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Life on the Road with 3G

david_adams writes "Since I first evaluated Sprint's new Vision "3G" high speed wireless data service in September of last year, I've had the opportunity to travel around the country, using the service to keep in touch with the world, receive all my spam, er, email, and do my work. I've used the service in hotels, restaurants, parked cars, moving cars, picnic tables, and airports, in huge cities, and in desolate stretches of interstate highway. Here are my impressions after this long term test."

7 of 188 comments (clear)

  1. SMS by onthefenceman · · Score: 5, Informative

    The author seems puzzled by the popularity of SMS in Europe, but it's just simple economics. With most plans I've come across in England in France, it's cheaper to send an SMS than to make a 1-minute call. Rates overall are also more expensive, so getting in the habit of sending an SMS rather than making a call lowers your bills.

    The other advantage is that in noisy environments like buses, subways, crowded hallways, etc. you don't have to shout over the crowd to get the message across. This keeps your neighbors from strangling you and lets you say your message once rather than repeating it 3 times.

    --
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  2. Speed by rf0 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well he says that he can get 12-18Kb/s per second on GPRS. Well thats not bad but here in the UK its just not worth doing. We are billed on a per Kb cost. To download a 1MB can pay upto US$8. Also the latency sucks so SSH over GPRS isn't the most friendly expierence in the world.

    However we have just had Three lauch which should provide real 3G services. Now that should be cool. I can't wait to have to make sure my hair is neat when I answer a video call

    Rus

  3. Why do I read the articles first? by jonbrewer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    First off, he's not talking about 3G. Not even close. If the Slashdot posting had said 2.5G, I'd have ignored it. I mean, I've been using GPRS in Boston on T-Mobile's network for over two years, and it's nothing to write about. He can't even read his email on his phone! Bah. I was using Outlook on my iPaq using a bluetooth connection to my GPRS enabled Nokia 6330i almost a year ago.

  4. really 2.5G by guacamolefoo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As the article notes, it is really 2.5G service. Nevertheless, I think the author's experience mirrors mine in a lot of ways.

    1. SMS is way overrated. It has its place, but given the tariffs in the US, it will never be a big deal. Calling is just too cheap.

    2. Data interfaces suck on phones. Everyone keeps predicting the demise of PDAs, but my Handspring Visor Neo with the Sprint PCS module (available for $20) kills any "phone" out there. Go to a bigger (compared to a phone) Treo (for an arm and a leg), and the web is usable.

    3. Phones need a better way to get data in and out. At a minimum, maybe a USB cable to synch data from a desktop/laptop. Again, my Visor/PCS phone rules here. I can't believe the Samsung phone inthe review wastes all the features by lacking that simple item. I hadn't considered "how the features work" when I looked at that phone a few months ago -- gotta add that criteria to my list. I do not want to enter several hundred addresses on a fricking phone keypad.

    4. What I want in a phone/pda/service plan are the following:

    a. desktop synch
    b. a decent, usable screen/browser
    c. a smallish form factor (less than my currrent clunky rig, but super-duper small isn't a big deal to me)
    d. palm-like features (handwriting recognition, scheduler, phonebook, to-do list)
    e. lots of third party developers and apps
    f. total cost $100
    g. good coverage (very important)
    h. 1 meg/day of transfer for data
    i. under $50/mo.
    j. 250 primetime minutes, free weekends/nights

    I have compromised on some of those things, but I still haven't found everything I want in my market. Video phones don't interest me. Ditto cameras and MP3 players. I want my phone and PDA to converge for basic web/mail/phone capabilities in one usable, comfortable package for a reasonable price.

  5. Yes.. by Adam9 · · Score: 4, Informative

    3 options. The free, the limited, and the expensive-but-oso-cool option.

    Free: Plug in the USB cable and make sure you have the necessary drivers and the phone set to the right setting. Typically, you're limited to 14.4k but it only uses normal airtime with NO extra charges.

    Limited: You can pick a plan with either limited airtime for data or limited usage (like 40mb a month for example).

    Expensive but oso cool: $99.99 a month gets you unlimited, any time of day, bandwidth at constant ~140kbps at peak time and ~170-180+kbps at offpeak hours. I've heard great things about this if you plan on using this a lot.

    You'll need a phone capable of doing this. Most newer phones support it. Check Ebay for a USB cable. It shouldn't cost you more than $11 especially if you check eforcity.com

    For example, my Motorola T720 is recognized as a usb modem when I plug it into my computer. Since I don't pay for any of the plans I mentioned above, I get 14.4. Still good for checking email or browsing low-graphic sites.

    The official info about this kind of stuff can be found here at Verizon.

  6. Re:SMS by ojQj · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I have to say, I personally hate SMS's, and they aren't cheap, but I can see why some people do like them:
    1. You can communicate from a loud disco
    2. You can communicate without interrupting someone in case they are doing something important (similar to e-mail)
    3. You can communicate with someone in a language they don't feel terribly comfortable in since they don't have to respond in real time

    This is all aside from the wierd fashion it has become among some teens here in Germany.


    That said, I don't think SMS will be terribly popular once real e-mail is more mobily accessible.

  7. Vive PCS Vision ! by FauxPasIII · · Score: 4, Informative

    I've had the service since early November, and I will be a sad, sad little boy if they ever deactivate it or change the pricing structure unfavorably. I principally use it with my laptop, and it's absolutely magnificent.

    I have the Sanyo 4900 phone, fwiw, and it shows up to Linux as a USB modem using the standard acm.o driver. I get a pretty high latency, about 350ms ping to my gateway, but the bandwidth is around 20K/s (that's kiloBYTES) when I'm in a strong service area, averages around 12 if I'm moving around. Coverage is good, albeit not perfect. I drove from Atlanta to St Louis with a ping going the whole time, and lost less than 10 packets. There are a few dead zones in the rural area south of St Louis where my parents live, but not many (and we haven't found ANY cell phones that work in those areas, T-Mobile and Cingular all die in the same places)

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