(Me= vanlife.)

If you have your starlink satellite thing mounted on top of your vehicle, the only time you can get internet is when you are within range of your vehicle, right?

In case there’s no Wi-Fi available, and you’re away from your vehicle, which is a situation that is pretty constant in my life.

I presume there’s no starlink hotspot to carry around(?)

Like it’s been nice to have my Verizon hotspot “Orbic” shitty little thing when my phone’s unlimited data service is slow or spotty but even the Orbic has shitty service sometimes.

I definitely want to abandon evil extortionate Verizon. Please tell me if I become a starlink customer, I won’t be able to use my phone indoors at work which doesn’t allow us to use their Wi-Fi, And when I’m walking around town, what to do for internet?

Please tell me your most highly recommended ISP that isn’t extortionate & manipulative.

  • @Stormwind
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    4 days ago

    Starlink dishes need an open unobstructed view of the sky to communicate with the satellites. You’d need the dish to be outside and then be in range of the wifi from the dish’s router (or other routers or mesh system you set up).

    IMHO Starlink is best when living or boondocking in remote area without other options and with enough open sky view to get a decent connection. I have a Starlink dish on my van to get internet access when 5G coverage is not available.

    The new Starlink Mini dish might be of interest - a small dish, power-able by 12-48V DC or USB-C PD. In the US it is $600, then $30 a month but only 50GB per month before extra charges.

    FMCA TechConnect+ has some plans including an unlimited but speed capped AT&T plan for around $60 a month.