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When I decided to get Starlink for our motorhome it was around 57 Euros a month for unlimited. By the time we got Starlink it jumped to 72. Then they added some "spanish taxes" and went up to 82. Now I got an email saying they just made it 89. All of these happened in the past few months.

WTF.

But so predictable unfortunately...

It sucks because there is no reliable unlimited internet solution cross-EU. I have paused Starlink for this month and I need to seriously consider what we will do. 90 Euros a month for the internet is crazy.

They really trap you because you buy the dish for a lot of money and that dish can ONLY be used with Starlink. Not that there is any other option for satellite internet. So now if you give up on the subscription, you are left with a fucking 400 Euros dish that is basically ewaste.

Thank you Elhon for being such an "innovator".

#starlink #elon #elonmusk #internet


So now guess what? Elon's space junk is screwing up radio astronomy too.

New Radio Astronomical Observations Confirm Unintended Electromagnetic Radiation Emanating from Large Satellite Constellations >>> https://cps.iau.org/news/new-radio-astronomical-observations-confirm-unintended-electromagnetic-radiation-emanating-from-large-satellite-constellations/

Anybody surprised?

And the plan is to let him launch 30,000 of these monstrosities!

Sign the petition: STOP! SpaceX Starlink from Spoiling Outer Space for Humanity. >>> https://www.change.org/p/stop-spacex-starlink-from-spoiling-outer-space-for-humanity

More on @AstroMigration

#SpaceX #StarLink #SpaceJunk
A striking photo showing Comet Neowise behind those streaks of light shows how easily the satellites can upstage observations of distant objects in space.

The satellite project, called Starlink, is Musk's plan to blanket Earth in high-speed satellite internet. The effort has drawn criticism from professional and amateur astronomers, however, because the bright satellites can mar the skies and disrupt telescope observations.

That's what happened to the astrophotographer Daniel López on July 21, when he was shooting Comet Neowise before it flies out of view for another 6,800 years. He shared the resulting image on the Facebook page of his photography company, El Cielo de Canarias, saying it was a shame to see the satellites make such a spectacle.

López's photo is a composite of 17 images taken in the span of 30 seconds. Each image was long exposure, meaning it captured the comet over several seconds.

https://www.businessinsider.com/elon-musk-starlink-satellites-photobomb-comet-neowise-2020-7