Subj : Re: Musk's Starlink To : August Abolins From : Daniel Date : Mon Jun 15 2020 11:26 pm -=> August Abolins wrote to Daniel <=- AA> Hello Daniel! AA> Sorry.. I did not mean to discredit the entire effort. But I was just AA> thinking of those pieces as "junk" as they are decomissioned into lower AA> orbit and into reentry for burn up. There is a risk that some debri AA> would remain and possibly cause damage. Coordinating a satellite back AA> into decent to earth and avoid stiking an airliner could be a AA> challenge. It would likely burn up on re-entry enough to reduce a risk, as well as considering the probability that any object would be in harm's way even if it didn't. AA> It will be very interesting when the real figures pop up. Right now, I AA> am not interested in paying more than $40/mo for any kind of internet. AA> The concept is already overpriced as it is, imho. Yeah, we all have our budgets. I agree that internet is too expensive as it is. AA> Actually, it's pretty sad to witness so much attention to the internet AA> when ordinary phone quality seems to be diminishing year by year. I am AA> so fed up with the audio lag and echo that people have when they call AA> from their VoIP lines or cell phones. Almost every one having AA> discontinued their landlines in favour of lower-cost VoIP or cell AA> phones sound like they are all under water. I've seen a decline on phone use personally. Most people I know don't wish to speak on the phone. They want to text message, use social media, or talk in person. AA> With the orbital satellites contantly on the move, I did not expect AA> that a user would need a fixed dish. I imagine it would work much like AA> GPS operates. I am impressed how quickly my portable GPS Drive-60 AA> device can track and report the speed of my vehicle to the second in AA> real-time. GPS uses far fewer satellites to triangulate your position as well. AA> But not more than $40/mo for me! Fair enough. Daniel Traechin .... Visit me at gopher://gcpp.world --- MultiMail/Linux v0.49 * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (1:340/7) .