@@Allen_in_Asia thanks for responding, well I believe there are a ton of teachers teaching online from Cambodia, if the internet is sufficient for their work then it should be fine for basic online document downloading, no?
Yes, there are plenty of people that teach online. The internet is good enough to use Zoom, etc. most of the time. Also, mobile data is very cheap (basically free), so if my internet at home is unreliable I will just tether from my phone. However, while I was on Koh Rong, I wasn't even getting reception on my phone on many parts of the island. I wouldn't recommend living there if you need phone service and internet consistently. You could live in Sihanoukville, a major city on the mainland, and then ferry over to Koh Rong on the weekends or something.
@@Allen_in_Asia thank you very much for taking time to explain, alright yes this makes sense! I agree you do have a point, I’ll keep Koh Rong as a holiday destination otherwise I think Kampot or Kep are my better options. You are owed a six pack of beer and I’ll remedy that once I’m settled in the kingdom, much love and good luck to you fam.
Beautiful beautiful
Very informative, thank you bro.
You can't go wrong with Koh Rong.
Nice video. How much did you pay to stay in a bungalow on the beach?
I don't remember exactly, but it was somewhere in the range of $30 a night.
How were the mosquitoes?
No more than the mainland. Didn't really see any.
There’s no mosquitoes by the beach it’s breezy air very beautiful island
Hey man, could expats live in Koh Rong? Where internet is for remote workers of course. Thanks!
The internet is not that great in Cambodia as a whole and is even worse in Koh Rong. Probably not the best bet for remote workers.
@@Allen_in_Asia thanks for responding, well I believe there are a ton of teachers teaching online from Cambodia, if the internet is sufficient for their work then it should be fine for basic online document downloading, no?
Yes, there are plenty of people that teach online. The internet is good enough to use Zoom, etc. most of the time. Also, mobile data is very cheap (basically free), so if my internet at home is unreliable I will just tether from my phone.
However, while I was on Koh Rong, I wasn't even getting reception on my phone on many parts of the island. I wouldn't recommend living there if you need phone service and internet consistently. You could live in Sihanoukville, a major city on the mainland, and then ferry over to Koh Rong on the weekends or something.
@@Allen_in_Asia thank you very much for taking time to explain, alright yes this makes sense!
I agree you do have a point, I’ll keep Koh Rong as a holiday destination otherwise I think Kampot or Kep are my better options.
You are owed a six pack of beer and I’ll remedy that once I’m settled in the kingdom, much love and good luck to you fam.