big cities.Science Denier said:RED AG 98 said:If you live in a remote area, sometimes your choice is this vs $80-100 for 1/10 the bandwidth. It's a no-brainer for many folks not in the city.Science Denier said:
$120/month + one-time fee of $379 seems pretty pricy. That is for residential service.
Let's see if it gets cheaper. Certainly has the capability of being awsome.
My mother in law lives in an area where she can't get internet. So while I agree it's good, he's nir going to start killing it until he can compete in the big cities. We pay $49/month for internet in a very small Texas town of about 5,000 people. It's not a gig speed, but we can stream Roku there with zero issues.
It takes really severe weather, and my land based internet had issues in severe weather as well.Barnyard96 said:
Has issues in severe weather.