Really? What did you use before Starlink? What are all the nomads using out west who don't use Starlink?Most places we go Star Link is about your only option at $150 a month (slower speed RV plan was what it was originally) which allows you to change locations with no waiting period.
I've been staying in a national forest on the Alabama/Florida border for the past week and a half. My connection was awful. I used my straight talk hotspot and that helped sometimes. Other times I was just "stuck in the mud". (CB lingo, lol)Carla, I've been researching lately so I'll chime in...
First, check out this map as it will give you an idea of where you can get cell service and where you can't: https://map.coveragemap.com/signal-strength
For the places I like to go, ATT usually has better coverage... but Verizon is cheap via Visible ($25/mo), and the limitations seem reasonable. What you need is a mobile hotspot plan through your phone to get internet on your computer. Most of the "unlimited" ones throttle for anything over ~50GB/mo which isn't that much. Gotta learn to conserve. https://www.whistleout.com/CellPhones/Guides/The-Easy-Guide-to-Mobile-Hotspots
With a monster trailer like yours, you'll probably stick close to decent roads and more populated areas where cell service will be fine.
I don't know what your other option was, but Straight Talk is Verizon... and according to the map they often have no signal on public land. I wonder if you can locate where you were on the coverage map I posted?I've been staying in a national forest on the Alabama/Florida border for the past week and a half. My connection was awful. I used my straight talk hotspot and that helped sometimes.
I was in Conecuh Natl Forest and it looks like T-Mobile might have helped there (the smashed Pixel). My daughter just told me she is due for an upgrade so I will get her Galaxy and be back on T-Mobile .I don't know what your other option was, but Straight Talk is Verizon... and according to the map they often have no signal on public land. I wonder if you can locate where you were on the coverage map I posted?
I've never had internet in the boonies... kinda wonder if it's stupid for me to even be thinking about it. One of the nice features of camping is getting disconnected from all the "noise"...
I think it is harder for many women to enjoy camping in remote areas. Due to statistics .One of the nice features of camping is getting disconnected from all the "noise"...
Ya, that is the max.From your second link, am I reading it correctly that visible has a speed of 5mbps?
Criminals don't cruise remote areas looking for victims, just like predators don't look for prey in places where it's scarce. Plus these days damn near everyone has a gun. If you are worried, get a shotgun and just act crazy if someone comes around that you don't like. You could even leave the gun at home and just act crazy...I think it is harder for many women to enjoy camping in remote areas. Due to statistics .
Even if you are more safe, I think the fear has something to do with having grown up in a country with our statistics. Doesn't mean it's a rational fear.Ya, that is the max.
Criminals don't cruise remote areas looking for victims, just like predators don't look for prey in places where it's scarce. Plus these days damn near everyone has a gun. If you are worried, get a shotgun and just act crazy if someone comes around that you don't like. You could even leave the gun at home and just act crazy...
A lot of people are afraid of being alone in the wilderness for other reasons, though.
When I went camping in AZ recently, I thought it was odd that even people with offroad capable rigs clustered in groups near the paved road. 4 miles in I was at least 3 miles from any other campers.
What part of N AZ? Does this map coincide with your Verizon experience, and does ATT look better? https://map.coveragemap.com/signal-strengthI purchased a tablet in a December that works on the AT&T towers so this summer when I move to Arizona higher elevations where Verizon failed to connect as it did in previous summers I will try out a few of the lower cost plans that use the AT&T towers.
Last summer Flagstaff NFS area at Bellemont had Verizon signals but it was at snails pace , very slow, speed during daytime business hours. I generally got timed out when trying to connect to apps for mail or other things. Phone calls went through but texts were often delayed.What part of N AZ? Does this map coincide with your Verizon experience, and does ATT look better? https://map.coveragemap.com/signal-strength
Apparently if you can get any signal at all, a cell booster can make it usable... but never used one myself.
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