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Hammerhead Shark
Satellite internet with laptop
Is it possible to have a satellite internet connection with a laptop? How big is the satellite dish (if there is one at all)?
Just curious, because I heard that all you need is a little PCMCIA card with an inch-long antenna? Or is that still sci-fi?
Bottom line - is there any way to get broadband(ish) connectivity on the road?
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Crash Test Dummy
I haven't personally heard of using a satellite connection on a laptop, but I have seen wireless services available for them. One that was popular a little while back was called Ricochet, but they went belly-up. Go.Web is another one.
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Catfish
If you are rich you will be able to get nothing more than 19kbps using satellite Internet through Iridium or Globalstar. If you are super rich you will be able to get 144kbps through Inmarsat. I think Inmarsat is how the reporters in Afghanistan send their news reports to their office. So basically it is possible to get broadband through satellite, but you will be paying probably around $10/min if you are using Iridium or Globalstar. I have no idea what Inmarsat costs, but I know it is a whole lot more expensive than Iridium or Globalstar. I would wait for 3G so you can use your cell phone to get affordable Internet access.
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Catfish
Originally posted by SkyDog
One that was popular a little while back was called Ricochet, but they went belly-up.
A company bought out Ricochet's assets, and they brought it back online. It is a resonable $45/month.
Desktop: Asus P4T533-c | Pentium 4 2.4B | Kingston 256 Mb PC1066 RDRAM | ATi Radeon 9800 Pro 128MB | Creative Audigy w/ 1394 | Western Digital 100GB Special Edition | HP CD-Writer 9500 | Toshiba DVD-ROM | Antec SX635 Case w/ 380Watt PSU | Viewsonic VX900 19" LCD
Laptop: Compaq Evo N800w | Pentium 4 Mobile 2.2 GHz | ATI Fire GL 9000 Mobility w/ 64 MB RAM | 15" 1600x1200 LCD | 512 MB RAM | 60 GB 5400 RPM Hard Drive | 24x/10x/24x/8x DVD/CD-RW
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I use the Nextel M1100. It's a PCMCIA card with a small antenna that will cost you a couple hundred bucks and $55 a month for unlimited use. It doesn't use the laptop power, it uses it's own Li-ION battery that charges like the Nextel phone batteries (same charger). It's listed as 19kbps but it's compressed to equal a 56K modem speed. It has worked pretty well for me and I'm happy with it. They obviously have a long way to go in this area. I've rode across a couple of states with a connection in the car that was really solid.
I would like to try Sprint hearing they are a bit faster, but I had a Sprint phone and their coverage isn't very good in my area.
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Reef Shark
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