Sleaziest Advertisement I’ve Seen Yet

I’ve seen some pretty bad advertisements before, but I assumed they were all scams. The same day I got the HughesNet advertisement, I got an advertisement from Rise Broadband, but you wouldn’t know it by looking at it.

Isn’t that the most generic, scam-looking advertisement you’ve ever seen? There are two ways to know that it is Rise. One is to Google the return address and see that it matches up with Rise and the other is to call the phone number and it’s in the greeting.

Not only is the design of the advertisement extremely deceptive, but the content isn’t even true. Sure, they have a low introductory rate, but then they come back a few months later and increase the price. That low price you get is only good for six months, then it goes up $10. After 18 more months, it roughly doubles to almost three times the initial cost.

The fastest they offer in our area is 5 megabits/s, which is half of our fastest and that’s even before our upcoming speed increases. Building on the Netflix information from the last post, their Netflix speed is only 2.21 megabit/s. A lot better than HughesNet, but nothing great. It’s still not to the optimal SD performance. They only include 150 gigabytes/month of data transfer, which as we learned in the last post we wrote is more than what our average customer uses (about 125 gigabytes/month), but that’s average. We have customers that use more than that. What happens when you go over? It costs you $3.50 per 10GB of overage.

What other fees do they have? It’ll be up to $250 if you cancel your contract before it’s up. Don’t return your equipment (which we’re not sure why you’d want to keep it anyway), $300 minimum.

A sleazy advertisement for a company that doesn’t have a compelling offering. Don’t be swayed by their attempts to woo you. You’ll be happier elsewhere.

HughesNet isn’t the great deal they claim to be

You probably got something like this in the mail last week.

Good ole HughesNet up to their tricks again. Currently, Netflix shows HughesNet at 1.29 megabit/s. That’s the average speed of a customer of theirs to the Netflix system during prime time. While only 0.5 megabit/s is required, Netflix recommends 1.5 megabit/s for SD viewing and even 3 megabit/s is recommended for optimal SD performance. Now we are fully aware that the problems could be in the subscribers’ home, such as poor WiFi signal, low resolution phones, etc. However, that problem would present itself on other networks as well. The satellite providers have many beams coming out of their satellites, each serving a portion of the county. In many areas, the beam is full, so you don’t even get the average performance.  That 1.29 megabit/s is the average, meaning half of HughesNet users are getting worse than that.

Another possible reason is due to the low data caps that HughesNet has. People could be voluntarily reducing their Netflix data consumption to help stay under the data transfer limits that HughesNet has in place. You can see their plans in one of the pictures above. The most they have is 50 gigabytes per month. Once you use up your allotment, your speed is reduced. Netflix thankfully also publishes guidelines for how much data they consume. If you have the lowest HughesNet plan, you’re only good for about 3 hours 20 minutes of HD viewing a month. The largest plan only gives you 16 hours a month. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics says that the average American watches 2.7 hours of TV per day. That’s roughly 80 hours per month or roughly five times the amount of HD content that HughesNet allows you to view per month.  The rest of the time, you’re stuck at a much lower picture quality.

It’s not just Netflix that’s using these data caps or suffering poor performance. Streaming video is the number one use of the Internet, so lump in there Hulu, YouTube, Amazon Video, Facebook, Instagram, HBO, etc. If you use any of those or similar services, you’re having the same problems.

The average ICS customer uses 125 gigabytes per month. That’s 2.5 times the highest plan you can get with HughesNet for on average worse performance. Most ICS customers are on a 4 megabit/s service., with faster plans available. That’s already 3 times faster and at less cost than what HughesNet can do with Netflix. Ask yourself this, can you afford HughesNet, a worse service?

Welcome to the ICS Blog

We’ve largely just posted whatever we had to say to social media, but our original content was getting lost in things we were sharing, platforms like Twitter are rather limiting in the amount we can say and some things are just better posted in this format.

We’re obviously quite new to blogging, so please give us some time to work out the look of the page. We’re a bit rushed in getting this up as we had some content that we wanted to post ASAP.