There’s something surreal about cruising along the open highway, the sun ahead, trees rushing past, and the hum of the road underneath — while running a full Starlink setup right on the dashboard.
Today’s journey took us from Springdale to Steady Brook, a stretch of Newfoundland road that winds between thick forest and glimpses of the Atlantic air. But this wasn’t just any road trip — the Starlink dish was mounted up front, router and node plugged in, everything humming along as if the car itself had turned into a moving edge datacenter.
The beauty of it? The cluster stayed online, packets flowing as the road stretched ahead. No roadside café Wi-Fi or sketchy cell tower hand-offs — just direct beam to space, streaming connectivity as steady as the road stripes.
It’s a strange blend: the rugged backroads of Newfoundland paired with cutting-edge space-age infrastructure. A reminder that the survival cluster isn’t just about sitting in one cabin, it’s about being mobile, flexible, and always connected.
From Springdale’s quiet town vibe to Steady Brook’s rivers and ski hills, the trip stitched together with a constant link to orbit. Starlink and the node — keeping the lab alive, even on the move.
Connectivity in motion. That’s the frontier.
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