..Maybe to make it a little more clear - the AT&T "hotspot", like Beth said, you must "go to" and be within its broadcast range in order to pick up the signal on your device. These AT&T "hotspots" allow unlimited bandwidth to AT&T customers. I think my podunk little phone carrier has "hotspots" in our county seat offering unlimited bandwith. However, I really don't want to drive 15 miles to use this service!
Let's refer to our "personal" hotspots as MiFi. So, for instance, you can be sitting in my driveway, far-far-away-from-anything-digital, and use
your MiFi to get online to check your email, the Forum, etc. With this method, you would NOT want to stream anything - far too expensive and slow. On my iPad (Verizon Prepaid), I pay $20/month for 1Gb. Verizon Prepaid's largest plan is 10Gb for $80/month. As far as I know, there is no wireless provider that offers unlimited data usage. But I could be wrong; I don't keep up with that stuff like I used to.
Even with my home (A)DSL, if I want to watch something on ON DEMAND, I start the download the night before and can watch it the next day...that's as demanding as I can be.
My personal opinion - if live television is important to you, satellite is the only way to go, unless you limit your camping experience very close to large towns. Another benefit of satellite is that you can load up your DVR with tons and tons of shows/movies and watch at your leisure. However, it's not the
live nightly news, or tonight's episode of The Amazing Race.
I know the dome antenna I bought was expensive, but I was so very tired to TRYING to get the standard dish pointed in the right direction, altitude, and skew...VERY frustrating. I was willing, in this case, to trade off moo-lah for convenience and less frustration...
Oh, one more thing - for those of you with smartphones/tablets, there's a cool app called TV TOWERS. It shows where tv stations are
located all over the county. This allows you to point your roof antenna (not satellite) in the right direction to pick up the regular broadcast stations (ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, PBS, etc.) I think it was free, but I don't recall for sure.
Wow, all this before my second cup o' joe...
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