I cannot find any fine print on their website, aside from the fact that
video is limited in speed.  Overages do not exist with them anymore from
what I am told.
https://www.viasatsavings.com/lp/plans?kbid=113645&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIisSHm5HU3AIV17jACh2PCQINEAAYASAAEgKoePD_BwE

12Mbps - $50 ($70 after the first 3 months) - video @360p
25Mbps - $70 ($100 after the first 3 months)  - video @480p
50Mbps - $100 ($150 after the first three months)  - video @720p
100Mbps - $150 ($200 after the first three months)  - video @1080p

https://corpblog.viasat.com/new-plans/

On Sat, Aug 4, 2018 at 12:04 PM, Bill Prince <part15...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Those are not exactly unlimited plans. They are "unlimited" plans. Key
> point is the quotes. The different plans recognize video streaming and
> limit it to lower data rates. There is also a cap on what actually
> constitutes "unlimited" for each plan. You need to read the fine print, and
> they don't make that easy to find on their web site.
>
>
> bp
> <part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>
>
>
> On 8/4/2018 8:43 AM, Jeremy wrote:
>
> Viasat2 has unlimited data plans now.  We have actually had two customers
> switch from our service just for the unlimited data, since we only allow
> 500GB per month.  One of them came from satellite and then went back due to
> overages.
>
> On Fri, Aug 3, 2018 at 10:50 PM, Eric Kuhnke <eric.kuh...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> 1) Up to 1 Gbps or more, if you have the budget for a large o3b earth
>> station.
>>
>> 2) o3b is around 150ms, absolute lowest you'll see for geostationary 1:1
>> SCPC is about 492ms
>>
>> 3) Totally depends on how it's engineered for fade margin.
>>
>> 4) Depends on money, again.
>>
>>
>> Your questions are sort of like asking "how fast is a fiber optic cable".
>> In actual practice, I think you're asking about consumer graded
>> highly-contended, shared network TDMA, small VSAT terminals, which Chuck M
>> summed up neatly as "suck, suck, suck".
>>
>> Satellite should be a last resort if nothing else is available.
>>
>> If people are willing to pay for it, satellite services that cost
>> $400-800/mo or more (vs $110/mo consumer VSAT) are a slightly lesser degree
>> of suck.
>>
>> I designed and engineered serious, higher-budget, two way satellite for
>> defence contractors and government agencies for years - send me a question
>> offline if you have something more specific in mind.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Aug 3, 2018 at 6:38 AM Eric Muehleisen <ericm...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Does anyone out there have any stats or experiences with satellite
>>> internet that you could share?
>>>
>>> 1. What kind of down/up speeds can they deliver?
>>> 2. What is the RTT latency?
>>> 3. How much is the service impacted by weather?
>>> 4. What are the typical data caps and pricing?
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>
>
>
>
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