joelsfood wrote: » Depends completely on the area and the usage. Personally, satellite is painfully laggy, and msot remote places I go to cell coverage is spotty at best. ISPS in areas like Joshua Tree and others will often use point to poin wireless service. Not as fast as FIOS, but beats out 3MB DSL, mostly.
thomas_ wrote: » I've seen businesses use cradlepoints for internet connections. Basically, you stick a sim card in from a phone carrier such as ATT, Verizon, whatever and you use the cellular signal for the connection to the internet. The ceadle point has a network connection that you can use to plug into your computer/router/whatever. This would require a plan with the provider and the cost of the cradlepoint. I'm not sure whether this would be cost-prohibitive for you or not.
Sylabicuma wrote: » What would be the benefit of using that over a hotspot? Since they both use cellular signal.
kurosaki00 wrote: » A Cradlepoint is a much more complex and expensive tool than just a hot spot. It routes, mimo, load balances, content filtering and much more. You can also integrate more than one modem on it.