I thought phone call use too.Sorry, I wasn't clear. Yes, but just for texting. This news was more "web surfing", email, and full user experience. None of the sat services can do that directly to any phone...yet.
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I thought phone call use too.Sorry, I wasn't clear. Yes, but just for texting. This news was more "web surfing", email, and full user experience. None of the sat services can do that directly to any phone...yet.
Very true. I took a guy from work fishing this morning that is from MN. He had a 2500 dollar ice fishing live scope setup that was crazy.Garmin is everywhere. They are big in fishing electronics, running, biking, etc. Losing inreach sales won’t kill them. I still like my inreach and won’t be getting rid of it anytime soon.
Just emergency or regular call too?I thought phone call use too.
I assumed it would work similar to a sat phone and allow regular phone calls.Just emergency or regular call too?
Sorry, I wasn't clear. Yes, but just for texting. This news was more "web surfing", email, and full user experience. None of the sat services can do that directly to any phone...yet.
Thanks. Pretty cool. I missed that announcement.T-Mobile satellite supports more than just texting. Currently the following apps, with more being added.
- AccuWeather
- AllTrails
- Apple Compass
- Apple Fitness
- Apple Maps
- Apple Messages
- Apple Music
- Apple Weather
- CalTopo
- Google Maps
- Messenger
- Overwatch x Rescue SOS
- onX Backcountry
- onX Fish
- onX Hunt
- onX Offroad
- T-Life
- X
- Yahoo Mail
Finally got a chance to try the iPhone sat messaging last week. Not much to add from the others input on the application and service. I would need to be conscious of battery usage and only go to sat mode when I was going to use it. I would worry that passively staying in normal mode and letting it determine whether it should use LTE, Sat, etc might drain the battery. But that really isn't much different than using the inreach. Overall result is the header of the thread. Goodbye Garmin Inreach.
Thanks for sharing your experience. I have found that the GSAT sats are usually lower on the horizon than I expect and trees and canyons have been an impediment. That may have been your problem too. Honestly, I haven't used it as much as i would have liked over the last year+.Apple doesn’t use the same Satellite network as Garmin. Apple relies on Globalstar, where Garmin uses iridium. iridium has 100% global coverage, where Globalstar does not.
I don’t know a single other guide that relies on an IPhone (Globalstar). We were guiding in a remote canyon in Montana and the iPhone couldn’t connect the entire time we were in the canyon. No sent or received messages, while the other two Garmin users were able to send and receive texts.
Apple sat services are targeted for the weekend warriors who aren’t going deep in the backcountry.
I thought the same thing with the SPOT and Garmin and waiting for the lights to blink a certain way to confirm messages. With a good signal and communication is 60 seconds. With a weak signal and it would take long enough I stopped keeping track. But I guess in an emergency something is better than nothing.Iphone sat messaging will be almost useless in a real emergency where the user is mostly incapacitated and unable to chase sattelites across the sky. Then there's a good chance the "next sattelite available in 13 minutes" pops on to the screen. I've seen that gem a cpl times. It works great when you're sitting on a stump eating a sandwich, mostly.
Thanks for sharing your experience. I have found that the GSAT sats are usually lower on the horizon than I expect and trees and canyons have been an impediment. That may have been your problem too. Honestly, I haven't used it as much as i would have liked over the last year+.
Also, the Government also uses Globestar.
I don't want this to become an Apple-bashing or Starlink-bashing thread. There is no point in that.