J
Joerg
Hello Folks,
A future application would require the transmission of small amounts of
data from deployed units to several bases (civilian stuff), service
locations, and such. Very little data, maybe 1kB/day. Bi-directional
would be nice but not (yet) required. The challenge is that much of this
will be located in the boonies, mostly south-eastern US. Also Caribbean
and other countries but that might be a whole 'nother matter. Units will
be mounted outdoors, mains power is available. If we use cell networks
the units would not necessarily all need their own cell number if it's
possible to shave off some cost that way.
Since I don't live there, what is the network with the best coverage?
Anything else besides cell networks? Reaching even some remote areas
would be nice. Cost per month is paramount. Latencies are not so
important, if a message gets delayed by 15mins that's ok.
A future application would require the transmission of small amounts of
data from deployed units to several bases (civilian stuff), service
locations, and such. Very little data, maybe 1kB/day. Bi-directional
would be nice but not (yet) required. The challenge is that much of this
will be located in the boonies, mostly south-eastern US. Also Caribbean
and other countries but that might be a whole 'nother matter. Units will
be mounted outdoors, mains power is available. If we use cell networks
the units would not necessarily all need their own cell number if it's
possible to shave off some cost that way.
Since I don't live there, what is the network with the best coverage?
Anything else besides cell networks? Reaching even some remote areas
would be nice. Cost per month is paramount. Latencies are not so
important, if a message gets delayed by 15mins that's ok.