Voicestream Quietly Releases GPRS In The U.S.
hidden72 writes: "Voicestream quietly rolled out their iStream GPRS wireless data service in the United States last week. More information is available from Voicestream's website. General information about GPRS can be found here. Theoretically, GPRS data rates can reach close to 170k. Voicestream's per-packet charges are quite expensive, ($40 for 10MB) but it's an always-on 28k-56k data connection available in most metropolitan areas."
All I can say is "Thank Standards" its about time that you can use the same phone in the rest of the world and still have it work in the States without having to buy a bulky tri-band number. Now if the billing issues could be sorted out then it would be great.
Why is the US always at least 2 years behind the rest of the planet for Wireless ?
An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
I don't care what some others say. Personally, I say Voicestream makes the nicest trailer.
You quote $40 for 10MB, in the UK the prices are about £7($5) for 1MB if included in the price plan, or 2p/KB ($15/MB) if not, so it seems to be in line.
The problem with GPRS is that the suppliers are likely to kill the market by charging too much and restricting the accessable sevices to a few WAP sites which the supplier has a relationship with (I'm told at least one telco in the UK does this, but I havn't checked it out).
SMS used to be a service that was hardly ever used due to expensive prices and a restriction to the suppliers network, alot of people didn't even know their phones could do it. As soon as the prices dropped and the telcos opened gateways to each other, the volumes exploded, now SMS' are a large part of the telcos' income.
GPRS is something that will be kept in the WAP bracket of niche user base until telcos finally realise that people will use it if they can afford it. Ironically GPRS will solve the main problem with WAP, speed.
or about a third the cost for the same service in New Zealand.
Those prices are quite expensive, especially if you need a wireless connection to download porn, like I do. I guess people who want a connection for non-pornographic related activities might not mind.
BTW, it says on the bottom that PDA's need to be running Windows CE. Unless I'm mistaken, this sounds like another attempt to alienate the non-MS community. I say we declare war.
You die too easily.
Palm has a nice GRPS modem out.. seems like anybody with a decent palm and the modem within a area that is accessible by GRPS would be quite happy except if they cant afford the service.. I for one wouldnt mind being in a Cafe and whipping out my Palm and looking up the current movie listings for teh area I'm in and be able to find a decent movie that I want to watch..
. html
Voicestream has a page that has GRPS capable devices at: http://www.gsmworld.com/technology/gprs_terminals
Here in germany its 190 DM (about 90 us$) for 10 MB .. :(
:)
:)
And they wonder why noone is using this
in fact the only application for gprs would be to check your email with a handheld computer.
Surfing the web is way too expensive with it
Yes.. it happened 3 weeks ago.. I would think that the mourning period would be over by now.. Its time to move on.. there's no point in lurking in the past.. might as well look forward to the cool things happening now in the present and hope that more cool things like this happen in the future without any more bad stuff happening!
The reason mobile phones are doing so well in europe is the price and the flexibility. Sweden are for instance way ahead of the states, way better standard (GSM all the way), better deals and SIM cards instead of locking the consumers in.
So what does this got to do with GPRS? Well, charging per packets will be expensive, even more so as you will pay for everything in and out (I guess). WAP push will not be fun for example. And it could very very easily become extremly expensive for the cosumer, and hard to check up on how expensive it has become before it is too late. Charge me a monthly sum according to the QoS I get and I would think about it, like it is now I can not recommend anyone to use it, unless they are very rich.
You can use it with a palm... or something else with a irda connection... :-) so I guess there are some uses for it...
A friend of got gprs and uses it to talk on icq in the train, bus, etc
He also uses it to read slashdot
99Fims (about 15$) a month for unlimited GPRS data-access :)
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
Yes, around here in Portugal it's still very expensive, but for those of us that were using regular modem thru gsm we get the benefit of not having to lose 45s just for the modem sync, and about 1.5 mins to login...
Right now it's cheaper doing certain things in gprs.
wow, now imagine if these all had that *911 gsm deal.
i wonder how the swedes feel about this? new zealand? i wonder how they reacting to this in guam.
i wonder what the effects this service might have on scientists working on cold fusion. i wonder if this will speed up the process?
i wonder if i can interface with the new moterola phone with say, some kind of glove based input device?
I wonder 30 years ago what the founders of email would think about wireless email and how much it costs in new zealand and how the swedes are so much more evolved then we are.
i wonder why i come back here anymore really.
I'm intrigued to know what 'killer apps' are going to emerge for wireless devices. I know that the role out of WAP here in the UK has been something of a failure as no one could really see the 'benefit' of wireless web surfing which is slower as not as usable as doing it from your home PC.
The truly useful applications will use the GPS location of your phone to give you location dependent services. What's the traffic like 1 mile up the road? Where's the nearest pub that serves Wadworth's 6X? Where's the nearest record store?
Perhaps the Yellow Pages is the killer app.
------------ jay*arr*tee
The other nice thing about Voicestream is that they use GSM, which allows me to roam internationally (no, not just Canada and Mexico). Recently I was on a trip to France, and was able to send and recieve calls just as if I was state-side.
It is a great idea, and the proof of that is AT&T is also building a GSM network.
Also known as "ISDN" on some phones.
With it, the connection time is practically zero as th GSM connects to the Internet Dialin port via ISDN instead of with a modem. To use it, you just need a different init string, and the other side has to support V110 (not all do, but a lot do).
I use it when connecting my laptop. I only get 9.6 kBit as I don't use it enough for the $10 extra a month to be able to use HSCSD (High speed circuit switched data) which is capable of transferring 14.4*3=43,2 down/14.4 up or something like that. And that only costs regular phone charges.
GPRS is too expensive here in Germany.
If I would use it, I would have to pay $0.35 per 10 kilobytes for the first 100kb and $0.10 after that.
So one MB would cost $3.50 + 90*$0.10 = $12.50 for one megabyte!!!
With HSCSD I only pay $0.10 per minute and get a decent connection. That makes a megabyte price if continously transferring data of $0.35
Great, its global roaming will allow you to use it anywhere including Kazakhstan, but oh no, not Canada. It's just an invisible line dividing a land mass. We're practically american anyway!
I wonder if VoiceStream is conspiring with those marketing type geezers that send 8 Mb PowerPoint(tm) presentations to half the company...
ich bin der musikant
mit taschenrechner in der hand
kraftwerk
They're going to use GSM800 aren't they?
Just now phones are starting to have GSM 900/1800/1900 as a standard and now we have GSM 800 as well.
Oh well.
I wanted more accurate numbers but when I tried to price the damn phone + plan + contract on Voicestream's website I realized that their little shopping cart prog refuses to give you a running total... I got to the point where I would have had to enter a credit card and agree to terms and they still never let me know what exactly this was costing me. That really sucks. Okay rough guesses:
Motorola phone (that you probably didn't want) 169.99
PDA data plan (that you don't want because you have a Palm or linux on PDA) 19.99
Voice plan (that you don't want because you like the cell you have) 19.99
Compaq ipaq H3635 (because if you have to run WinCE... ) 499.99
Extra battery, mobile charger. (guess) 89.99
Comes out to: $799.95
So for almost a grand I can pretty much have my porno spam beamed straight to the metra train on the way to work... yeah I guess I could also pull down Slashdot as well so that I could keep current about glove input devices as well. True...
I think I am just gonna keep my ugly clumsy Palm VII
But the phone does come with a built in FM tuner. So maybe I am just being a bitch about the whole thing.
Meanwhile, we're working hard to encourage folks to investigate/participate in, the brave gnu world of open/honest communications/commerce. We will be giving away, this distinctive set of URLs, including a year's free hosting, as a result of someones' ability to follow simple directions.
So far, we note, A LOT of whining about the asphixiating behaviours of the felonious kingdumb of fud, but a dangerous lack of actual resolution to participate in the offering of alternatives. As far as we're concerned, fud is dead, but we hear that may not be totally true for everybuddy, yet.
Hi everybody!
I just have to say one thing:
Here in Europe GPRS is already in use in cellular networks so I have some experience with it (the experience comes also from my job, I work at the largest cellular network provider here in Austria). Unlike HSCSD, GPRS does not provide stable data tranfer rates. 170 k sounds cool, but as experience has shown, these rates only apply if you stand directly next to a receiver. HSCSD uses multiple channels, reaches about 43 k and if you loose a channel (e.g. when the network gets crowded) you pay for one channel less. GPRS uses slots in one channel, and if a slot is unavailable - well, bad luck. Here in Austria most people prefer HSCSD for it is cheaper and more reliable, the maximum transmission speed reached with GRPS in real use is only slightly higher than HSCSD and generally speaking -> HSCSD is most times faster. GRPS is not a solution for high speed date. It is only a small step towards UMTS.
bye
johannes
".Sig Stealer" was here
Powertel users who signed a contract (ie the 3600 minute plan), VoiceStream has volated your contract. If you want more info please e-mail me:
c0le@ziplip.com
As you can see here GSM is not a viable solution for most of America. GSM requires almost 3.5 times more towers to operate. For a country so spread out as North America is (compare the total population of Canada and American against Europe and you'll see what I mean) you won't be putting up a tower for one or two people out in the country.
If America needs national coverage (and I think they do) CDMA is the obvious choice.
If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
Enough of these ignorant comments.
GSM is, and still isn't right for the United States for 2 reasons.
1) The European GSM standard uses 900MHz and 1800MHz. Those frequencies are used by the United States government, and have been long before GSM came around. So that's why GSM in the U.S. uses different frequencies. So any GSM phone that is, say 2 years old, won't work in Europe and vice versa.
2) Optimal cell size is a function of population density. Digital technologies, especially GSM, require smaller cell sizes. Simply put, places like Wyoming are not going to be getting digital anytime soon. But they do have analog because you can make those cells huge. GSM does not interoperate well with AMPS. CDMA IS-95 does. You can run a CDMA network and an AMPS network at 800MHz.
I also believe that CDMA is the future (not IS-95). Sure, UMTS is based on time-division, but the Docomo 3G call stack is CDMA-based.
So go buy your VoiceStream phone if you live in a big city. I live in Chicago. VoiceStream is there, but no way will I get a VoiceStream phone because if I ever go to Wisconsin, my phone will not get service. My Verizon CDMA phone gets service anywhere in the country.
Yes they are. And they're testing GPRS in Washington state. Here's the coverage map.
it's not going to stop until you wise up, no it's not going to stop. so just give up.
Gotta love my nokia 8290 w/ voicestream. IR modem to laptop or handheld. doubley wireless ;-)
I can dial right into my ISP and voicestream it
doesn't cost anything when it's in my minutes.
http://www.djw.org/information/palm8290.html
-- these are only opinions and they might not be mine.
You want to maybe tell us what the hell GPRS stands for so that the 99% of us who aren't drooling nerds will have some idea what the fuck you're talking about?
7 quid is about 11 dollars...
don't plant a tower in un-populated areas then!
On the surface, Voicestream's plan doesn't sound bad. In Japan, you pay 0.1 yen per 128 byte packet, or about $75 per 10mb. $40 for 10mb is only half that, at about 0.05 cents per packet. Cost-wise, it's fine - but you have to buy your packets ahead of time, and you have to buy your voice minutes separately! In Japan, you buy your (subsidized to be cheap) phone, pay a flat $3/mo fee for the activation and use, and then just pay as you go by packets you send or request, be it for voice or data. As a result, text messaging in Japan (and europe) has become hugely popular and people use their phones for practically everything.
When are the American companies going to learn that what is holding the cellular market back is not so much the technology as the bass-ackwards system of purchasing a calling plan for a whole year with a certain number a minutes a month and a preposterous number of restrictions while still having to pay for incoming calls. It's overly complex, intimidating, and autocratic. These idiotic games are precisely the reason I do not yet own a mobile phone. I don't mind paying more for the phone, but I won't pay for more minutes/data than I use, and I hate playing guessing games.
It irritates me to see US technology so far behind Europe and Japan for such a stupid, greedy reason. As far as I'm concerned, a mobile phone should work anywhere in the world that a network exists, and have consistent, per-use billing regardless of where you are. Until we have something approaching that in America, I'm not buying. Here's hoping Sprint or ATT figure it out.
---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?
quietly ????
/???
and on slashdot
what are u talking about ??
the European 1800 -- so in effect you still need a dual or tri band phone to use it in both the states and Europe. GSM is simply a Euro hack and slash of TDMA which itself is a warmed over AMPS implementation --- in short it is not the best choice out there technology wise -- but then design by committe (espeically European committe it seems) is always bad.
In many ways CDMA (ala Sprint PCS) is a superior carrier, if only for security reasons.
GSM Packet Radio Service - It's a quick inexpensive upgrade for GSM networks to get Packet data. GSM is currently Circuit Switched Data (CSD), you dial up an ISP. GPRS allows an "always on" connection. The data rate does not go up significantly - that is what EDGE ( Enhanced Datarates for GSM Evolution ) and UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecomunications System). UMTS actualy does more now - it will allow MobileIP, a full IP Core network for voice transport, Data roaming from Wi-Fi to GPRS. Not voice though - it requires "Hard Real Time" and QoS (Quality of Service) capabilities.
A colleaque student did a diploma thesis with gprs (Hey Joergi where are you). And he experienced roundtrip times around 2s. Yes two seconds !!!
I'm not to familiar with this whole matter but what is theoreticly 170k good for if I need 6 secs for a handshake ?
Ummm So there are around 280million or so in North America... a similar number for Europe, add in Africa, the Middle East, Asia which are all predominantly GSM and soon the argument falls into tatters. There is no reason not to use GSM, if its the network of choice in the rest of the planet, and it works over large parts of Russia (hint you don't need many towers in Nebraska or Sibera because animals don't use mobiles). And look at Finland. You'd be hard pushed to find a more sparesely populated country, and yet mobiles rule.
The infrastructure in the US sucks, its disjointed, fractured and a pain. A classic example of where a lack of goverment direction restricts choice. Having such a disjointed network has put a heavy dampner on the development of wireless in the US.
Roll on standards, even if they are goverment decreed.
An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
7 pounds was US$10 last time I went to London (August 2001), so the prices seem to be $10/1MB with plan, $30/MB without? Voicestream's best rates are $4/MB w/ plan.
OTOH, the UK is generally more expensive.
Cingular has announced pricing of $70/MB. Read this thread for more info...
I am a novice GSM user and understand that there is a provision for the s.i.m. card that you purchase to write to the phone an identifier that prevents the phone from recognizing a s.i.m. card from any other carrier.
Is this in actual use in the world?
I searched the web for workarounds, but without exception I turned up the exact same paragraph copied verbatim at well over 50 sites, so I gave up looking.
If true, it would go a long way towards killing acceptance of this, in addition to exhorbitant rates.
Ideas? Comments?
slashdot: A failed experiment.
Actually, today AT&T Wireless announced consumer GSM/GPRS service in Seattle, Portland, Phoenix and Las Vegas.
What's there to look at Finland? Oh yeah, they aren't anything like North America! You proved my point (if Finland really is the least dense place using GSM)! But here's the stats to back it up:
t ml
Taken from http://www.funet.fi/Finland/Finland-info.html
People per sq km: 16
(I'll use my home country, Canada to prove we need to use CDMA)
Taken from:
http://www.canadainfolink.ca/chartthree.htm
Canadian population: 30 million
Canadian land area: 10 000 000 sq km.
People per sq km: 3.
See what I'm talking about? I live in an area that would be considered 5 minutes out of town and my phone has to drop to analog to work! If it was GSM I wouldn't have service at all!
You might get away with only including the US in the stats, but even so, I'd be surprised if Finland's population were as evenly distributed as the US's.
>and it works over large parts of Russia
Great... a network that doesn't cover the times when you are out in the middle of nowhere and want to use the phone. Joy! Now I can take all my camping trips in fear that my car might explode on the way there since I can't afford an Iridium phone.
>hint you don't need many towers in Nebraska or Sibera because animals don't use mobiles
Try telling that to the 2 million "Animals" that live there under the mamalian class human.
http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/31000.h
>You'd be hard pushed to find a more sparesely populated country
Nahh... I both live in one, and beside one.
I think you'll also find that wireless isn't popular here since it can't compete with local service. I pay $12 US a month for all the phone service I want. Is that how much it is in Finland? If its anything like the rest of europe, probably not.
I've heard of people in europe saying they use their mobile phones a lot because they hardly pay more to use them than a landline phone. I question if mobile phones can ever take off in a country where a local call is $0.15 US. Even the $30 US a month plans that include 600 minutes are a rip off! I can get more than 2 regular phone lines for that!
As long as wireless isn't cheap enough to be as popular as regular phones there won't be enough money coming in to build 12x the towers. Well, you could cut off customers and just have service in big cities like New York, but then everyone from europe would complain about how their phone only worked in the one city.
To me it all looks like chicken & egg.
If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
>where a local call is $0.15 US
I'm having a bad day! Make that a local call from a payphone.
I read the headline and thought "But GURPS has been out for *years* now!!"
The problem with WAP is incompatibility/bugginess, low usability and lack of useful content - speed is barely faster using GPRS, which simply makes it more convenient by being always-on. Every time I try a new WAP site, it doesn't work on my phone (a Nokia 7110, supposedly a standard one), due to WAP gateway, WAP browser or site problems. I would actually use WAP a bit if it worked, despite the usability - some of the content is becoming useful, e.g. a site that tells you driving directions from any point in the UK.
So, it's basically a 28k - 56k service, that can "theoretically" go as fast as 170k, while Ricochet was a 128k service, with real-life throughput of up to 300k. They charge 40 bucks for 10MB, while Ricochet charged $40/month (for local-only service in San Diego--$75/month for nationwide) for as much data as you wanted (I used as much as 100MB/day at times). Be still my heart.
£7 is more like $12
:)
/picky
and yes it's extortionate isn't it?
I went with VS almost two years ago because of the email to the phone and messaging. Over this time, they've changed the name of the service for this several times. What's worse, they've changed what they mean by "email", and closed the website through which I could send the phone a message.
VS currently thinks that email means "160 characters or less, remove all carrage returns and characters they don't like". Sure, that's what the phone wants, but if you forward your email to another place, they still mangle it when it is forwarded. And they throw away all the headers so tracing any spam you get becomes impossible.
They consistently make me sorry I signed their stupid contract that gives them my firstborn child if I drop them.
The main appeal for GPRS is not the high data rates. In practice, the data rates are similar to single-slot CSD, or sometimes as good as multi-slot HSCSD. It depends on how the operators provision their RF channels. The big deal about GPRS is that it is packet switched, "always on", and has no long call setup times.
These features make casual web/wap browsing more appealing than the old way (dial up, wait, connect, read web page, pay while reading, hang up).
There are two main uses for cellular data connections: (1) apps in the phone, like email and wap (2) use as a modem, connected to a laptop. GPRS will make #1 a lot better. The effect it will have on #2 will be that you pay for bits and not time (which is good for activities like web browsing, which have download-and-read usage patterns).
It's a shame that the cellular infrastructure companies (see my email address) have marketed GPRS as a "high bandwidth" solution instead of an "always on" one. The carriers are just selling what they've been told.
// Alan Porter
All of europe agreed on a standard in 1984 for digital phones called gsm. works allover europe, in Canada, a small provider has had GSM service in cities for the past 5 years. Rogers (largest cell network in Canada, on Nov 1 will release its GSM Offering accross its whole network, meaning if you can get cell service there now, youll get gsm there in a month.
AT&T in the US will offer this in about 2 years.
the reason fo rthe switch is that it was discovered that cdma doesnt work with the new 3g wireless services (developed in europe for gsm) thus requireing the switch to gsm.