I have heard nothing positive about Hughes from anyone, I have the 3g Verizon mifi which has been working out pretty well for me, way better than dial up. Verizon is now transitioning in many areas to 4g which is supposed to be up to ten times faster than 3g, I am not holding my breath but when it becomes available and reliable it will be a big leap forward.
Al
I was an IT manager for 17 years before moving to the boonies. I have dealt with connections from 300 baud to multiple T1's, including DSL.
When I moved to the boonies I got Hughes so my wife could download recipes. LOL. About 18 months into the contract the modem went out. I had to deal with techs in 3rd world countries where English is a second language. They wanted me to pay $160 for a new modem. They wanted the old modem back when I shipped them the system after my contract was up.
I switched to a USB cellular modem with Virgin Mobile (Sprint) as my provider. Because I live in a "dead zone" as far as cell phone calls go I acquired a Wilson Electronics booster. That did three things.
Doubled my download speed on the air card.
Improved my cell phone calls inbound and outbound.
Saved my marriage because the wife can still get her recipes.
I am 17 miles from my tower. If you have a similar situation with no obstacles check out Millenicom and Wilson boosters.
I guess that I am in a small minority that is very happy with Hughesnet. We had dial up for about 10 years and it was so slow that we couldn't really use the internet at home. We tried a wireless card from AT&T (which has great cell service at our home) but the speeds were horrible.
Thanks to the Reinvestment and Recovery Act (or something like that), we were able to get Hughesnet installed for at no cost and instead of the $60 or $70 per month for the lowest tier of service, we have it for $40.
I am absolutely satisfied with what we get, but it may be just because of what we had before. It is also probably the manner in which we use the internet. We don't do any "twitch" gaming, we don't do much uploading, and we don't watch streaming shows or movies.
We can watch video clips, download files, music, etc. We installed a download monitor so that we can see how much usage we have remaining in our rolling 24 hour period. You also get one "free" token per month so if you use up all of your allowance in a day, you can recharge it. You can buy additional tokens for $5.
They have recently added another 50 megs to our daily allowance and have also changed the the way your "bank" works to let you use up to twice as much in one day (example: if you didn't use it at all yesterday, you get double today - but you can only bank up to 2 days, so far).
At this point, I couldn't be more happy with Hughesnet. Yes, it does go out during inclement weather (same time as my Dishnetwork signal does). Sometimes its faster than other times, but, in my case, it's cheaper than a wireless plan and is much, much faster.
I cannot comment on service, because we haven't had any problems (it was just installed in July). I will be able to comment on this shortly, because we are going to have to have the dish moved due to a building expansion, so I'll post how that goes.
I do definately seem to be in the minority, but I assure you, I'm not a "plant".
Good luck and take care.
Does anyone know the status of Broadband over Powerlines (BPL)?
i just checked my internet speed today. its 4.4Mbps download ans 1.75 Mbps upload. super fast and around $70/month as i recall.
There is NO max download bandwidth allotment for the day or month... its unlimited.
I had to cut down 2 large trees when i installed it 3 years ago., and its mounted on my roof.
this is like 200X faster than dialup....![]()
And, unfortunately AFAIK, not available here...or in many places
Ken
Does anyone know the status of Broadband over Powerlines (BPL)? This is enabling broadband over existing electrical lines and seems anyway to have the advantage of having the infrastructure already in place. I know there were objections by HAM radio operators due to interference but was hoping the technology would progress to address the shortcomings.
Just wondering......
i just checked my internet speed today. its 4.4Mbps download ans 1.75 Mbps upload. super fast and around $70/month as i recall.
There is NO max download bandwidth allotment for the day or month... its unlimited.
I had to cut down 2 large trees when i installed it 3 years ago., and its mounted on my roof.
this is like 200X faster than dialup....![]()
How do you check your speeds?
How do you check your speeds?
I use speedtest.net
Just be sure you notice what the settings are since it allows you to choose to report in kilo or mega and Bytes or bits. Quite a difference between those choices!
I just ran it and got these results with Hughes:
ping: 793 (horrible)
download: 75.2 kB/s (poor but better than dialup)
upload: 37.4 kB/s
Ken
yeiks,... thats not much better than dialup....
Well dialup here was 18.4 k on a good day, 9600 baud on a bad day. Hughes does better than that.
Landline maintenance here is a joke. They literally wrap repairs to the mainline cable with trash bagsI once called them and told them that there was a tree down on their mainline that had the line down in the creek water. Their response was "that's not our responsibility." !!!
Ken