Pages:
1
2
3
4 |
tougholdman
Newbie
Posts: 10
Registered: 6-22-2023
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by lencho |
With that attitude, you probably are.
Time to hang up your spurs, find a nice grave site and hop in.
Come to think of it, if those spurs are silver, I'll take 'em off your hands.
|
I'm 87 yrs old and in a wheelchair. SPURS...lol
|
|
tougholdman
Newbie
Posts: 10
Registered: 6-22-2023
Member Is Offline
|
|
Can we get back on track. If you're not interested in helping, please bypass my post.
Again I'm 87 yrs old, in a wheelchair past 20+ yrs and what good would spurs do me.
|
|
surabi
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4707
Registered: 5-6-2016
Member Is Online
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by tougholdman | I guess cause I'm in a wheelchair and don't get out much to speak to other and learn. Where I'm at I had no internet or phone svc for over 20 yrs. So
no way to learn.
So if that's disrespectful so be it. You wouldn't speak it either if things were reversed.
But thanks for your imput. |
Sorry to hear you are disabled. I can see where you might not need to speak Spanish if there are few people you come in contact with.
But I'm not sure how you think people learned other languages before there was internet. They may have never even had anyone around to speak that
language with, but simply wanted to learn it because they might have some need for it in the future, think they might want to travel to other
countries.
People have always been able to learn languages from books and also there are language tapes.
I took my car to a Mexican mechanic one day and he spoke perfect English. While he had his worker put the car up on the hoist and check some things
out, I was making small talk with him and said he must have lived up north at some point and he said "No, why?" I said because he spoke perfect,
completely unaccented American English, as if he was born and raised in middle America. He said he learned English from watching English language TV
shows since he was a kid. Then he told me he was also teaching himself German and Japanese, as he wanted to travel to those countries, so wanted to be
able to converse with people and read what was written around him- street signs, shop names, newspapers.
People learn new languages out of interest and motivation, which it is clear you didn't have. It really has nothing with having internet or a phone or
other people to speak that language with. Anyone who can read can learn a language, or anything else, if they want to.
[Edited on 6-25-2023 by surabi]
|
|
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2457
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Looking forward to 2024
|
|
T,O,M,
Ignore Surabi! In answer to your question Starlink Mexico is about 40% of the US price. It’s transparent to everything I’ve used with it. The way
not to get stuff in Spanish is to get a VPN service in the US and don’t let your apps and programs use your location. You can also force a language
choice on most search engines.
|
|
larryC
Super Nomad
Posts: 1495
Registered: 8-11-2008
Location: BoLA
Member Is Offline
|
|
To answer your question, if you get roaming then yes starlink will work in both Mexico and San Diego. I have the Mex roaming service and use my
starlink in both locations. The hardest part of a starlink install is routing the wire to the dish through walls and such so I bought a second wire
and installed one each permanently in my house in San Diego and in my house in BoLA so now I just travel with the modem and dish. Simple install when
I get to either location.
One caveat, starlink says if you roam to a country where the monthly fee is higher for more than 2 months they may charge you the higher rate. I
haven't tested that yet. I'm usually in San Diego for 3 months so we'll see what happens this summer.
Hope this helps.
Off grid, 12-190 watt evergreen solar panels on solar trackers, 2-3648 stacked Outback inverters, 610ah LiFePo4 48v battery bank, FM 60 and MX60
Outback charge controllers, X-240 Outback transformer for 240v from inverters, 6500 watt Kubota diesel generator.
|
|
tougholdman
Newbie
Posts: 10
Registered: 6-22-2023
Member Is Offline
|
|
To Surabi! The first 7 yrs i was here a week every couple of month off and on. Then an accident put me in a wheelchair. Apparently most off you
have never visited Mexico. I didn't even have internet until about 8 -9 yrs ago and living in the hills where my closest neighbor being 1/2 mile away,
I don't see to many people.
When you're in a wheelchair, the mexican people don't just run to your house to help you learn spanish.
Anyways enough on the subject. i do speak enough to get me by if spoken to me slowly.
[Edited on 6-25-2023 by tougholdman]
|
|
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2457
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Looking forward to 2024
|
|
LarryC,
StarLink dropped that2 month thing. You can stay as long as you want.
|
|
baja-chris
Junior Nomad
Posts: 91
Registered: 5-23-2008
Member Is Offline
|
|
Just an FYI, I found the 5GHz frequency the Starlink router defaults to does not readily travel through the common block and concrete wall
construction found in Baja, even with mesh extenders.
I've since found the router can be set to use 2.4GHz which should work better but I've not taken my Starlink down to my Baja house to test this. We
get DSL at our Baja house which is adequate for streaming and only $20/mo so not much incentive to drag the starlink equipment down.
|
|
JDCanuck
Super Nomad
Posts: 1579
Registered: 2-22-2020
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by baja-chris | Just an FYI, I found the 5GHz frequency the Starlink router defaults to does not readily travel through the common block and concrete wall
construction found in Baja, even with mesh extenders.
I've since found the router can be set to use 2.4GHz which should work better but I've not taken my Starlink down to my Baja house to test this. We
get DSL at our Baja house which is adequate for streaming and only $20/mo so not much incentive to drag the starlink equipment down.
|
Didn't realize the 2.4 ghz would penetrate concrete better, thanks for that info. We got around the issue by using wireless extenders and local
Ethernet links, but I may try the 2.4 ghz as well .
[Edited on 6-29-2023 by JDCanuck]
|
|
tougholdman
Newbie
Posts: 10
Registered: 6-22-2023
Member Is Offline
|
|
Well that solves things for me. I'll pickup a Starlink System at Best Buy this weekend. Use a San Diego address and find someone down here to install
it
|
|
Don Pisto
Banned
Posts: 1282
Registered: 8-1-2018
Location: El Pescador
Member Is Offline
Mood: weary like everyone else
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by tougholdman |
Well that solves things for me. I'll pickup a Starlink System at Best Buy this weekend. Use a San Diego address and find someone down here to install
it
|
isn't that gonna cost you twice as much for gear and monthly?
there's only two things in life but I forget what they are........
John Hiatt
|
|
gnukid
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4411
Registered: 7-2-2006
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by tougholdman |
Well that solves things for me. I'll pickup a Starlink System at Best Buy this weekend. Use a San Diego address and find someone down here to install
it
|
You want to use your baja address for your initial account signup, using google plus code from google maps, but, when you get approved to receive the
dish based on your (cell availability) home address in Baja you can request for the dish to be shipped anywhere you want, such as USA, to be carried
by you en route to baja, when you are not in your home cell in Baja you will be roaming on deprioritized mobile service, when in crowded cells, but,
you will be at the Mex rate, not USA, which is %50 less.
Order everything you think you might want for mounting and usually one would buy extra cable, one for permanent home and one for mobile or emergency,
Ethernet adapter to use with other routers or setup Mesh or additional hard wired Access Points, mounts, poles, etc.
|
|
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2457
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Looking forward to 2024
|
|
Don P,
If you are going to use it in Mexico, it’s way cheaper to buy it in Mexico.according to StarLink’s latest weasel words your unit must be delivered
to Mexico if you want the Mexican deal. If you buy a US unit you pay the US monthly plus Roam to use it in Mexico
|
|
surabi
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4707
Registered: 5-6-2016
Member Is Online
|
|
There's other things like that, too. For instance, a Costco membership is cheaper in Mexico than NOB. But a membership can be used in any Costco
anywhere.
And my Telcel Sin Limites works in Canada when I am up there for 1 to 2 months and is dirt cheap @ 200 pesos/month for unlimited texting and calling
to anywhere in Canada,the US and Mexico. You can only pay for Sin Limites for a month, and so when it's due to run out, I just get a friend in Mexico
to go to Oxo and put another 200 pesos on it. (You used to be able to pay for more time by calling *133#, and using your crrdit card, but Telcel put a
stop to buying more time from out of the country)
|
|
SFandH
Elite Nomad
Posts: 7084
Registered: 8-5-2011
Member Is Offline
|
|
I do the same with my Telcel phone. Cheap!
Hey Starlinkers. Does the IP address the system assigns reveal your location? I imagine Starlink has a pool of IP addresses to use for its
subscribers. I'm wondering if the address you get is a function of your location. From a system point-of-view, that's not necessary.
This website will tell you where "the Internet" thinks you're located.
https://whatismyipaddress.com/
[Edited on 6-29-2023 by SFandH]
|
|
surabi
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4707
Registered: 5-6-2016
Member Is Online
|
|
That's why I was able to top up my Telcel Sin Limites from Canada two summers ago, but couldn't last summer. I guess Telcel started reading out-of
country IP addresses when trying to recharge and kiboshed that. But I guess they haven't gotten more sophisticated in realizing we can just get
someone in Mexico to top it up.
[Edited on 6-29-2023 by surabi]
|
|
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2457
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Looking forward to 2024
|
|
SH&F,
You need a good VPN from the States if you want to show as being in the US. Some of the better services do work with streaming content providers.
|
|
SFandH
Elite Nomad
Posts: 7084
Registered: 8-5-2011
Member Is Offline
|
|
Thanks, I know all about VPNs. You didn't answer my question.
|
|
SFandH
Elite Nomad
Posts: 7084
Registered: 8-5-2011
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by surabi | That's why I was able to top up my Telcel Sin Limites from Canada two summers ago, but couldn't last summer. I guess Telcel started reading out-of
country IP addresses when trying to recharge and kiboshed that. But I guess they haven't gotten more sophisticated in realizing we can just get
someone in Mexico to top it up.
[Edited on 6-29-2023 by surabi] |
Yes, but I'm wondering about Starlink IP addresses.
|
|
RFClark
Super Nomad
Posts: 2457
Registered: 8-27-2015
Member Is Offline
Mood: Looking forward to 2024
|
|
If you mean your actual location, I doubt it. It does reveal you’re in Mexico. On the other hand that might be a function of apps that get your
location when you use them.
|
|
Pages:
1
2
3
4 |