This is very good information even for these very types of communication services that could increasingly dilute prices to a much lower average value between regional and global options for accessing information. Of course, these current prices are likely to ensure the most immediate return on initial investment for shareholders. But really, the ever-increasing enjoyment of this type of service will drive prices down. It is also clear who pays the initial investment are always the early adopters. The information provided by you free of charge to those services stimulates and encourages this type of service, especially through your ever-so-objective and clear explanation. As long as there are no large solar magnetic ejections or a burst of electromagnetic radiation pulse created by a nuclear high-altitude explosion near satellites, all is well as far as communications are concerned. :)
Thanks for sharing! I just bought a high performance, and I'm experimenting. I went global and will shift to regional. The wifi was not labeled as Starlink, as the App says. It was Stinky.
Good info Dan. The big reason I haven't pulled the trigger to get Starlink is my personal issue/problem is that Starlink constantly changes price, name rules, etc. I know it's a "new" company but i don't like when companies change the rules because I can't change my payment due dates or amount. Since this is 2023 and this is how the internet will work in the future I'm not a fan of prioritizing my internet speed or limits. When they get more and more satellites up I think the speed and limits will slowly go away. Anyway with all that said once I start heading towards Argentina in January I'm sure I will have Starlink, if not sooner.
A lot of people have gone back to cellular service with the recent price increases. Unless you have no other alternative, it can be tough to deal with all of the changes.
Yes it is possible now. You just need to physically be in Mexico near the address you are using on the new account when you migrate your account to a new one.
Hello, I have a question. With the starlink global plan registered within the US; when you decide to move to another country does your ip address stay based in the US or it reflects the country you are in? Thank you and great video.
Am at the moment looking into wi-fi possibilities for when I start my The Americas trip next year. Wondering how your hack is working for you. I will need to buy a Starlink system in Europe and then change ownership once in Canada. Would like to get a regional roaming plan (currently 59 euro). But how does that work for The Americas? Would that mean that in every country I visit I have to transfer ownership and re-register with a new plan? Hope you can shed some light on this for me. Loved your vid, btw.
You won't need to change with each country but definitely each continent. Although once you get to Mexico it is worth switching because it's cheaper. Then you can wait until to get to Colombia before changing again.
@@freelyroamingBrilliant, thank you for your reply. So if I understand you correctly. Simply get the dish here (waiting for gen 3) then change ownership in Canada and once more in Mexico and doing the same in Columbia again.
I have starlink Global here in the US and I am traveling to Hondorus and will be in a stationary location. Do I just turn on starlink in Hondorus and it will work or do I need to change to roaming? Thanks
Are you sure you have Starlink Global? The $200 monthly plan recently increased to $400/month? If you are taking it to Honduras and using it stationary there, you will want to change your account to a Honduras one. It's way cheaper.
So I just bought the gen 3 and was told to activate in Florida before bringing to bahamas. Now I'm in the bahamas and I have the global plan but it is staying connected to my mobile data and not the satellite I tried to change address and it won't let me. So I'm guessing I need to deactivate and then sign up with new email. Do you do that under transfer? I'm completely lost. Thanks in advance
So if you are activated in Florida then you have a US plan. You won't be able to change to a Bahamian address unless you deactivate your US account and activate a new account in the Bahamas (Assuming Starlink service is available there). But your US plan should still work there. You need to make sure it is not their standard service but the mobile plan.
@freelyroaming thank you. It's mobile global but when I connect it stays connected through my mobile data not satellite. If I turn off mobile data it quits. I wanted it to pick up the satellite and not use mobile data. 😒
@@MichelleMcelreath-hm7mk technically if don't need global in the Bahamas but it still should work. What does the starlink app say when you connect to it?
Change the title to : STARLING SERVICES AND TRANSFER POSSIBILITIES. You re not hacking them, they just let you to use their services and do what you do. You can read all of what you describe in their plans.
big thanks for sharing, much appriciated
You are welcome!
Wow, great Starlink plan "hacking" tips. Thanks!
starlink watching along to hack all these hacks with current results 😆
Not sure what you mean. I'm still using mine here in Peru.
Thanks for the Info.
Thank you for watching!
Thanks!
Thank you so much!
Super great video, thanks.
Great video!
This is very good information even for these very types of communication services that could increasingly dilute prices to a much lower average value between regional and global options for accessing information.
Of course, these current prices are likely to ensure the most immediate return on initial investment for shareholders.
But really, the ever-increasing enjoyment of this type of service will drive prices down. It is also clear who pays the initial investment are always the early adopters.
The information provided by you free of charge to those services stimulates and encourages this type of service, especially through your ever-so-objective and clear explanation.
As long as there are no large solar magnetic ejections or a burst of electromagnetic radiation pulse created by a nuclear high-altitude explosion near satellites, all is well as far as communications are concerned.
:)
When you come to Europe, you can always park at are home in the Netherlands
Amazing! Thank you!
@@freelyroaming to thin wiring for the dualie. Now with 6mm2 wiring no problemo.
Thanks for sharing! I just bought a high performance, and I'm experimenting. I went global and will shift to regional. The wifi was not labeled as Starlink, as the App says. It was Stinky.
Good info Dan. The big reason I haven't pulled the trigger to get Starlink is my personal issue/problem is that Starlink constantly changes price, name rules, etc. I know it's a "new" company but i don't like when companies change the rules because I can't change my payment due dates or amount. Since this is 2023 and this is how the internet will work in the future I'm not a fan of prioritizing my internet speed or limits. When they get more and more satellites up I think the speed and limits will slowly go away. Anyway with all that said once I start heading towards Argentina in January I'm sure I will have Starlink, if not sooner.
A lot of people have gone back to cellular service with the recent price increases. Unless you have no other alternative, it can be tough to deal with all of the changes.
Great video. I have a question. Is it possible to use an used american dish in mexico with a new account and new plan.?
Yes it is possible now. You just need to physically be in Mexico near the address you are using on the new account when you migrate your account to a new one.
Hello, I have a question. With the starlink global plan registered within the US; when you decide to move to another country does your ip address stay based in the US or it reflects the country you are in?
Thank you and great video.
As far as I know it will stay US based. I am assuming that based on the fact it staying US-based while traveling across central America.
Am at the moment looking into wi-fi possibilities for when I start my The Americas trip next year. Wondering how your hack is working for you. I will need to buy a Starlink system in Europe and then change ownership once in Canada. Would like to get a regional roaming plan (currently 59 euro). But how does that work for The Americas? Would that mean that in every country I visit I have to transfer ownership and re-register with a new plan? Hope you can shed some light on this for me. Loved your vid, btw.
You won't need to change with each country but definitely each continent. Although once you get to Mexico it is worth switching because it's cheaper. Then you can wait until to get to Colombia before changing again.
@@freelyroamingBrilliant, thank you for your reply. So if I understand you correctly. Simply get the dish here (waiting for gen 3) then change ownership in Canada and once more in Mexico and doing the same in Columbia again.
I have starlink Global here in the US and I am traveling to Hondorus and will be in a stationary location. Do I just turn on starlink in Hondorus and it will work or do I need to change to roaming? Thanks
Are you sure you have Starlink Global? The $200 monthly plan recently increased to $400/month? If you are taking it to Honduras and using it stationary there, you will want to change your account to a Honduras one. It's way cheaper.
@@freelyroaming Thanks....it will go there for 2 weeks and then to Kenya. Not a permanent solution.
@@Markhancock64 for Honduras just switch to roaming. For Kenya, you will need global. Assuming it's also just for a short time. But it's gonna be $$$
So I just bought the gen 3 and was told to activate in Florida before bringing to bahamas. Now I'm in the bahamas and I have the global plan but it is staying connected to my mobile data and not the satellite I tried to change address and it won't let me. So I'm guessing I need to deactivate and then sign up with new email. Do you do that under transfer? I'm completely lost. Thanks in advance
So if you are activated in Florida then you have a US plan. You won't be able to change to a Bahamian address unless you deactivate your US account and activate a new account in the Bahamas (Assuming Starlink service is available there). But your US plan should still work there. You need to make sure it is not their standard service but the mobile plan.
@freelyroaming thank you. It's mobile global but when I connect it stays connected through my mobile data not satellite. If I turn off mobile data it quits. I wanted it to pick up the satellite and not use mobile data. 😒
@@MichelleMcelreath-hm7mk technically if don't need global in the Bahamas but it still should work. What does the starlink app say when you connect to it?
Can I take a European starlink standard to the US?
@@etienneetienne4752 yes. They are the same.
Change the title to : STARLING SERVICES AND TRANSFER POSSIBILITIES.
You re not hacking them, they just let you to use their services and do what you do.
You can read all of what you describe in their plans.
@@georgeclassic6688 no