I use to be a Sat /Comms/Network engineer. Worked for two major Cruise Lines. As per your possible inquiry on 8:45 - No, it does NOT cost Starlink any more if you are on land or ocean. Starlink satellites do not work the same as the old satellite style does. The old style was that a customer linked/pointed to a satellite that was in high orbit (geosynchronous orbit) Which just means it's stationary above one area like satellite DISH TV and therefore cover MANY customers with one Sat. With Starlink satellites the customer links to one satellite that orbits in a non-geostationary orbit and your dish finds the next following starlink satellite and connects to it before losing the previous link as it moves out of your line-of-sight hence the need for many starlink satellites (hence the starlink net). Since these Starlink satellites are circling the Earth and passing over land AND WATER the "Many customers to one satellite" (old way) does NOT apply and therefore does NOT cost any more. -- What does cost is the production of so many satellites and rocket ship launches to put them up in space and so to get as much money for funding as quickly as possible they charge more money to those customers that are "different" using that "different" excuse to charge more. Those satellites are NOT doing anything different to ocean connections as they are to land connections. --- Great video, thank you.
I was going to add the same comment, Starlink satellites are at a much lower orbit, which is why internet latency (ping rate) is much better than old geostationary satellite internet. If I remember correctly geostationary orbit is ~36,000 km above the earth; I think Starlink orbits at 550 km? So with such a low orbit, they have to speed around the planet orbiting earth once every ~1.6 hours. They have to put a bunch up there anyways to always have satellites over land so why not treat the ocean like a regular day of internet seeing as there are satellites there anyways, not like there are a tonne of people overloading the connection between satellites over the ocean. I agree, this seems more like a method to recover infrastructure costs. EDIT: Change geosynchronous to Geostationary
So...I think that there are far fewer users to satellite that covers the ocean areas...so...it costs more per user. If these near shore users are part of the on land group...then the maritime service has even fewer users. Because there are a finite number of boats in the world that would pay for this service...having those near shore users act as if they are on land...undermines the potential profitability of the maritime service. All of this has to be paid off by itself within a certain amount of time and make money before the end of life for the maritime satellites. This is why they are doing this.
The one thing not mentioned, the inter satellite links are not established in a meaningful way, so the down link is a possible bandwidth limiting issue. No ground stations out there so everyone is sharing the limited available downlinks.
@@mikegrindstaff The Starlink Sats "don't know" there are no customers in the oceans, not more, not less....Starlink sats just have to cross the oceans no matter if there are zero customers. The HAVE to circle the Earth.
I remember my dad looking for a used car in the newspaper. Before deciding on calling the owner, he would page through the phone book to see if that number was a local call, a zone call, or long distance. How things have changed!
Now the landline runs around $70/mo before the first call and the phone book doesn't tell you which prefixes will raise that. (living in a cellular near-dead spot)
You very accurately conveyed what has transpired. Look forward to Amazon satellite packages! Competition can be quite beneficial for consumers. Take Care
Amazon has a good reason to learn how to get something into Orbit, then, which it never has so far. $250/mo for 50Gb is $5/Gb, barely more than my cellphone data contract.
Great analysis of this. I do think that $250 is still a pretty amazing price for oceanwide, on demand, high speed internet. This price will be driven down, but it's a groundbreaking technology. It won't be cheap for a while.
Do you realize his billionaire, has put up satellites in space That's not his area.. when are people going to wake up and realize that these billionaires shouldn't be getting all these subsidies. And if they get them they shouldn't be gouging us. Funny thing if the government raised taxes on people they'd be crying up and down the storm. Let these billionaires make a fortune, oh it's okay. People you've got to wake up
@@yoshy2628 so they don't get fast internet. My point is, 5 years ago it would have cost 10s of thousands of dollars for starlink speeds, if you could even find a consumer product to do it. At least $250 is achievable.
Starlink will go under when subsidies stop or when they fail to increase them. Starlink revenue in no way can cover the launch costs for 3 to 4 year life satellites.
I wish Starlink was listening. Having an internet connection while traveling on the open sea is a huge safety gain. Using the service to watch videos is not on my menu. But getting accurate and timely weather data, connecting with shore-based support (engine trouble, for example), and keeping loved ones assured with our progress reporting are all extremely valuable. I wish they would offer a lower-speed version so that email, text messaging and basic phone service stayed up.
I think you're onto something. Even though Iridium GO is a thing, having a single service that can do both sure sounds like a good idea. Honestly no reason why they can't just make that the default behavior rather than shutting off access completely.
Whats the speed on iridium? Whats the bandwidth? Whats the monthly cost? There are options to Starlink, but thats like going back 20 years to dialup era for same price lol.
Another work around that might help some is to setup a Raspberry Pi and run Jellyfin on it with modest sized SSD ~2gb and store all of your media backups for your own off grid boat based Netflix !
@@TimHayward Thanks for sharing that too !!! You could cable connect with an OTG cable for a larger drive but I really like the simplicity of your setup plus you could just have multiple 1gb sd cards !
@@BangBangBang. Haha ....correct I meant 2tb ...... most of the compressed movies are 1.2gb with still pretty good quality probably get about 150 movies on a 2tb...give or take
Regarding cost over sea vs over land - Starlink is very different from satellite internet before. The satellites are not geosynchronous!! That means they are not stationary over an area; instead they use a vast network/constellation of little and relatively inexpensive satellites all zipping around and communicating with each other. This means that the coverage at sea is mostly just "accidental". Of course they are happy to proved service (and collect revenue) by supplying internet to boats at sea. But those satellites would be there regardless even if they only wanted to provide internet to land. So no, it is not more expensive for them to provide internet to boats. They just know that people with boats are more likely to accept a higher price tag. I've been waiting to see what happens with starlink to see if I get it. Thanks for testing the waters for the rest of us!
From what I understand: The number of starlink satellites over any latitude is effectively constant. But, they need to relay each other's signals to one that is over a ground station. Apparently that becomes more difficult as the amount of satellites that need to relay signals increases. That and the capacity of ground stations seem to be what's limiting starlink for a lot of regions. Also, some jurisdictions are preventing ground station installations.
I can't even begin to imagine how much this infrastructure is costing. Heck the rocket launch alone. What is it like 15-20 satellites per launch? Like Bryant mentioned all the ground stations needed. I'm pretty sure Starlink is operating at a loss right now. Now Amazon is wanting to put their own version of starlink in the sky. Me personally could get by with the $250 plan on a boat. I'd be mainly just be using it for weather updates, and doing research on how to fix problems that come up on the boat if I can't figure it out. 50Gig should be plenty of data for that. Last time I did the cruiser life style there was no civilian internet and GPS was unaffordable. Yah I'm old!
I liked your video and learned a few things about billing options. I just have the static land version at the moment. I did want to comment on how Starlink works in relation to your comment about out in the ocean. It doesn't really cost them more, but it is a limited resource (at the moment). Two things are going on: (1) There are pretty much the same number of satellites over any given latitude at any one time. IOW, there are just as many serving over the mid Atlantic at 40.7 degrees latitude as there are over New York city. Since there are no users out there (relatively speaking) the satellites have really nothing to do. Having anybody hitting one would be just free money to them. (2) BUT...over land, when you browse to some site, it goes to the satellite and then directly back down to a ground station then to the site. At mid-Atlantic, that satellite that is serving the boat, can't see the ground station. It must relay to one or more other satellites to finally reach the ground station. So... you are using more resources for your connection out in mid ocean. The problem is... the first generation of satellites did NOT have this relay capability. It is my understanding that the first ones that did are the ones launched on a polar orbit out of Vandenberg in California... and there are very few of those satellites comparatively, but enough to handle the current high-end ocean customers (and the military). As time goes on, all the satellites are supposed to have that capability and hopefully there will be no reason for high costs, except to gouge what the market will bare.
it's not gouging. i hate how people think a business making money is evil. NO people expecting free stuff is EVIL. consumers are the biggest parasites around. like blaming oil companies for global warming. absolutely wrong. it's the users not the suppliers that cause the problem
@@ronblack7870 Well, maybe in your mind the word gouging conjured up negative visions of some socialist. I don't have any problem with their capitalism. The point I'm trying to make, Starlink has limited resources at the moment, so they can justify the huge price for mid-ocean Internet AND they have to, to keep it from overburdening the current resources. Once they flesh-out with interlinking satellites, I'm sure they'll re-address the "bottom line" where the lower price can permit private sailors of sub-million $ boats to justify getting it and thus make even more profit by numbers.
Anyone here remember pagers? In the beginning only ER doctors could afford them. Before they became completely obsolete they offered unlimited text for about $8 a month.
I just got my Starlink with a Roam/Mobile Regional service for my boat on Lake Ontario. This works for what I am doing since not on the Ocean. The option for the mobile priority that allows for use in motion and on the water is like double to cost and only 50GB. The Canadian price I see is $320. As Tim says this will all change. So stay awake!
Here in Chile, today, Starlink Chile is offering a maritime plan worth Ch$257,411 (Chilean peso) per month, that is, US$320.21, with equipment worth Ch$2,536,000, which is equivalent to US$3,153.84.
@@2011blueman Starlink prices are different in each country, depending in local internet prices. I'm paying about $70 for (non-mobile) Starlink in the Netherlands.
Starlink has just deployed a set of "high Earth orbit" (instead of the common low Earth orbit) satellites. They are further away with a bit of time lag. There are only a few of them and they were deployed for airlines, ocean-going freighters and cruise ships. They are huge, compared to the earlier version.
Both 1.5 and V2 minis have laser links, also so few of V2 have been deployed that, those can't really yet to make difference in coverage. And 1.5 and V2 are near same orbital height. There are V2s in 950 km orbit but those are for SDA e.g. military coms.
One of the problems not mentioned here is ground stations. Satellites require ground stations to function. Until there is a heavy saturation of inter-satellite links (laser), data must be transferred via (legacy) radios from sat to sat until there is a sat with a viable ground station link. Since there are no ground stations in the middle of the ocean, this makes it very hard to predict throughput/load/bandwidth/etc throughout the system, possibly degrading service for people that are using the service according to the agreed terms.
It's one of the best use cases for their product. I can't believe they would make it this difficult/expensive to use it that way. If i was Starlink i would do everything to prove they power of my product.
You need to see that Elon Musk just cares about bringing in tons of money from his customers while him and his company is always focused on government money (Tesla tax credits, SpaceX competing with NASA, etc)
How much does it cost per Gb? That makes the difference between it being extortionate and the price of a burger. I get 6Gb a month on my smartphone plan. How much would that cost me?
There are many reasons, including the fact that they need to provide land users that are using the service according to the contract, and minimal bandwidth to comply with the regulation for the frequency lease.
@@BangBangBang. well he has spent megatons of money on the system and they are not yet breaking even . so there is nothing greedy about it. they have like a million customers so far. that's only maybe 150 million/ month . yet it costs like 15 billion to put the system up . and they have operating costs as well . spcex6 has over 6000 employees.
We received a email 4 months ago from Starlink (ground based) saying our service will be cut back because we use to much data (2 seniors with IPads on most of the time and internet TV so we were sometimes using 1T an month so we cut back on our usage to prevent our service from being downgraded. Yesterday we received a email saying that our service will not be downgraded and we can use as much data as we want anytime peak or off peak times as well our monthly cost will be going down and if we want we can buy a additional dish for 20% ($1000) of what we paid for our present dish. It’s all a bit confusing just like Twitter 🤪
You're right that infrastructure for boats costs more, but for the wrong reasons. Starlink satellites are not in geosynchronous orbit. So they MUST have enough satellites to cover the ocean, just to get good coverage on land. ie: each satellite goes all the way around the Earth, so you need to fill that ring with enough satellites that your target service area is always covered. However, Starlink satellites can communicate with three things: your dishy, a ground-based access point, and each other. To service the land, the dishy sends to the satellite which sends to the ground-based access point. On the ocean, there is no ground-based access point, so instead, your dishy talks to the satellite which talks to a satellite which talks to a satellite which eventually reaches a ground-based access point. So to service requests on the ocean takes significantly more power and bandwidth than over land.
Thank you for the most reasoned brief on what's happening, that I've seen so far. And I don't expect a better one, anytime soon. Experience definitely enables us to take a broader and longer view of events. In my own case, this ability took far too long to develop! ;)
ปีที่แล้ว +1
The reason why Starlink is doing that is that their satellite mesh is fed the data by ground stations. They cannot have any ground stations in the ocean, so getting the data there requires many more hops between satellites and loads the mesh significantly more than a typical ground usage. (The low earth orbit satellites are always orbiting at high speed, so there are no satellites above a certain location permanently.)
50gigs will stream more than 100 hours of TH-cam at 480p, honestly do we all really need to watch 3-4 hours of TH-cam everyday? I guess on an ocean passage that might be nice, but I'm going to blow your mind right now; Every movie ever made in existence is on the internet and available to download right this second.
a very fast cabnle internet connection ,frostwire, expressvpn and a windows laptop and 3 external usb internet antennas and one very big ass external hard drive for storage.. in two years you can collect over 5 terebites of movies.. tv series, and youtube videos.. when i hit the water next year, ill have all the entertainment i will ever need.. and i wont even have a cellphone on my boat. gunna toss that sucker in the water...
The way i see it. 250.00 a month for internet at sea is cheap as chips. 8.00 a day. I remember intennet caffe at 6.00 per hour or maybe 2.00 at a cheap shop. The ability to pause is key for me. If that goes away, so do i.
On the satellite coverage of starlink ... no. Starlink is contellations of leo sattelites that basically fly across the sky in formation. The dish is actually a phased array antenna that can track and steer the beam to multiple sattelites near simultaineously ... as one sat begins to pass out of view the next sat in view becomes active. In a maritime environment the signal has to be crosslinked from satellite to satellite until it gets a sat in view of a NOC ... could be 2 hops, could be 10. There are near impercetable breaks in the data stream, vpn services don't like it and often drop. All of these extra crosslinks do have a monetary value for starlink. Most boaters are using either the RV or Business antenna, which arent really designed for marine use, the roll, pitch and yaw of a boat will excessively wear the tiny stepping motors. With US DoD and many commercial shipping companies contracting Starlink services i suspect they are going to be a bit more draconian in enforcing the terms of service so they can more accurately determine what bandwidth they can guarantee to those contracts. As it is, many boaters are intentionally and willfully breaking the terms of service which they agreed to and are now angry Starlink has finally had enough ... Havent seen the approvals for amazons service ... Also ... no I dont work for Elon ... but I am a communications manager for a very large shipping company.
I know the $250 a month for only 220MBps seems expensive to folks who have gotten used to sub $100 per month Gigabit terrestrial broadband in urban areas. But sailors at sea have been paying around $100 per month for Iridium Go service that has a 2.4 kbps (no that's not a typo) data rate that reminds me of my childhood CompuServe dial up. I think sooner rather than later, Starlink will treat RV's and Sailboats the same and allow the RV service to be used within a couple miles of the coast as long as they are "stationary", meaning anchored or in a marina. The easiest way to do it would just be to geofence the unit when you power it on with a rule that says something like, "the service works only within 250 meters of the powerup location". Just my opinion. I could be wrong.
Launching a single satellite into space can cost anywhere between $10 million and $400 million, depending on the vehicle used. A small launch vehicle such as the Pegasus XL rocket can lift 976 pounds (443 kilograms) into low-Earth orbit for about $13.5 million. That works out to be almost $14,000 per pound.
The re-usable Falcon 9 flight costs is about $20 million for 55 Starlink v1.5 satellites, 675 lb each, so about $540 per pound. (Internal cost for SpaceX. External customers pay upto $60 million per flight, still 10x cheaper than Pegasus XL.)
When the government breaks up the monopoly on communication maybe some resellers will play fair, meanwhile its up to us to stay informed, so thaks for the insight Tim..! PS In the early 2000's I had T-Mobile in California & had a fraudulent charge appear on my bill but the team corrected it within my very 1st call.. wheras here in B.C. 🇨🇦 I had a similar fraudulent charge appear & although the initial tech support (Rogers isp) was very understanding & assured me that it will be FIXED for SURE.. the ordeal has been ongoing for 1 YEAR.. with no end in sight...! So, again, we must keep informed when a rogue capitalist decides to cheat consumers simply bc they can. PSS Great segment man..!
As a kid I watched startrek and and wished I had a communicator and when the motorola startac 3000 dropped in the 90s i said to my mate look this is literally the startrek communicator from 15 years ago and we just both sat there spinning out that what we watched as kids is now a reality, now i look at today and see the replicators as 3d printers from digital to physical in minutes, i cant wait to see where we will be in 50 years, BEAM ME UP SCOTTY!!!
Starlink sats are in low earth orbit (LEO) which means they orbit faster than the earth rotates in order to stay up in orbit (generally about 30,000 km/h) - as opposed to geosynchronous orbit (such as most television and communications satellites) which orbit at the same speed that earth rotates (roughly 18,500 km/h). What this means is that they need more satellites, moving at faster speeds in order to make sure that you always have satellite coverage. Also, the lower down a satellite is, the smaller its coverage area, again necessitating more satellites. Priority for the early satellites was for the orbits that would cover high population densities, however now as they complete the network, the lower densities are also being filled in - remember this is Starlink’s main competitive advantage that they cover areas that are not well served by high speed Internet (let alone affordable broadband). All of this is to say that your analysis at 8:55 is a little bit off - there is actually no additional incremental cost to Starlink for the offshore coverage since the satellites must move through those areas of spares population regardless as they orbit in LEO. What is different is that Starlink has competition from those lower cost options that you mentioned via cellular networks for land-based customers. Furthermore, Starlink could make agreements with those cell providers and make use of a hybrid cellular/satellite configuration in order to achieve max speeds while reducing traffic on the space segment of the network. So all that to say that the only differences between at-sea and near-shore or onshore is competition and that at-sea customers are more willing to pay more because of fewer options - both things that you touched on. And totally agree that this absolutely mirrors the cell phone wars of the late 90s and early 2000s.
Small tidbit- the first sstarlink sats were for connecting the financial institutions (stock market transactions) and cost a fortune to use. They had better latency (speed) which enabled faster transactions wich generated huge $s out of milliseconds. Time is indeed money!
The biggest reason for the starlink changes ,, is that us boaters found a great loophole and had the world, but instead of staying quiet they went shouting and bragging on every media N.a. na na , and here we are , the secret is out and the loophole will close,
@@paulkopp3634 look at the sailing world compared to van livers , its a tiny market , the amount of live aboard that actually move country to country is a fraction of less than0 .25% of 1% the population ,, so no more like he didn't evan think about sailing , and still doesn't, but one of his staff read whats happening , for get live aboard, most don't leave there local area so not effected
I think the land-based Roam plan is all non-priority. The new plan gets you the certain amount of priority internet. When that runs out it goes ack to the same speed you get from Roam. I would think unless you are moored near a city, you won't notice much of a speed drop because traffic will be low. I don't have it so I could be wrong. But I am looking to pick it up soon and will get the $250/mo plan. We still work from the boat and it is worth the cost to us at this time.
Please consider doing a video on sailboats for tall folks. 6' 5" and good luck finding a boat with headroom and a berth long enough to sleep well in. Thanks.
I Heard Starlink's Satellites Cover the Planet, It's Just Some Aren't Active. You May Be 100 Miles from Cook Islands, and There Are Sats Up There, but Not Active Because No Customers. If You're in Shipping Lanes, You May Get Better Prices, Internet Speeds. Yadda, Yadda...Now, I'm Just Rambling. Great Video!!
The issue is the service there doesn't seem to be a difference between the service offered on land or at sea? So the only reason for the higher cost is it seems a bargain against other existing options.
@@DrRusty5 Technically the marine starlink panel is higher latency, but yes you are right. He is charging more because comparatively speaking it's still a 'great deal." While I understand how his pricing might seem unfair, his service is still far better and cheaper than his competition so I still view it as a "win."
The one thing not mentioned, the inter satellite links are not established in a meaningful way, so the down link is a possible bandwidth limiting issue. No ground stations out there so everyone is sharing the limited available downlinks.
Watching this today 10 July 2024 Star Link's cheapest boat subscription is £247 monthly ($316US) for 50gb In-Motion / Ocean use with unlimited inland data. I wonder if simply in port or bay anchored counts as "inland. By comparison though unlimited data starlink for a house is £75 a month. Oh and the required hardware is an additinal £2470 GBP ($3160 USD ). We appear to have to pay more for the service than the US. [ I used my vpn to compare prices and we do have to pay significantly more than the US ]
That was really a great explanation. Thanks. Send it to all the macro econ teachers you know. It's all in there: supply and demand, elasticity of demand, competition, fixed costs, variable costs, monopoly power, government regulations, and of course avarice. And much more. Oh, also the historical perspective, And maybe send it to the engineering. Heck, put the whole thing on the internet. Oh, yeh. It is. Never mind.
Imagine NOT being able to send an SOS because the JackAss in the sailboat pitching about watching reruns of Friends while uploading his kids Only Fans accounts...
considering I use to pay 6 bucks-ish a minute for sat phone service ..working in Sub- Sahara Africa with a Calgary phone number .. was cheaper to travel to town and use the consular phones a data links ..
Switch on/off billing is simple, Starlink made it when you switch on, it converts your entire month to the new plan for the month, even if you turn it off.
Sending good vibes your way, I have some heavy personal stuff going on as well and taking some time out for yourself is necessary & good. I had heard about the Starlink Kerfuffle..good video :) ..I remember the early days of cell phones "oh, you want to have a dial tone? That will be extra...text messages???? whooooowheeeeeeee, sign this loan application"
I bought my starlink here in Mexico its 1350 pesos per month which is about $72 a month and 40 pesos per GB which is about $2.00 per GB so for me its cheap
I had been curious about the Starling service for maritime use. I see a lot of the land based systems. I have to agree on the paying for infrastructure aspect and billing models. Very similar to the cell phones, text messages and long distance calling scenarios. Thanks for sharing.
The issue with Starlink is that the infrastructure was front loaded. The satellites are up and are traveling around the earth already. There's no functional reason to charge boaters more than land users, other than Elon feels anyone cruising around the world can afford it. Sadly, many people who would be perfect candidates for Starlink service are cruisers on a tight budget. Again, the Starlink satellites are so revolutionary because they are not in geosynchronous orbit. They don't orbit the earth in a fixed position. They are lower and traveling around the earth. A land based user is using multiple satellites. Instead of driving between cell phone towers, it's like the cell phone towers flying past you and your phone (or the Starlink receiver) connects to the next one before dropping the current one. A sailboat, even a fast catamaran is only traveling maybe 25 mph. The Starlink satellites are cruising at a cool 17,000 mph. What's the effective difference of zero mph (a land based "home" user) to an 8 mph (more reasonable sailing speed) ocean user compared to the satellite's 17,000 mph. Elon isn't putting up extra satellites to handle sea service and sea service isn't stealing from land service throughput because it's different satellites, while at the same time being the same satellites (remember the cell phone towers flying past analogy).
@@Texas240 I see your point . I must admit, plenty of this feels like a cash grab. I thought the same about the text message thing. And it may we'll be. I also know that those rockets and the fuel they consume were not cheap to build or refuel, nor were the satellites cheap to design and manufacture. It's not like they took Bluetooth speakers from Walmart and shot them into space with some kids hobby rocket. I think some day in the future as the tech becomes more mainstream you will begin to see $35 a month basic packages like modern cell phones. I am no expert, just an honest opinion. As pre-loaded as the tech deployment may have been it was more then likely built with and still financed by leveraged assets somewhere. I cannot therefore disagree with the cost of services.The infrastructure may be there, but it is still being paid for. Just an opinion mind you.
I use Starlink at my house, but I have the mobile package because it was available immediately, and residential was a two year waiting list. Odd, considering it’s the same equipment. Anyway, I just went into the app and looked at the mobile option for use on the ocean, and it says “In motion use supported with approved hardware.” Does that mean you have to buy the more expensive Dishy to use it at sea?
When you switch plans you have to wait out the rest of your billing cycle to switch back in most cases. That's what I've heard...so you can't just switch willy nilly whenever you want without a penalty period...I think there might be an internal tier system to that governs how quickly you can switch.
A few things... it doesn't cost Starlink anything more to operate over water than it does to operate over land. The satellites are not stationary, so they all travel over water to create the constellation that they have now. When the satellites travel over water, they are simply not getting used as much as the ones that are over land. From a financial perspective, they would want more people using the ones over water more often since it allowed them to reduce their operations costs. As far as data goes, 50GB per month is more than enough for the average user. That would equate to roughly 60 hours of Netflix watching or 2 hours per day. When we lived in the RV (family of 4), we used about 65GB per month and that was with me working a full-time job where I was online for 8 hours per day and our children attended online school classes.
Correction, it does not cost them any extra to service oceans because of the style of satellite being used. Geostationary satellite such as viasat do cost more to service the ocean because they have a cone of service that has to be directed at an area to supply service. SpaceX satellites are in LEO which means they have to cross the ocean anyway to service land based customers. They only charge more because they can charge more.
People outside of the USA often don't realise that they have no legal protection against Starlink, whereas if they used a local service their own country laws would/may offer some protection. For example UK, Australia or New Zealand have fantastic consumer protection laws as well as misleading advertising protection laws, unlike the USA.
I see that Delos is crossing the Pacific and has been posting, I think with Starlink. I wonder which plan they are using. The Viasat system they were using was removed because it doesn't cover the Pacific. I think the cost of the Viasat was $5,000/month, if you had to pay the fee.
There is also a french one that is being trialled atm. I am not sure atm if it will be full internet connection or just access to weather associated items. Either way it is another choice. 😃
Being on the ocean requires use of the new V2 Starlink satellite which can communicate sat-2-sat via laser. There are not very many of these launched yet. So service is limited. Near shore the v1 says can directly communicate with ground. I doubt these expensive rates will last more than a few years.
That's not too bad! Yes it's expensive! But there are options that can be enabled/ changed anytime. I don't see an issue other than the massive price for the mobile usage option. I do look forward to Starlink dropping in price and see the massive use to sailors!
There is a specific package for ships and a lot of sailors are using the mobile base station indented for campers. I'm sure there is some opportunistic pricing going on here on the part of Starlink but this isn't just that. TCP packets ping back and forth, when the packet fails or you fail to get a confirmation, the internet keeps sending it over and over again. So using the wrong service causes more packet problems and you are resending again and again and clogging up the entire network. The sailing package prices in the extra bandwidth you use, and the hardware adjusts faster to reduce the package loss. So again, they may be gouging you on the cruising plan but there is something real behind it all.
Terms of Service? A friend had an IMTS mobile phone active in his car when a large piston airliner crashed on takeoff. He parked his car in the middle of the mess, opened the doors, and let every emergency, doctor, fireman, and aviation person call unlimited and unhampered. The result was a mobile phone bill that needed a handtruck. The phone company realized that almost all these calls were dire unselfish emergencies, and they plucked out the monthly fee, circled the rest with a red pen, and made them disappear. Sailboats are among the most likely Starlink users to find themselves in the rescue role. They are the most likely customers to find a collision, fire, piracy, storm wreck, or plane downing of any vessel. ...About sea bandwidth. Sea bandwidth utilizes almost completely unburdened horizontal relay Starlinks. The relay eventually reaches shore based Starlink ground connections. If every Pitcairn, Galapagos, Midway, sailboat, junk, and swordfish sailor surfed Starlink, heavily, they would hardly put a scratch in the service, and they would be dipping into the cheapest bandwidth of all. Starlink was supposed to become friendlier and cheaper. They have lost their way.
.... Wired describes the lifecycle of a platform..... "Here is how platforms die: First, they are good to their users; then they abuse their users to make things better for their business customers; finally, they abuse those business customers to claw back all the value for themselves. Then, they die." The comparison to mobile phone companies will only be valid once there is significant competition. For our use that means Satellite Data aimed at recreational boaters. Once that comes, it is just a commodity where price competition drives the purchasing decision. I'm just afraid that may be quite a few years out.
It’s like the people who tell me they are going camping but show me pictures of themselves inside their giant trailers equipped with big TVs and all the modern conveniences. I think there is more adventure in ocean cruising though.
Land Starlink subscriber here. Musk's MO is big promises but failure to follow through. I was an early beta adopter, and at first, my download speeds were 200Mbps. And then things gradually slowed down. I searched on the Internet, and found others subscribers had a similar experience. The reason was simple: Starlink was rapidly signing up new subscribers, but it failed to keep pace by launching more and more satellites. And there is really no excuse here: Musk owns the space company employed to send the satellites into space. So my speeds are all over the road now. Though I live in rural CO, I am fortunate that the state provided funds for fiber optic cable for my neighborhood. Before the end of this year, it will be good riddance to Starlink, and hello to fiber optic. The 200 Mbps fiber optic plan is only 60.00 per month -- half what I am paying Starlink now.
When is go my first cell ph in New Zealand the calls cost $.70c/min a txt was $.70c and monthly plan was $70. The ph system cost $16000… you had to order it and wait for the call on the land line to come in and pick it up.. tot was a big deal in the telecom office and people would clap as the deal was done…. Saying that it made me hide money in the marine fishing industry… I could call thru with problems and order stores and fuel and trucks to unload fish for the export market. Things continue to get better all the time .
The cell phone analogy is spot on. We are in the wild-west of satellite pricing. When the European and Chinese competing satellites go up, it’s going to be quite interesting. There are so many rabbit holes to go down but, I will agree with @tyvandm about one thing: Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites could offer coverage across almost the entire sailable area of the globe. In fact, service over the ocean would be clearer because there are no obstructions across the entire horizon. Additionally, because the density of users in the middle of the ocean is so low, service would be quite fast. It wouldn’t cost the internet service provider anything extra to provide service across the entire ocean because the satellites are already there. Like with cell phones, the end product is going toward cell phones and iPads equipped with satellite connections at the price of something just above regular cell-phone service. Land service will be made moot, just as most people no longer own true copper landline POTS telephones. Amazon Kindle readers came with free 3G and no ads if you bought the most expensive machine. Of course that’s deprecated now, but for a while it was a thing. It’s likely a decade from now there will be some bottom-dollar machine with similar satellite service that will allow you to text, email or browse regardless of your global position. Love watching your channel and hearing your excellent perspectives. Stay safe out there!
in a way it's what offshore is all about, however, there are those that need the security of being infinitely connected like an umbilical.. Tech is moving forward at a fast pace, so options are opening up .. and then there is the peace and quiet offered by the on-off switch..
Love the videos - I could be wrong, however my understanding is that because Starlinks satellite network is a gigantic mesh of eventually thousands of satellites - this means that their hexagon coverage is always global. So, in theory, unless Starlink factored in a "cool down" phase when their boxes are flying out of coverage of land , across giant stretches of the ocean - and this logistically affects them ( I doubt it) - then logically the cost of full ocean coverage ought to be fully free, or very very very cheap for starlink to provide. The network is going to be flying over the oceans anyways, and due to the lower altitude of the network compared to older satellites like dish, it means they will be working - with no clients to service. You would think that starlink would want to get whatever $$ they can get out of the coverage they are providing, but some idiot in Corp billing probably equates boat = rich people, so charge atleast double. This move definitely reeks of the early cell phone days, and might unfortunately increase since there really is not going to be a competitor with Starlink for a long while. The closest is OneWeb - the UK version of Starlink, but that is very limited as there are international agreements for who has coverage over what spot and what altitudes.
There are islands in the Bahamas that they missed! Some people are getting this message now saying people living on land are in fact according to Starlink are in the ocean!
I didn't get THE 'email'... notwithstanding my liveaboard sloop has been in the same slip, same marina for 4 years... using my class C tcp/ip connection in the browser to take a peek at my SL router I read a nasty little note that I have been using my service outside the service address... I assume this is going to pumpout where the service address is still the service address I used to sign up... And, I've noticed the Availability hexagon is only partially over a small piece of land and the rest of the hexagon is over the GOM... ????
my first cell phone that i used was provided by my employer ,it was the size of a car battery and cost about £1.00 a minute to use ,that was about 40 years ago , now look at what you can get on an unlimited plan, Starlink has different charges world wide , i believe its $50.00 in the Phillipines ,Its £70.00 here in the Uk and $150.00 in the US per month
Your last few points are the big ones... the "point of presences" on the internet, POP if you will. When you have land available you can put as many POP's on fiber backbones as needed for the load. Out on the ocean you are limited to islands that may or may not have fiber internet connections for that backhaul to the main internet. This puts a strain on the older 2nd and 3rd gen starlink sats that don't have the throughput for sat to sat communication for a large amount of boats, airplanes and other things on the oceans. So I can understand their problems with bandwidth in those cases. I also understand that they had planned to have the newer sats up and running months ago that would handle this backhaul but due to the long FAA time delays and the first launch failure of Starship things just aren't rolling out as fast as they need to to keep up with demand. I've been a long time Starlink subscriber... back in the "better than nothing days" just to get away from Comcast's dead lock over my area. So there is my personal disclaimer, I'm a 3 year subscriber that has been through the ups and downs of Starlink and I still say on a bad day they are better than dealing with Comcast... that I had for over 20 years.
Tim, for those of us Great Lake sailors, can we use the basic service? I see that the hardware prices have dropped. Where do you see hardware prices going? Thanks.
When cell phone plans charged by the minute, cell phones all rounded DOWN the number of minutes you used. So a 2:30 call showed as two minutes, while the billing system rounded UP and charged you for three minutes. Every carrier did this, so if you dared to use 59 minutes on a 60 minute plan, you'd get an extra charge for ten or fifteen overtime minutes. Clever fraud, huh? All it takes is one change in one line of code to correct that, but none of the carriers ever did.
I wonder given Tim you are on a Lake... I did not get that email but I have not used my Starlink away from the doc yet.. as my boat is not in the water yet this season... so my question is... do they consider the "Great Lakes" at sea? the satellites that cover the land near the lakes are going to be the same ones that we use while on the lakes.. so.. :D just currious
Besides wanting to get more money out of wealthier customers, there's also the issue that on land, the satellite you use will connect directly to a nearby ground station. On the ocean, multiple satellites are needed to route you to a ground station.
Sat count does not justify cost increase for most oceanic areas. These sats are not geostationary because they are very low orbit, thus you need a constellation of sats with orbit trajectories all over the globe, hence covering most of the oceans.
We're currently sailing international,ly in Taiwan for the past two weeks. First, no Starlink in Taiwan. (worked great in Vietnam, the Philippines and during the passages between.) I got the message you got. Said I was using Starlink for the previous 30 days outside my continent. So $150 Roaming to $250 Mobil Priority 50/gig. We expect that as soon as we're out of Taiwanese waters it'll work again. $250/month for crossing the Pacific is no problem at all. But when I get back home in California? I'll want to get back to the cheap plan. Some Starlink options say there's no going back.... I can't see them sticking to this. My alternative would be to turn off Starlink instead of spending $250/month (+$75/month for my house connection - unlimited.) And yeah, I end up confused by all the names for stuff. Amazon is a big company and they have a rocket subsidiary Blue Origin -- but they have yet to put a rocket into orbit. So how are they going to compete with Space X?
250 a month for high speed internet on the ocean is a steal. The maritime option prior to this was like 5-10k month and the fact they knowingly let folks use residential on ocean was just a gift to the cruising community. 50G limit with 100 month for every 50G after that is reasonable. My recommendation: starlink while in ocean or on hook without cell and use your cell when you have coverage.
I use to be a Sat /Comms/Network engineer. Worked for two major Cruise Lines. As per your possible inquiry on 8:45 - No, it does NOT cost Starlink any more if you are on land or ocean. Starlink satellites do not work the same as the old satellite style does. The old style was that a customer linked/pointed to a satellite that was in high orbit (geosynchronous orbit) Which just means it's stationary above one area like satellite DISH TV and therefore cover MANY customers with one Sat. With Starlink satellites the customer links to one satellite that orbits in a non-geostationary orbit and your dish finds the next following starlink satellite and connects to it before losing the previous link as it moves out of your line-of-sight hence the need for many starlink satellites (hence the starlink net). Since these Starlink satellites are circling the Earth and passing over land AND WATER the "Many customers to one satellite" (old way) does NOT apply and therefore does NOT cost any more. -- What does cost is the production of so many satellites and rocket ship launches to put them up in space and so to get as much money for funding as quickly as possible they charge more money to those customers that are "different" using that "different" excuse to charge more. Those satellites are NOT doing anything different to ocean connections as they are to land connections. --- Great video, thank you.
I was going to add the same comment, Starlink satellites are at a much lower orbit, which is why internet latency (ping rate) is much better than old geostationary satellite internet. If I remember correctly geostationary orbit is ~36,000 km above the earth; I think Starlink orbits at 550 km? So with such a low orbit, they have to speed around the planet orbiting earth once every ~1.6 hours. They have to put a bunch up there anyways to always have satellites over land so why not treat the ocean like a regular day of internet seeing as there are satellites there anyways, not like there are a tonne of people overloading the connection between satellites over the ocean. I agree, this seems more like a method to recover infrastructure costs.
EDIT: Change geosynchronous to Geostationary
So the sooner starlink needs to get the idea that cruisers are a bonus source of revenue to the fixed land based customers.
So...I think that there are far fewer users to satellite that covers the ocean areas...so...it costs more per user. If these near shore users are part of the on land group...then the maritime service has even fewer users. Because there are a finite number of boats in the world that would pay for this service...having those near shore users act as if they are on land...undermines the potential profitability of the maritime service. All of this has to be paid off by itself within a certain amount of time and make money before the end of life for the maritime satellites. This is why they are doing this.
The one thing not mentioned, the inter satellite links are not established in a meaningful way, so the down link is a possible bandwidth limiting issue. No ground stations out there so everyone is sharing the limited available downlinks.
@@mikegrindstaff The Starlink Sats "don't know" there are no customers in the oceans, not more, not less....Starlink sats just have to cross the oceans no matter if there are zero customers. The HAVE to circle the Earth.
I remember my dad looking for a used car in the newspaper.
Before deciding on calling the owner, he would page through the phone book to see if that number was a local call, a zone call, or long distance.
How things have changed!
Now the landline runs around $70/mo before the first call and the phone book doesn't tell you which prefixes will raise that. (living in a cellular near-dead spot)
What's a "newspaper"?
You very accurately conveyed what has transpired. Look forward to Amazon satellite packages! Competition can be quite beneficial for consumers. Take Care
Amazon has a good reason to learn how to get something into Orbit, then, which it never has so far. $250/mo for 50Gb is $5/Gb, barely more than my cellphone data contract.
Great analysis of this. I do think that $250 is still a pretty amazing price for oceanwide, on demand, high speed internet. This price will be driven down, but it's a groundbreaking technology. It won't be cheap for a while.
Do you realize his billionaire, has put up satellites in space That's not his area.. when are people going to wake up and realize that these billionaires shouldn't be getting all these subsidies. And if they get them they shouldn't be gouging us. Funny thing if the government raised taxes on people they'd be crying up and down the storm. Let these billionaires make a fortune, oh it's okay.
People you've got to wake up
Some sailors got a very tight monthly budget, for some that extra 250 per month is too much.
@@yoshy2628 so they don't get fast internet. My point is, 5 years ago it would have cost 10s of thousands of dollars for starlink speeds, if you could even find a consumer product to do it. At least $250 is achievable.
@@yoshy2628then they can’t afford the luxury.
Starlink will go under when subsidies stop or when they fail to increase them. Starlink revenue in no way can cover the launch costs for 3 to 4 year life satellites.
Tim, you do a really good job of communicating. Well done!
I wish Starlink was listening.
Having an internet connection while traveling on the open sea is a huge safety gain. Using the service to watch videos is not on my menu. But getting accurate and timely weather data, connecting with shore-based support (engine trouble, for example), and keeping loved ones assured with our progress reporting are all extremely valuable. I wish they would offer a lower-speed version so that email, text messaging and basic phone service stayed up.
They could even make a slow connection for less $ for sailors even 1 or 2 mbps is enough
That's what Iridium is for, and why every sailboat I know that sails internationally has an iridium satellite system.
I think you're onto something. Even though Iridium GO is a thing, having a single service that can do both sure sounds like a good idea. Honestly no reason why they can't just make that the default behavior rather than shutting off access completely.
@@2011bluemanexactly, I think some people would complain no matter what.
Whats the speed on iridium? Whats the bandwidth? Whats the monthly cost? There are options to Starlink, but thats like going back 20 years to dialup era for same price lol.
Well done, as always. Thanks for doing the digging and the honest (and spot on!) explanation of what it all means.
The call-back to the cell-phone and internet of the late 90s/early 00s was really insightful, and accurate.
yep
Another work around that might help some is to setup a Raspberry Pi and run Jellyfin on it with modest sized SSD ~2gb and store all of your media backups for your own off grid boat based Netflix !
I do this with my phone and a 1tb sd card.
@@TimHayward Thanks for sharing that too !!! You could cable connect with an OTG cable for a larger drive but I really like the simplicity of your setup plus you could just have multiple 1gb sd cards !
2GB for "hosting your own Netflix"? How's that going to work when that's barely 3 movies at 700mb each.
@@BangBangBang. Haha ....correct I meant 2tb ...... most of the compressed movies are 1.2gb with still pretty good quality probably get about 150 movies on a 2tb...give or take
Very level headed expiation of the current situation! Thanks
Regarding cost over sea vs over land - Starlink is very different from satellite internet before. The satellites are not geosynchronous!!
That means they are not stationary over an area; instead they use a vast network/constellation of little and relatively inexpensive satellites all zipping around and communicating with each other. This means that the coverage at sea is mostly just "accidental". Of course they are happy to proved service (and collect revenue) by supplying internet to boats at sea. But those satellites would be there regardless even if they only wanted to provide internet to land.
So no, it is not more expensive for them to provide internet to boats. They just know that people with boats are more likely to accept a higher price tag.
I've been waiting to see what happens with starlink to see if I get it. Thanks for testing the waters for the rest of us!
From what I understand:
The number of starlink satellites over any latitude is effectively constant. But, they need to relay each other's signals to one that is over a ground station. Apparently that becomes more difficult as the amount of satellites that need to relay signals increases. That and the capacity of ground stations seem to be what's limiting starlink for a lot of regions. Also, some jurisdictions are preventing ground station installations.
I can't even begin to imagine how much this infrastructure is costing. Heck the rocket launch alone. What is it like 15-20 satellites per launch? Like Bryant mentioned all the ground stations needed. I'm pretty sure Starlink is operating at a loss right now. Now Amazon is wanting to put their own version of starlink in the sky. Me personally could get by with the $250 plan on a boat. I'd be mainly just be using it for weather updates, and doing research on how to fix problems that come up on the boat if I can't figure it out. 50Gig should be plenty of data for that. Last time I did the cruiser life style there was no civilian internet and GPS was unaffordable. Yah I'm old!
I liked your video and learned a few things about billing options. I just have the static land version at the moment. I did want to comment on how Starlink works in relation to your comment about out in the ocean. It doesn't really cost them more, but it is a limited resource (at the moment). Two things are going on: (1) There are pretty much the same number of satellites over any given latitude at any one time. IOW, there are just as many serving over the mid Atlantic at 40.7 degrees latitude as there are over New York city. Since there are no users out there (relatively speaking) the satellites have really nothing to do. Having anybody hitting one would be just free money to them. (2) BUT...over land, when you browse to some site, it goes to the satellite and then directly back down to a ground station then to the site. At mid-Atlantic, that satellite that is serving the boat, can't see the ground station. It must relay to one or more other satellites to finally reach the ground station. So... you are using more resources for your connection out in mid ocean. The problem is... the first generation of satellites did NOT have this relay capability. It is my understanding that the first ones that did are the ones launched on a polar orbit out of Vandenberg in California... and there are very few of those satellites comparatively, but enough to handle the current high-end ocean customers (and the military). As time goes on, all the satellites are supposed to have that capability and hopefully there will be no reason for high costs, except to gouge what the market will bare.
it's not gouging. i hate how people think a business making money is evil. NO people expecting free stuff is EVIL. consumers are the biggest parasites around. like blaming oil companies for global warming. absolutely wrong. it's the users not the suppliers that cause the problem
@@ronblack7870 Well, maybe in your mind the word gouging conjured up negative visions of some socialist. I don't have any problem with their capitalism. The point I'm trying to make, Starlink has limited resources at the moment, so they can justify the huge price for mid-ocean Internet AND they have to, to keep it from overburdening the current resources. Once they flesh-out with interlinking satellites, I'm sure they'll re-address the "bottom line" where the lower price can permit private sailors of sub-million $ boats to justify getting it and thus make even more profit by numbers.
You are doing an amazing job, keeping us informed, especially about Starlink.
Anyone here remember pagers? In the beginning only ER doctors could afford them. Before they became completely obsolete they offered unlimited text for about $8 a month.
Remember VHF radio tel service .. my trucks all had the,..
I remember 8 track tapes....
@@RonKris I remember roadsides festooned like buntings with jammed tapes ... sitting for hours in a sleeper rewinding them along with the 4 tracks..
ER doctors and drug dealers... ;-)
I just got my Starlink with a Roam/Mobile Regional service for my boat on Lake Ontario. This works for what I am doing since not on the Ocean. The option for the mobile priority that allows for use in motion and on the water is like double to cost and only 50GB. The Canadian price I see is $320. As Tim says this will all change. So stay awake!
Here in Chile, today, Starlink Chile is offering a maritime plan worth Ch$257,411 (Chilean peso) per month, that is, US$320.21, with equipment worth Ch$2,536,000, which is equivalent to US$3,153.84.
Here in the US the maritime plan costs $250 a month now, so you're being ripped off due to exchange rates.
@@2011blueman Starlink prices are different in each country, depending in local internet prices. I'm paying about $70 for (non-mobile) Starlink in the Netherlands.
Starlink has just deployed a set of "high Earth orbit" (instead of the common low Earth orbit) satellites. They are further away with a bit of time lag. There are only a few of them and they were deployed for airlines, ocean-going freighters and cruise ships. They are huge, compared to the earlier version.
these satellites are for (what we call) backhaul functions. they are not used by the subscribers on the ground.
Both 1.5 and V2 minis have laser links, also so few of V2 have been deployed that, those can't really yet to make difference in coverage. And 1.5 and V2 are near same orbital height. There are V2s in 950 km orbit but those are for SDA e.g. military coms.
One of the problems not mentioned here is ground stations. Satellites require ground stations to function. Until there is a heavy saturation of inter-satellite links (laser), data must be transferred via (legacy) radios from sat to sat until there is a sat with a viable ground station link. Since there are no ground stations in the middle of the ocean, this makes it very hard to predict throughput/load/bandwidth/etc throughout the system, possibly degrading service for people that are using the service according to the agreed terms.
Hey Tim, thanks for your quick response to this recent news. Always appreciated. Cheers.
Thank you. Very helpful.
It's one of the best use cases for their product. I can't believe they would make it this difficult/expensive to use it that way. If i was Starlink i would do everything to prove they power of my product.
You need to see that Elon Musk just cares about bringing in tons of money from his customers while him and his company is always focused on government money (Tesla tax credits, SpaceX competing with NASA, etc)
How much does it cost per Gb? That makes the difference between it being extortionate and the price of a burger. I get 6Gb a month on my smartphone plan. How much would that cost me?
There are many reasons, including the fact that they need to provide land users that are using the service according to the contract, and minimal bandwidth to comply with the regulation for the frequency lease.
@@BangBangBang. well he has spent megatons of money on the system and they are not yet breaking even . so there is nothing greedy about it. they have like a million customers so far. that's only maybe 150 million/ month . yet it costs like 15 billion to put the system up . and they have operating costs as well . spcex6 has over 6000 employees.
We received a email 4 months ago from Starlink (ground based) saying our service will be cut back because we use to much data (2 seniors with IPads on most of the time and internet TV so we were sometimes using 1T an month so we cut back on our usage to prevent our service from being downgraded. Yesterday we received a email saying that our service will not be downgraded and we can use as much data as we want anytime peak or off peak times as well our monthly cost will be going down and if we want we can buy a additional dish for 20% ($1000) of what we paid for our present dish. It’s all a bit confusing just like Twitter 🤪
we did too , and it's our getaway cabin at lake ..
You're right that infrastructure for boats costs more, but for the wrong reasons. Starlink satellites are not in geosynchronous orbit. So they MUST have enough satellites to cover the ocean, just to get good coverage on land. ie: each satellite goes all the way around the Earth, so you need to fill that ring with enough satellites that your target service area is always covered. However, Starlink satellites can communicate with three things: your dishy, a ground-based access point, and each other. To service the land, the dishy sends to the satellite which sends to the ground-based access point. On the ocean, there is no ground-based access point, so instead, your dishy talks to the satellite which talks to a satellite which talks to a satellite which eventually reaches a ground-based access point. So to service requests on the ocean takes significantly more power and bandwidth than over land.
Thank you for the most reasoned brief on what's happening, that I've seen so far. And I don't expect a better one, anytime soon.
Experience definitely enables us to take a broader and longer view of events. In my own case, this ability took far too long to develop! ;)
The reason why Starlink is doing that is that their satellite mesh is fed the data by ground stations. They cannot have any ground stations in the ocean, so getting the data there requires many more hops between satellites and loads the mesh significantly more than a typical ground usage. (The low earth orbit satellites are always orbiting at high speed, so there are no satellites above a certain location permanently.)
50gigs will stream more than 100 hours of TH-cam at 480p, honestly do we all really need to watch 3-4 hours of TH-cam everyday?
I guess on an ocean passage that might be nice, but I'm going to blow your mind right now; Every movie ever made in existence is on the internet and available to download right this second.
Also, what's the point of going to sea if you're just going to spend the whole time watching TV? Seems like an expensive and bumpy couch to me!
a very fast cabnle internet connection ,frostwire, expressvpn and a windows laptop and 3 external usb internet antennas and one very big ass external hard drive for storage.. in two years you can collect over 5 terebites of movies.. tv series, and youtube videos.. when i hit the water next year, ill have all the entertainment i will ever need.. and i wont even have a cellphone on my boat. gunna toss that sucker in the water...
The way i see it. 250.00 a month for internet at sea is cheap as chips. 8.00 a day. I remember intennet caffe at 6.00 per hour or maybe 2.00 at a cheap shop.
The ability to pause is key for me. If that goes away, so do i.
Thanks for this timely video. I was planning on getting Starlink (thinking it was to be at $130/mo) in just a few months.
Well done.
On the satellite coverage of starlink ... no. Starlink is contellations of leo sattelites that basically fly across the sky in formation. The dish is actually a phased array antenna that can track and steer the beam to multiple sattelites near simultaineously ... as one sat begins to pass out of view the next sat in view becomes active. In a maritime environment the signal has to be crosslinked from satellite to satellite until it gets a sat in view of a NOC ... could be 2 hops, could be 10. There are near impercetable breaks in the data stream, vpn services don't like it and often drop. All of these extra crosslinks do have a monetary value for starlink. Most boaters are using either the RV or Business antenna, which arent really designed for marine use, the roll, pitch and yaw of a boat will excessively wear the tiny stepping motors. With US DoD and many commercial shipping companies contracting Starlink services i suspect they are going to be a bit more draconian in enforcing the terms of service so they can more accurately determine what bandwidth they can guarantee to those contracts.
As it is, many boaters are intentionally and willfully breaking the terms of service which they agreed to and are now angry Starlink has finally had enough ...
Havent seen the approvals for amazons service ...
Also ... no I dont work for Elon ... but I am a communications manager for a very large shipping company.
THANK YOU !
I know the $250 a month for only 220MBps seems expensive to folks who have gotten used to sub $100 per month Gigabit terrestrial broadband in urban areas. But sailors at sea have been paying around $100 per month for Iridium Go service that has a 2.4 kbps (no that's not a typo) data rate that reminds me of my childhood CompuServe dial up. I think sooner rather than later, Starlink will treat RV's and Sailboats the same and allow the RV service to be used within a couple miles of the coast as long as they are "stationary", meaning anchored or in a marina. The easiest way to do it would just be to geofence the unit when you power it on with a rule that says something like, "the service works only within 250 meters of the powerup location". Just my opinion. I could be wrong.
You're assuming that Starlink doesn't go out of business. I think it's going to go bankrupt just like Iridium originally did.
@@2011blueman Starlink is currently billions in the black and growing massively every year. Do try to get your information from places other than CNN.
Launching a single satellite into space can cost anywhere between $10 million and $400 million, depending on the vehicle used. A small launch vehicle such as the Pegasus XL rocket can lift 976 pounds (443 kilograms) into low-Earth orbit for about $13.5 million. That works out to be almost $14,000 per pound.
The re-usable Falcon 9 flight costs is about $20 million for 55 Starlink v1.5 satellites, 675 lb each, so about $540 per pound. (Internal cost for SpaceX. External customers pay upto $60 million per flight, still 10x cheaper than Pegasus XL.)
When the government breaks up the monopoly on communication maybe some resellers will play fair, meanwhile its up to us to stay informed, so thaks for the insight Tim..!
PS
In the early 2000's I had T-Mobile in California & had a fraudulent charge appear on my bill but the team corrected it within my very 1st call.. wheras here in B.C. 🇨🇦 I had a similar fraudulent charge appear & although the initial tech support (Rogers isp) was very understanding & assured me that it will be FIXED for SURE.. the ordeal has been ongoing for 1 YEAR.. with no end in sight...! So, again, we must keep informed when a rogue capitalist decides to cheat consumers simply bc they can.
PSS
Great segment man..!
Can I use starlink mini on ocean with mobile priority plan..?
As a kid I watched startrek and and wished I had a communicator and when the motorola startac 3000 dropped in the 90s i said to my mate look this is literally the startrek communicator from 15 years ago and we just both sat there spinning out that what we watched as kids is now a reality, now i look at today and see the replicators as 3d printers from digital to physical in minutes, i cant wait to see where we will be in 50 years, BEAM ME UP SCOTTY!!!
Starlink sats are in low earth orbit (LEO) which means they orbit faster than the earth rotates in order to stay up in orbit (generally about 30,000 km/h) - as opposed to geosynchronous orbit (such as most television and communications satellites) which orbit at the same speed that earth rotates (roughly 18,500 km/h). What this means is that they need more satellites, moving at faster speeds in order to make sure that you always have satellite coverage. Also, the lower down a satellite is, the smaller its coverage area, again necessitating more satellites. Priority for the early satellites was for the orbits that would cover high population densities, however now as they complete the network, the lower densities are also being filled in - remember this is Starlink’s main competitive advantage that they cover areas that are not well served by high speed Internet (let alone affordable broadband). All of this is to say that your analysis at 8:55 is a little bit off - there is actually no additional incremental cost to Starlink for the offshore coverage since the satellites must move through those areas of spares population regardless as they orbit in LEO. What is different is that Starlink has competition from those lower cost options that you mentioned via cellular networks for land-based customers. Furthermore, Starlink could make agreements with those cell providers and make use of a hybrid cellular/satellite configuration in order to achieve max speeds while reducing traffic on the space segment of the network. So all that to say that the only differences between at-sea and near-shore or onshore is competition and that at-sea customers are more willing to pay more because of fewer options - both things that you touched on. And totally agree that this absolutely mirrors the cell phone wars of the late 90s and early 2000s.
Small tidbit- the first sstarlink sats were for connecting the financial institutions (stock market transactions) and cost a fortune to use. They had better latency (speed) which enabled faster transactions wich generated huge $s out of milliseconds. Time is indeed money!
Thank you. This is the best explanation I have seen yet!
The biggest reason for the starlink changes ,, is that us boaters found a great loophole and had the world, but instead of staying quiet they went shouting and bragging on every media
N.a. na na , and here we are , the secret is out and the loophole will close,
Or , the loophole was placed like a baited hook .
@@paulkopp3634 look at the sailing world compared to van livers , its a tiny market , the amount of live aboard that actually move country to country is a fraction of less than0 .25% of 1% the population ,, so no more like he didn't evan think about sailing , and still doesn't, but one of his staff read whats happening , for get live aboard, most don't leave there local area so not effected
@@paulkopp3634 Yep people rushed out and bought hardware who were going to by now....
@@paulkopp3634 Yep people rushed out and bought hardware who were going to by now..
@@cwgruber1 still loads will buy , its still a great deal ,
Confusing, only allowed to use starlink in a land-based scenario with a non-land-based satellite. I guess a outerspace device is now landlocked.
I think the land-based Roam plan is all non-priority. The new plan gets you the certain amount of priority internet. When that runs out it goes ack to the same speed you get from Roam. I would think unless you are moored near a city, you won't notice much of a speed drop because traffic will be low. I don't have it so I could be wrong. But I am looking to pick it up soon and will get the $250/mo plan. We still work from the boat and it is worth the cost to us at this time.
Hope all is well. I'd help if iI could. And yes, starlink's new plans do sound like the early days of cellular.
Please consider doing a video on sailboats for tall folks. 6' 5" and good luck finding a boat with headroom and a berth long enough to sleep well in. Thanks.
my late brother had same problem
I Heard Starlink's Satellites Cover the Planet, It's Just Some Aren't Active. You May Be 100 Miles from Cook Islands, and There Are Sats Up There, but Not Active Because No Customers. If You're in Shipping Lanes, You May Get Better Prices, Internet Speeds. Yadda, Yadda...Now, I'm Just Rambling.
Great Video!!
We used to use iridium in The antarctic those plans were something like 5k a month for 10gigs 250$ sounds like a bargain
Traditional marine satellite internet is still insanely expensive. $250 a month for the speed starlink offers is a great price.
The issue is the service there doesn't seem to be a difference between the service offered on land or at sea? So the only reason for the higher cost is it seems a bargain against other existing options.
@@DrRusty5 Technically the marine starlink panel is higher latency, but yes you are right. He is charging more because comparatively speaking it's still a 'great deal." While I understand how his pricing might seem unfair, his service is still far better and cheaper than his competition so I still view it as a "win."
👍🏼glad to see you back
The one thing not mentioned, the inter satellite links are not established in a meaningful way, so the down link is a possible bandwidth limiting issue. No ground stations out there so everyone is sharing the limited available downlinks.
Thanks Tim, really relevant commentary
Watching this today 10 July 2024 Star Link's cheapest boat subscription is £247 monthly ($316US) for 50gb In-Motion / Ocean use with unlimited inland data. I wonder if simply in port or bay anchored counts as "inland. By comparison though unlimited data starlink for a house is £75 a month. Oh and the required hardware is an additinal £2470 GBP ($3160 USD ). We appear to have to pay more for the service than the US. [ I used my vpn to compare prices and we do have to pay significantly more than the US ]
I got that email.... I'm a TRUCK DRIVER. I couldn't sail anywhere if i wanted to!
That was really a great explanation. Thanks. Send it to all the macro econ teachers you know. It's all in there: supply and demand, elasticity of demand, competition, fixed costs, variable costs, monopoly power, government regulations, and of course avarice. And much more. Oh, also the historical perspective, And maybe send it to the engineering. Heck, put the whole thing on the internet. Oh, yeh. It is. Never mind.
if you do business from your boat, should be able to deduct cost as a business expense.
What about Emergency service. On land we had to include 911 & GPS positioning emergency service. I would expect that same from every provider.
Imagine NOT being able to send an SOS because the JackAss in the sailboat pitching about watching reruns of Friends while uploading his kids Only Fans accounts...
what you call early days of cell plans is pretty much the modern setup in australia lol
considering I use to pay 6 bucks-ish a minute for sat phone service ..working in Sub- Sahara Africa with a Calgary phone number .. was cheaper to travel to town and use the consular phones a data links ..
Tim, beware turning your dish on/off. If you 'land' in a country where service isn't offered, you might not reconnect.
Switch on/off billing is simple, Starlink made it when you switch on, it converts your entire month to the new plan for the month, even if you turn it off.
Glad I've waited. I'll continue to wait to see the Amazon offering in 2024.
Yeah, maybe in 2024 they might get a rocket into orbit... 🤣
Sending good vibes your way, I have some heavy personal stuff going on as well and taking some time out for yourself is necessary & good. I had heard about the Starlink Kerfuffle..good video :) ..I remember the early days of cell phones "oh, you want to have a dial tone? That will be extra...text messages???? whooooowheeeeeeee, sign this loan application"
@@Toniitony it is a mantra these days
Great explanation. I'm grizzly enough to remember very early cell days. We are on a journey no doubt.
250.00 smackers and there's cap FOGETABOUTIT! Great vid btw, thanx.
I bought my starlink here in Mexico its 1350 pesos per month which is about $72 a month and 40 pesos per GB which is about $2.00 per GB
so for me its cheap
I had been curious about the Starling service for maritime use. I see a lot of the land based systems. I have to agree on the paying for infrastructure aspect and billing models. Very similar to the cell phones, text messages and long distance calling scenarios. Thanks for sharing.
The issue with Starlink is that the infrastructure was front loaded. The satellites are up and are traveling around the earth already. There's no functional reason to charge boaters more than land users, other than Elon feels anyone cruising around the world can afford it. Sadly, many people who would be perfect candidates for Starlink service are cruisers on a tight budget.
Again, the Starlink satellites are so revolutionary because they are not in geosynchronous orbit. They don't orbit the earth in a fixed position. They are lower and traveling around the earth. A land based user is using multiple satellites. Instead of driving between cell phone towers, it's like the cell phone towers flying past you and your phone (or the Starlink receiver) connects to the next one before dropping the current one.
A sailboat, even a fast catamaran is only traveling maybe 25 mph. The Starlink satellites are cruising at a cool 17,000 mph. What's the effective difference of zero mph (a land based "home" user) to an 8 mph (more reasonable sailing speed) ocean user compared to the satellite's 17,000 mph. Elon isn't putting up extra satellites to handle sea service and sea service isn't stealing from land service throughput because it's different satellites, while at the same time being the same satellites (remember the cell phone towers flying past analogy).
@@Texas240 I see your point . I must admit, plenty of this feels like a cash grab. I thought the same about the text message thing. And it may we'll be. I also know that those rockets and the fuel they consume were not cheap to build or refuel, nor were the satellites cheap to design and manufacture. It's not like they took Bluetooth speakers from Walmart and shot them into space with some kids hobby rocket. I think some day in the future as the tech becomes more mainstream you will begin to see $35 a month basic packages like modern cell phones. I am no expert, just an honest opinion. As pre-loaded as the tech deployment may have been it was more then likely built with and still financed by leveraged assets somewhere. I cannot therefore disagree with the cost of services.The infrastructure may be there, but it is still being paid for. Just an opinion mind you.
I use Starlink at my house, but I have the mobile package because it was available immediately, and residential was a two year waiting list. Odd, considering it’s the same equipment. Anyway, I just went into the app and looked at the mobile option for use on the ocean, and it says “In motion use supported with approved hardware.” Does that mean you have to buy the more expensive Dishy to use it at sea?
When you switch plans you have to wait out the rest of your billing cycle to switch back in most cases. That's what I've heard...so you can't just switch willy nilly whenever you want without a penalty period...I think there might be an internal tier system to that governs how quickly you can switch.
A few things... it doesn't cost Starlink anything more to operate over water than it does to operate over land. The satellites are not stationary, so they all travel over water to create the constellation that they have now. When the satellites travel over water, they are simply not getting used as much as the ones that are over land. From a financial perspective, they would want more people using the ones over water more often since it allowed them to reduce their operations costs.
As far as data goes, 50GB per month is more than enough for the average user. That would equate to roughly 60 hours of Netflix watching or 2 hours per day. When we lived in the RV (family of 4), we used about 65GB per month and that was with me working a full-time job where I was online for 8 hours per day and our children attended online school classes.
Correction, it does not cost them any extra to service oceans because of the style of satellite being used. Geostationary satellite such as viasat do cost more to service the ocean because they have a cone of service that has to be directed at an area to supply service. SpaceX satellites are in LEO which means they have to cross the ocean anyway to service land based customers. They only charge more because they can charge more.
People outside of the USA often don't realise that they have no legal protection against Starlink, whereas if they used a local service their own country laws would/may offer some protection. For example UK, Australia or New Zealand have fantastic consumer protection laws as well as misleading advertising protection laws, unlike the USA.
I see that Delos is crossing the Pacific and has been posting, I think with Starlink. I wonder which plan they are using. The Viasat system they were using was removed because it doesn't cover the Pacific. I think the cost of the Viasat was $5,000/month, if you had to pay the fee.
Great work Tim thanks :)
Yo! Thank you at the end with your explanation of why it is expensive and the cell phone analogy is a great one.
I was under the impression that the small dishy is NOT authorized for in motion use. Regardless if you change your plan.
There is also a french one that is being trialled atm.
I am not sure atm if it will be full internet connection or just access to weather associated items.
Either way it is another choice. 😃
Being on the ocean requires use of the new V2 Starlink satellite which can communicate sat-2-sat via laser. There are not very many of these launched yet. So service is limited. Near shore the v1 says can directly communicate with ground. I doubt these expensive rates will last more than a few years.
I love how Canadian the “I’m soarry was”
That's not too bad! Yes it's expensive! But there are options that can be enabled/ changed anytime. I don't see an issue other than the massive price for the mobile usage option.
I do look forward to Starlink dropping in price and see the massive use to sailors!
There is a specific package for ships and a lot of sailors are using the mobile base station indented for campers. I'm sure there is some opportunistic pricing going on here on the part of Starlink but this isn't just that. TCP packets ping back and forth, when the packet fails or you fail to get a confirmation, the internet keeps sending it over and over again. So using the wrong service causes more packet problems and you are resending again and again and clogging up the entire network. The sailing package prices in the extra bandwidth you use, and the hardware adjusts faster to reduce the package loss. So again, they may be gouging you on the cruising plan but there is something real behind it all.
Perhaps, it’s all due to a lack of competition. A license to use outer space should come with a caveat, no price gouging.
Terms of Service? A friend had an IMTS mobile phone active in his car when a large piston airliner crashed on takeoff. He parked his car in the middle of the mess, opened the doors, and let every emergency, doctor, fireman, and aviation person call unlimited and unhampered. The result was a mobile phone bill that needed a handtruck. The phone company realized that almost all these calls were dire unselfish emergencies, and they plucked out the monthly fee, circled the rest with a red pen, and made them disappear. Sailboats are among the most likely Starlink users to find themselves in the rescue role. They are the most likely customers to find a collision, fire, piracy, storm wreck, or plane downing of any vessel. ...About sea bandwidth. Sea bandwidth utilizes almost completely unburdened horizontal relay Starlinks. The relay eventually reaches shore based Starlink ground connections. If every Pitcairn, Galapagos, Midway, sailboat, junk, and swordfish sailor surfed Starlink, heavily, they would hardly put a scratch in the service, and they would be dipping into the cheapest bandwidth of all. Starlink was supposed to become friendlier and cheaper. They have lost their way.
.... Wired describes the lifecycle of a platform.....
"Here is how platforms die: First, they are good to their users; then they abuse their users to make things better for their business customers; finally, they abuse those business customers to claw back all the value for themselves. Then, they die."
The comparison to mobile phone companies will only be valid once there is significant competition. For our use that means Satellite Data aimed at recreational boaters. Once that comes, it is just a commodity where price competition drives the purchasing decision. I'm just afraid that may be quite a few years out.
Let's buy a boat & escape from this mad world. "Only if we can have Starlink". Hello.
😄
It’s like the people who tell me they are going camping but show me pictures of themselves inside their giant trailers equipped with big TVs and all the modern conveniences.
I think there is more adventure in ocean cruising though.
Land Starlink subscriber here. Musk's MO is big promises but failure to follow through. I was an early beta adopter, and at first, my download speeds were 200Mbps. And then things gradually slowed down. I searched on the Internet, and found others subscribers had a similar experience. The reason was simple: Starlink was rapidly signing up new subscribers, but it failed to keep pace by launching more and more satellites. And there is really no excuse here: Musk owns the space company employed to send the satellites into space. So my speeds are all over the road now. Though I live in rural CO, I am fortunate that the state provided funds for fiber optic cable for my neighborhood. Before the end of this year, it will be good riddance to Starlink, and hello to fiber optic. The 200 Mbps fiber optic plan is only 60.00 per month -- half what I am paying Starlink now.
When is go my first cell ph in New Zealand the calls cost $.70c/min a txt was $.70c and monthly plan was $70. The ph system cost $16000… you had to order it and wait for the call on the land line to come in and pick it up.. tot was a big deal in the telecom office and people would clap as the deal was done…. Saying that it made me hide money in the marine fishing industry… I could call thru with problems and order stores and fuel and trucks to unload fish for the export market. Things continue to get better all the time .
Very good perspective
The cell phone analogy is spot on. We are in the wild-west of satellite pricing. When the European and Chinese competing satellites go up, it’s going to be quite interesting. There are so many rabbit holes to go down but, I will agree with @tyvandm about one thing: Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites could offer coverage across almost the entire sailable area of the globe. In fact, service over the ocean would be clearer because there are no obstructions across the entire horizon. Additionally, because the density of users in the middle of the ocean is so low, service would be quite fast. It wouldn’t cost the internet service provider anything extra to provide service across the entire ocean because the satellites are already there. Like with cell phones, the end product is going toward cell phones and iPads equipped with satellite connections at the price of something just above regular cell-phone service. Land service will be made moot, just as most people no longer own true copper landline POTS telephones. Amazon Kindle readers came with free 3G and no ads if you bought the most expensive machine. Of course that’s deprecated now, but for a while it was a thing. It’s likely a decade from now there will be some bottom-dollar machine with similar satellite service that will allow you to text, email or browse regardless of your global position.
Love watching your channel and hearing your excellent perspectives. Stay safe out there!
Sometimes it makes sense to be unplugged. I know that people need the internet for work but I appreciate moments when I don't have access to the web.
in a way it's what offshore is all about, however, there are those that need the security of being infinitely connected like an umbilical..
Tech is moving forward at a fast pace, so options are opening up .. and then there is the peace and quiet offered by the on-off switch..
Love the videos - I could be wrong, however my understanding is that because Starlinks satellite network is a gigantic mesh of eventually thousands of satellites - this means that their hexagon coverage is always global. So, in theory, unless Starlink factored in a "cool down" phase when their boxes are flying out of coverage of land , across giant stretches of the ocean - and this logistically affects them ( I doubt it) - then logically the cost of full ocean coverage ought to be fully free, or very very very cheap for starlink to provide. The network is going to be flying over the oceans anyways, and due to the lower altitude of the network compared to older satellites like dish, it means they will be working - with no clients to service.
You would think that starlink would want to get whatever $$ they can get out of the coverage they are providing, but some idiot in Corp billing probably equates boat = rich people, so charge atleast double.
This move definitely reeks of the early cell phone days, and might unfortunately increase since there really is not going to be a competitor with Starlink for a long while. The closest is OneWeb - the UK version of Starlink, but that is very limited as there are international agreements for who has coverage over what spot and what altitudes.
There are islands in the Bahamas that they missed! Some people are getting this message now saying people living on land are in fact according to Starlink are in the ocean!
I didn't get THE 'email'... notwithstanding my liveaboard sloop has been in the same slip, same marina for 4 years... using my class C tcp/ip connection in the browser to take a peek at my SL router I read a nasty little note that I have been using my service outside the service address... I assume this is going to pumpout where the service address is still the service address I used to sign up... And, I've noticed the Availability hexagon is only partially over a small piece of land and the rest of the hexagon is over the GOM... ????
my first cell phone that i used was provided by my employer ,it was the size of a car battery and cost about £1.00 a minute to use ,that was about 40 years ago , now look at what you can get on an unlimited plan, Starlink has different charges world wide , i believe its $50.00 in the Phillipines ,Its £70.00 here in the Uk and $150.00 in the US per month
Your last few points are the big ones... the "point of presences" on the internet, POP if you will. When you have land available you can put as many POP's on fiber backbones as needed for the load. Out on the ocean you are limited to islands that may or may not have fiber internet connections for that backhaul to the main internet. This puts a strain on the older 2nd and 3rd gen starlink sats that don't have the throughput for sat to sat communication for a large amount of boats, airplanes and other things on the oceans. So I can understand their problems with bandwidth in those cases. I also understand that they had planned to have the newer sats up and running months ago that would handle this backhaul but due to the long FAA time delays and the first launch failure of Starship things just aren't rolling out as fast as they need to to keep up with demand. I've been a long time Starlink subscriber... back in the "better than nothing days" just to get away from Comcast's dead lock over my area. So there is my personal disclaimer, I'm a 3 year subscriber that has been through the ups and downs of Starlink and I still say on a bad day they are better than dealing with Comcast... that I had for over 20 years.
Tim, for those of us Great Lake sailors, can we use the basic service? I see that the hardware prices have dropped. Where do you see hardware prices going? Thanks.
When cell phone plans charged by the minute, cell phones all rounded DOWN the number of minutes you used. So a 2:30 call showed as two minutes, while the billing system rounded UP and charged you for three minutes. Every carrier did this, so if you dared to use 59 minutes on a 60 minute plan, you'd get an extra charge for ten or fifteen overtime minutes. Clever fraud, huh? All it takes is one change in one line of code to correct that, but none of the carriers ever did.
I wonder given Tim you are on a Lake... I did not get that email but I have not used my Starlink away from the doc yet.. as my boat is not in the water yet this season... so my question is... do they consider the "Great Lakes" at sea? the satellites that cover the land near the lakes are going to be the same ones that we use while on the lakes.. so.. :D just currious
Besides wanting to get more money out of wealthier customers, there's also the issue that on land, the satellite you use will connect directly to a nearby ground station. On the ocean, multiple satellites are needed to route you to a ground station.
Very well presented Sir. Competition not only brings price reduction,it creates new business,ideas,technology,etc.
Sat count does not justify cost increase for most oceanic areas. These sats are not geostationary because they are very low orbit, thus you need a constellation of sats with orbit trajectories all over the globe, hence covering most of the oceans.
We're currently sailing international,ly in Taiwan for the past two weeks. First, no Starlink in Taiwan. (worked great in Vietnam, the Philippines and during the passages between.) I got the message you got. Said I was using Starlink for the previous 30 days outside my continent. So $150 Roaming to $250 Mobil Priority 50/gig. We expect that as soon as we're out of Taiwanese waters it'll work again.
$250/month for crossing the Pacific is no problem at all. But when I get back home in California? I'll want to get back to the cheap plan. Some Starlink options say there's no going back.... I can't see them sticking to this. My alternative would be to turn off Starlink instead of spending $250/month (+$75/month for my house connection - unlimited.)
And yeah, I end up confused by all the names for stuff.
Amazon is a big company and they have a rocket subsidiary Blue Origin -- but they have yet to put a rocket into orbit. So how are they going to compete with Space X?
Can you still use the old system for the ocean plan?
250 a month for high speed internet on the ocean is a steal. The maritime option prior to this was like 5-10k month and the fact they knowingly let folks use residential on ocean was just a gift to the cruising community. 50G limit with 100 month for every 50G after that is reasonable. My recommendation: starlink while in ocean or on hook without cell and use your cell when you have coverage.
Good one, Tim.
Does mobile priority will work with the small dish or will require the bigger more expensive one?
Thanks!