by Forbury Lion »
31 Mar 2015 10:17
philM EPR2.0 philM The BBC iPlayer app lets you stream live TV so if the ship have a wifi service that will be an option.
The big golf ball like object on ships usually contains the satellite connection hardware. Big problem may be speed due to bandwidth issues though. If you are close to land the signal will often flip to using a land based tower and then you will get similar speeds to home broadband.
You might have to use a lower resolution display mode but if there is enough bandwidth it will be possible.
Yes - definitely worth being prepared for - but might be blocked by IP depending on the ISP / network provider the ship uses.
Just had a look at some cruise ship sites. Some of them charge up to £10/half hour for wi-fi so could get a bit expensive too!
Ask the Captain to sail near the coastline and you may pick up some free wifi from coastal coffee shops, although you may have to sell it to him as he might be reluctant to risk crashing the ship and putting lives at danger.
re: BBC iplayer, I suggest you check the BBC actually broadcast this as the rights may not extend to online, much like the radio coverage on BBC Berks online stopping during the games as they don't have the rights to broadcast them over the web.
Also, if you are outside of British waters or connecting to a non UK proxy server on wifi it may think you are based overseas and therefore block access to BBC services such as iplayer, so a change of dns settings would be required.