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May 3rd, 2010 at 4:48pm
North-American service is simply not available in South America. Satellite coverages differ dramatically between and among the continents. Now some providers may offer services to both NA and SA, but it's not the SAME service, and not the same price structure either. I pay $80/mo right now, for a tier of HughesNet service that's basically 3rd from the bottom. So before you decry any charge as excessive, you should really find out what it buys first. Hence my recommendation to contact the Iquitos leads that Google turned up.
Your opening questions suggest expectations that are a bit on the high side. I didn't initially address them initially, since it would be presumptive of me to speak for South American providers. But since I am a retired telecommunications engineer, I can provide some generic info: 1. Lease locally. If you're only there for a year, it's not worth buying your own equipment. 2. You get what you pay for, and "unlimited" plans are not typical 3. Reliability is inversely proportional to the severity and frequency of precipitation (rain/sleet/ice/wet snow) 4. Given the laws of physics as related to latency (delay), there is no such thing as a "high quality VoIP call" over satellite. 5. Again, you get what you pay for 6. There's no meaningful "new (consumer-grade) technology" worth waiting for at the moment.
//greg//
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