Bringing work with you when you're not working is fucking stupid and people need to knock that shit off. But streaming a movie or something would surely make shitting in the woods less awful.That's a bug, not a feature.
Why the fuck would anyone want this?!
rural for like 99% of the US population is still close enough to get electricity, water, and sewage, its just corporate greed and government inaction that has prevented buildout of good internet.It largely exists with the Rural Utilities Service - RUS loan eligibility includes broadband and electrification. The RUS has historically been the largest source of funding for electification (significantly greater than the original New Deal loans).
Satellite internet is a far more efficient deployment in rural areas than physical links (something is better than nothing).
One wonders if the movement has a correlation with its CEO's bowel regularity.It'd be nice if a week would go by without Starlink changing their pricing. I've never seen an ISP that is so indecisive regarding pricing.
It's almost as if long term the cheaper play is making it easier to run fiber vs 10,000 satellites.the economics of satellite internet dictate that its gonna get more expensive and shit as you try to add people. it absolutely has its use but they're telling investors they'll have everybody on the planet paying for service in 5 years which is impossible
It really is as simple as if they have electricity, they should have fiber. We did it with POTS. We only don't do it with internet because that wouldn't be maximizing profit, and if it doesn't turn into C-suite bonuses next quarter, we can't do it.rural for like 99% of the US population is still close enough to get electricity, water, and sewage, its just corporate greed and government inaction that has prevented buildout of good internet.
That would depend entirely on the movie. I'd rather shit in the woods in the dark and wipe my butt with poison ivy that watch the Melania "movie" or "documentary" or WTF the right wing revisionists are classifying it as.Bringing work with you when you're not working is fucking stupid and people need to knock that shit off. But streaming a movie or something would surely make shitting in the woods less awful.
How are so many people able to live such charmed lives that they can afford to be off grid for multiple days? Between work and family, I can no longer afford to be off grid for more than a day.That's a bug, not a feature.
Why the fuck would anyone want this?!
This.I don't understand why people have to shit on the guy for wanting access to the internet. Who gives a shit?
Not so idle question: How many miles of fiber can be laid for the cost of a satellite launch?It's almost as if long term the cheaper play is making it easier to run fiber vs 10,000 satellites.
Now amortize that over the decades where the fiber will be completely fine vs the satellite that will have to be replaced every few years.Not so idle question: How many miles of fiber can be laid for the cost of a satellite launch?
You'd have to model the costs long term. Sat wins short term for sure. But those starlink sats last about 5 years reportedly. So the ongoing costs will be a lot more. There's a crossover point, but it's 25-30 years out.Not so idle question: How many miles of fiber can be laid for the cost of a satellite launch?
A Falcon 9 vehicle is $67milllion USD in 2025 money.Not so idle question: How many miles of fiber can be laid for the cost of a satellite launch?
No, we need a government mandate to connect every residence to the Internet with reliable physical links, like we had with electrification.
Satellite TV hardware is cheap enough dishes were normally abandoned. Beats retrieving used equipment customers would not want.If you can't pause service, do you just cancel and give the dish back, then a month later start service again and they mail you the dish again?
Don't be too sure about the last bit.I'd rather shit in the woods in the dark and wipe my butt with poison ivy
I can't do ANY of that when I'm tethered to my Comcast link in my office. With Starlink I can get out and wander cross country, working in the mornings from glorious locations. It's a life changer for those of us lucky enough to have jobs that can be fully remote!I guess everyone is different, but when I'm out camping (in a tent and a luxurious air mattress), the last thing I want to do is respond to work emails and stream movies. I'm usually too busy hiking, mountain biking, swimming, exploring, walking, seeing new things, starting the campfire, cooking over the fire, chopping wood, making coffee over the fire, looking at the stars and the glorious Milky Way, listening to the wild life all around me, enjoying the fecundity of the forest, drinking beer with my wife, enjoying one-on-one time with her in the woods, and not worrying about an internet connection, looking at a screen, or doing anything whatsoever remotely related to work, digital technology, or movies.
Maybe you need more fiber if you can watch an entire movie while shitting.Bringing work with you when you're not working is fucking stupid and people need to knock that shit off. But streaming a movie or something would surely make shitting in the woods less awful.
Maybe a bear? I guess with remote sattelite internet we can find out if bears really do shit in the woods
Electricity to most rural locations is delivered above ground via poles, not trenching. It would be a lot cheaper to just string fiber on the existing poles where available. AT&T did exactly that behind my suburban house last month.Now, trenching fiber varies, a lot. Depending on if you are going through virgin rural farmland, or through a heavily urbanized area where you have to jackhammer out concrete. From maybe $20,000/mile in Nowhere... to $200,000/mile in downtown anywhere. So anywhere from 3,400 miles of fiber to 335 miles for the cost of one Falcon 9.
I've done multiday camping trips for almost 15 years without Internet/devices.I think that kind of behavior is lacking in self-awareness and fundamentally opposed to the goal of enjoying nature/getting away from people and infrastructure.
We actually need zero.We need more than 1 LEO satellite internet provider. This is cable modem rental fees all over again.
Competition is better for innovation - Elon should agree with that as a conservative flag bearer.
So I'm thinking, why not cut off the head?This fish rots from the head down, this was always going to happen
For most things yes. Bandwidth seems to be highly dependent on location. Two and a half years ago I was paying Spectrum $85/month for 300 down and 20 up. The only way to get the bill lowered was to bundle more services or leave for a month and come back as a "new" customer. Problem is the only competition was T-mobile 5G service. And, my T-mobile signal at my house is not good.Is it me or are all things just on enshitification speed runs?
Seems like crack head level can't-wait! sort of twitchies from the 1%
That gives some context. I see where it's ~60 satellites per Falcon 9 launch and "up to" 400 for a Starship; I assume Starship launch costs are much higher. Then you have to add amortized costs for the rockets themselves, not just the launch costs, lifecycle of the satellite vs the fiber install, etc.A Falcon 9 vehicle is $67milllion USD in 2025 money.
https://spacenexus.us/guide/space-launch-cost-comparison
Now, trenching fiber varies, a lot. Depending on if you are going through virgin rural farmland, or through a heavily urbanized area where you have to jackhammer out concrete. From maybe $20,000/mile in Nowhere... to $200,000/mile in downtown anywhere. So anywhere from 3,400 miles of fiber to 335 miles for the cost of one Falcon 9.
Now 3,400 miles sounds like a lot of miles of fiber. But, for reference, my rather average US city of 300,000 people that has sprawled over 80 sq miles...has 2,700 miles of roads to service all the R1 housing stock that is most of the developed land. If you're going to do fiber-to-home to every house, it'll take probably 3,000 miles of fiber and trenching**
**Sidenote, my city DOES have fiber-to-home to every R1 house in the city. That is permanently dark and will never be used. Before Time Warner got bought by Spectrum...they bought a State law making it illegal for a public utility to compete in the same "market" as a private corporation. So our municipal fiber system is permanently illegal.
And the constellation is ~10,500 satellites. That's 175 launches over 5 years, forever.That gives some context. I see where it's ~60 satellites per Falcon 9 launch and "up to" 400 for a Starship; I assume Starship launch costs are much higher. Then you have to add amortized costs for the rockets themselves, not just the launch costs, lifecycle of the satellite vs the fiber install, etc.
If the FCC does not have this exact analysis in hand, vetted independently six ways from Sunday and back, Carr is even dumber or more venal than I thought.
and here in Seattle they added a $500 surcharge for new customers “because of high demand”. Surveillance pricing?It'd be nice if a week would go by without Starlink changing their pricing. I've never seen an ISP that is so indecisive regarding pricing.
Planning and delegation. How else?How are so many people able to live such charmed lives that they can afford to be off grid for multiple days? Between work and family, I can no longer afford to be off grid for more than a day.
Short term, maybe. Long term, though? You lay the fibre, and it needs very little, if any, maintenance (assuming no deliberate vandalism or major disaster cutting the fibre). Need a speed upgrade? Just replace the equipment at both ends.Satellite internet is a far more efficient deployment in rural areas than physical links (something is better than nothing).
[Insert de Gaulle-attributed quote about graveyards and indispensable people here]How are so many people able to live such charmed lives that they can afford to be off grid for multiple days? Between work and family, I can no longer afford to be off grid for more than a day.
You're not getting a dedicated fiber line back to your ISP. "Fiber internet" is pretty much always some flavor of PON - Passive Optical Network. You're sharing the same fiber with possibly a hundred or so other subscribers (though probably fewer). It's much, much, much less congested than DOCSIS though.Short term, maybe. Long term, though? You lay the fibre, and it needs very little, if any, maintenance (assuming no deliberate vandalism or major disaster cutting the fibre). Need a speed upgrade? Just replace the equipment at both ends.
Plus, fibre is a private medium. What you do on your fibre connection has absolutely no impact on what I do with mine, at least until the traffic reaches a common peering point. Satellite is a shared medium: the more people using it, the worse the service gets, all else being equal.
Fibre could be ten times more expensive up front, and it would still be the better choice for those who are serious about building proper infrastructure.
Yeah, this is what I've seen too. Growing up, I had family members who loved to come camping, but who would either miss trips entirely, or have to leave a trip for a few days to go do some work that couldn't (or wouldn't) be rescheduled. They were all small business owners.I have had plenty of those experiences but you can't run a company and be AWOL unfortunately. It's just not possible - or rather, I haven't been able to make it work.