I’ve looked into satellite Internet before and it’s typically slow speeds with low data caps for a lot of money.
I just checked StarLink’s site and it doesn’t look like much competition to cable Internet. The cost is $120 a month which is double what I’m currently paying. In addition, I would need to pay $600 for the equipment to connect to their service. Meanwhile, I get a free cable modem from Spectrum or can buy one for well under $100.
The speeds seem more reasonable than other satellite Internet providers, so there’s at least that plus. I also couldn’t find any data limits, which is good.
Still, that price point keeps it from being an effective competition to Spectrum. If Spectrum threatened to increase my rates to $80 a month, I couldn’t exactly threaten to leave for a $120 a month (and $600 initial equipment cost) service.
The costs and it’s owned by the Muskrat, so I could not do it. I went with the T-mo home internet ($50/mo) option as a backup to our crummy DSL (20Mb). The cell service is faster during off-peak times and it is nice having the backup service since we WFH often.
I’ve looked into satellite Internet before and it’s typically slow speeds with low data caps for a lot of money.
I just checked StarLink’s site and it doesn’t look like much competition to cable Internet. The cost is $120 a month which is double what I’m currently paying. In addition, I would need to pay $600 for the equipment to connect to their service. Meanwhile, I get a free cable modem from Spectrum or can buy one for well under $100.
The speeds seem more reasonable than other satellite Internet providers, so there’s at least that plus. I also couldn’t find any data limits, which is good.
Still, that price point keeps it from being an effective competition to Spectrum. If Spectrum threatened to increase my rates to $80 a month, I couldn’t exactly threaten to leave for a $120 a month (and $600 initial equipment cost) service.
The costs and it’s owned by the Muskrat, so I could not do it. I went with the T-mo home internet ($50/mo) option as a backup to our crummy DSL (20Mb). The cell service is faster during off-peak times and it is nice having the backup service since we WFH often.