Alien thread

Starlink is cool as ****. It will change mobile internet forever and it will change rural internet forever.

But for me right now, there's no way I change. 100 bucks a month for maybe better service. But probably not isn't worth it. I get a solid 110 Mbps down and 15 Up.

It looks good and competition is amazing But the extra 35+ bucks a month for minimal gains isn't really worth it.

Yeah. As of now I have no need to switch. But my ultimate goal is to work remotely fulltime while living in a rural area so at that point hopefully Starlink will be the way to go.
 
Yeah. As of now I have no need to switch. But my ultimate goal is to work remotely fulltime while living in a rural area so at that point hopefully Starlink will be the way to go.

I know plenty of people who'll sign up because it's cheaper and superior to satellite internet. I just live on a main cable drag so no reason to switch off. My service interruptions aren't bad at all (few times a year it blips out) I don't have a reason to switch unless it's a huge improvement. But my hope is Starlink creates enough competition for Spectrum to open up the 500MB tier to me.
 
This guy is very well informed so I put some stock in his opinion. I don't think he's entirely correct, but he admits that his explanation only covers some reports. The article is very long.

https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zo...he-u-s-and-the-pentagon-acts-like-theyre-ufos

We may not know the identities of all the mysterious craft that American military personnel and others have been seeing in the skies as of late, but I have seen more than enough to tell you that it is clear that a very terrestrial adversary is toying with us in our own backyard using relatively simple technologies—drones and balloons—and making off with what could be the biggest intelligence haul of a generation. While that may disappoint some who hope the origins of all these events are far more exotic in nature, the strategic implications of these bold operations, which have been happening for years, undeterred, are absolutely massive.

Our team here at The War Zone has spent the last two years indirectly laying out a case for the hypothesis that many of the events involving supposed UFOs, or unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP), as they are now often called, over the last decade are actually the manifestation of foreign adversaries harnessing advances in lower-end unmanned aerial vehicle technology, and even simpler platforms, to gather intelligence of extreme fidelity on some of America's most sensitive warfighting capabilities.
 
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