Forum Discussion
Ver confused about data usage
HughesNet sales you a data package; how you use it is not their responsibility. The biggest packages are 50GB per month (not counting Bonus Bytes), and this can go fast with several kids doing schoolwork. The "solution" is to get tokens or to get a bigger data package, which may not be enough and may necessitate more tokens.
If you feel you were misled by the salesperson, you can request a sales review. Just reply to my post and request that they review your sales call, and explain how you think you were misled.
It typically takes 7 business days to do the sales call review, but if the HughesNet reps find you were actually misled, you may have some recourse.
Jlkkdk wrote:The data we have gets eaten up only by my kids going to school. I think it was gone in less then a week then it slows down where they can not do their schooling. Is it normal to get penalized where we have to spend more just so kids can go to school? This is our first experience with satellite internet and so far it is just not working out for us. I guess we can not -lay play station or even watch anything through streaming. I was not told any of this when I signed up. I was assured we had enough to do everything we needed it for which we are finding just is not the case. I was misled by the salesperson and now we are stuck in a contract. I just do not know what to do when my kids can not do their school because the schools do not care what the situation is they just want it done. For the last week they could use it only 3 hours a day if that all other times it was so slow it did not even work on a chrome book. Anyone have any solutions? Can not do the speed test because it is so slow the page won't even load.
- maratsade5 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
- Not enough GB is different from "letting carriers through."
- The amount of GB you get depends on the package you buy (10, 20, 30, 50), and how much you and your household use per day. Usage is also influenced by many factors outside of HN, all of them explained on the HN website and as part of the subscriber agreement.
- HN has optimised the network to improve access to educational resources, but once again, access is also dependent on many factors, explained on the website and subscriber agreement.
- If you are using more data than you get, your choices are to use less data (which of course may not be possible), or buy more data (a larger package, or data tokens).
SharlaNickell wrote:
We are having the same problem not enough GB for school classroom work. Can't Hughes let carriers like Google classroom thru and not slow them down? There is suppose to be covid relief! My granddaughter has to check in on Zoom twice during the morning and then is at different sites, I am buying tokens but it is so expensive. - GabeU5 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
SharlaNickell wrote:
We are having the same problem not enough GB for school classroom work. Can't Hughes let carriers like Google classroom thru and not slow them down?Not having a data limit, even on just certain activities, would have the opposite effect of what everyone wishes, as in it would slow the service down even more than what is already occurring. Having high speed data limits forces people to prioritize their activities, which is what keeps the service usable. Without those limits, the system would end up in a digital traffic jam.
- maratsade5 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
I think one issue is that many subscribers don't understand how satellite works and keep comparing it to terrestrial internet. They don't realise how small the data packages are for satellite internet, and how fast data can be used by regular Web activities (even though a simple calculation would show just how little is available to use on a daily basis).
GabeU wrote:Not having a data limit, even on just certain activities, would have the opposite effect of what everyone wishes, as in it would slow the service down even more than what is already occurring. Having high speed data limits forces people to prioritize their activities, which is what keeps the service usable. Without those limits, the system would end up in a digital traffic jam.
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