Several factors contribute to the sudden surge in interest:
Yes, if: You value upload speed, hate data caps, and want transparent pricing without a two-year prison sentence.
No, if: You live in a rural area where only Starlink is available (PSndlnet's fixed wireless requires line of sight) or if you need TV sports channels (their streaming TV lacks NFL RedZone as of this writing).
Even the best ISPs have hiccups. Here is how to fix common problems specific to PSndlnet hardware:
Issue 1: "Connected, no internet" after setup
Issue 2: Wi-Fi drops intermittently on Pro package
Issue 3: Billing discrepancies
Here's a simple example using the psych package to score a test:
# Install and load psych package
install.packages("psych")
library(psych)
# Example data (responses to 5 items by 10 people)
responses <- matrix(sample(c(0,1), 50, replace = TRUE), nrow = 10)
# Scoring the test
scores <- score.items(responses)
# Print the scores
print(scores)
And here's a basic example using the network package:
# Install and load network package
install.packages("network")
library(network")
# Create a network
net <- network.initialize(5, directed = FALSE)
# Set ties
net[1,2] <- 1
net[1,3] <- 1
net[2,3] <- 1
# Plot the network
plot(net)
If you are referring to something else entirely, could you please provide more context or clarify the name of the packages you're interested in? This will help provide a more accurate and helpful response.
The psndlnet packages integrate tightly with the network's economic layer. Upon successful task completion and verification by the psndlnet-verifier, the packages sign a transaction attesting to the work done. This transaction is broadcast to the blockchain, triggering the release of token rewards.
Best for: Remote developers, heavy cloud users, Twitch streamers.
Verdict: For the prosumer, this is a steal. Symmetrical 500 Mbps usually costs over $120 from legacy providers.