Overall Internet
First off, let me say that I completely hate the HughsNet internet / streaming. I live in the middle of what used to be a horse pasture, with no trees around me at all. There should be no interference because of this. From the get go, almost 2 years ago, we haven't been able to stream ANY television and the internet has been even worse at times. I have trouble opening the internet on a daily basis, whether it's night or day. I'm constantly reconnecting or even restarting altogether. So if the ads say HughesNet is great for country people there's no truth to it. Some people may like it, but I don't. So I'm here to tell you all that in August when my contract is up, I fully intend to cancel this and try something else. Mike from Farmerville, Louisiana1.8KViews0likes1CommentPoor mbps every night
Every night when I try to connect my Roku I have 0 mbps connection. And most days if I have 1 mpbs I am lucky. I am sick and tired of this crap internet..but again have no choice because of where I live. See attached screen shots.. and no..I am not going to run speedtest because it always seems to be fine..but as you can see..it is not. Too bad I pay outrageous pricing for 50 gb I can never use at night for streaming ..blah blah all the people are connected at night...whatever ..complaining done for now!Solved9.6KViews1like15CommentsHelp me understand please
I am trying to figure out if a local company is as fast as Hughes net. The local company, I believe goes over cellular. They are telling me they have no data caps but do cap speed and 4 megaBITS per second. I don’t understand the difference in megaBITS and megabytes. Once we hit our data limit on Hughes we can’t stream any Netflix, etc. how slow does Hughes go to?4.9KViews0likes8CommentsSatellite capacity, video streaming and other meanderings
OK, did some simple math here, please correct me if I made any errors. 1. Echostar 19 has been advertised as having "up to" 220 Gbps throughput:http://spacenews.com/atlas-5-launches-echostar-19/ 2. Netflix says 5 Mbps is needed for HD streaming:https://help.netflix.com/en/node/306 3. So, divide 220 Gbps by 5 Mbps and you get the max user capacity at that speed which equals 44,000 customers. 4. In my feeble mind that says if 44,000 customers are trying to stream video at HD, at the same time of night, the satellite throughput is already maxed out. I realise there is compression and other things being used but still, 44,000 or even 50,000 doesn't seem like that many users to send things over the edge when talking a half million users at least on each of the Echostar 17 & 19 satellites. Please tell me if my math or logic is off. Point I'm trying to make is people who think they are an island streaming at the higher definitions are affecting the entire ocean.12KViews0likes25Comments