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Wireless Data Plans Reviewed

prostoalex writes "The New York Times Technology section runs a review of available wireless data plans that provide a PCMCIA card for wireless Internet connections. Cingular BroadbandConnect seems to have won the comparison as far as quality, but the service is only available in 16 major metropolitan areas. Sprint Mobile Broadband has wider coverage for $80 a month. Verizon Wireless sells BroadbandAccess for $80 a month or $60 if you decide to commit to a 2-year contract, and this one has the widest coverage of 181 metropolitan areas."

15 of 105 comments (clear)

  1. Hmmm by AoT · · Score: 2, Funny

    I assume they give away the information on your wireless activities as well?

    Sign me up.

  2. Re:er.... misleading by AoT · · Score: 2, Funny

    Wireless? These don't appear to be 802.11... you mean cellular.

    Wow, if you have a cellular carrier that still uses wires I would definitely consider switching. It is terribly convenient to not have to carry around them large spools of wire.

  3. WAR Driving, Inc. by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 4, Funny

    How can we offer free WiFi to so many people? Volume.

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
  4. I don't even own a laptop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    So this is completely useless to me. That being said, why I am posting this? I am not even sure why I am here. Anyway, I'll see you guys later. Maybe we could catch a movie or something...

  5. Yes, but... by Locke2005 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Can I run VoIP over this wireless connection, thus screwing these same companies out of any cellular revenue?

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    1. Re:Yes, but... by Nimloth · · Score: 2, Informative

      A bunch of people are doing this here in Canada now that Bell offers 1X-EvDO (2.4 mbps), and that Skype works for smartphones. Works great with Treos and PPCs.

  6. Breaking The Terms by Linux+Ate+My+Dog! · · Score: 4, Interesting
    From the article:
    Another option is use-based plans starting at $20 a month with a cap of five megabytes of data and additional charges for transfers above that. In evaluating the Cingular service, I wanted to test how well the connection would hold while mobile; I started the service on a laptop, and using Windows Media Player tuned to a live radio broadcast. I then fastened the laptop to the passenger seat of my car and drove around Austin, Tex., for just under an hour.
    From Cingular's TOS for their plans Laptop Connect Unlimited, 80 bucks a month):
    Prohibited uses include, but are not limited to, using Services: (i) with server devices or with host computer applications, including, without limitation, Web camera posts or broadcasts, continuous jpeg file transfers, automatic data feeds, telemetry applications, automated functions or any other machine-to-machine applications, (ii) as substitute or backup for private lines or dedicated data connections, (iii) for Voice over IP or (iv) in conjunction with WWAN or other applications or devices which aggregate usage from multiple sources prior to transmission. Unlimited plans cannot be used for uploading, downloading or streaming of video content (e.g. movies, TV), music or games. Furthermore, unlimited plans (except for DataConnect and Blackberry Tethered) cannot be used for any applications that tether the device (through use of, including without limitation, connection kits, other phone/PDA-to-computer accessories, Bluetooth® or any other wireless technology) to laptops, PCs, or other equipment for any purpose.
    Bolding is mine, but Cingular bolds this whole quote in their document. Meanwhile, I use T-Mobile's dirt cheap 30-bucks-a-month, around 40Kbps 'antiquated' GPRS system to Bluetooth my subnotebook at work to keep IMing, reading mail, downloading simple pages. These data prices seem outrageous to me for services I am formally not supposed to use any more intensively than I am doing with GPRS right now. If I am getting broadband I want to stream my own music down already. Instead I am just supposed to download my spam faster?
  7. HSDPA vs. EV-DO by Erich · · Score: 2, Informative
    Singular's card is HSDPA, the 3G packet access for folks upgrading GSM networks. If you're not in an area with HSDPA, you can fall back to EDGE or (probably) GPRS. You'll need a card that supports lots of bands if you expect to roam around the world... but GSM/GPRS/EDGE/HSDPA is what you'll find around Europe. So if the card supports all the frequencies you'd have compatible hardware there.

    Verizon and Sprint use EV-DO cards. EV-DO is pretty widely deployed and growing fast. Make sure you get an EV-DO Revision A compatibile card. DOrA has even faster downlink and much faster uplink capabilities, as well as low-latency support so stuff like VoIP works better. EV-DO will fall back to normal 1x data... which is pretty fast. I get 100-200kbps just about everywhere on my cheapo 1x phone on Verizon. There are EV-DO networks in some Asian countries like Korea. And in my experience Verizon is the best wireless provider here in the USA.

    I have a cheapo Verizon phone and find the normal 1xRTT to be pretty good for web browsing. SSH is a bit high latency but not bad. And it just costs airtime minutes. I wouldn't want to dist-upgrade debian with the link, but it's pretty good for what I need. Several folks in the office have the EV-DO cards and they work great in most cities.

    If you are on a GSM network you also might find out that your phone does EDGE for free. Most phones -- even the cheap ones -- have data features. Find out and you might have a fun solution for an occasional need for wireless connectivity.

    PS. Linux connectivity for the LG VX3200 was a snap... but I can't get it to work in Windows... does anyone have this working? I got a cheapo cable that comes up as a serial device...

    --

    -- Erich

    Slashdot reader since 1997

  8. My experience by charstar · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've had Verizon's service for about a year and am pretty happy with it. They could do A LOT better though.

    I orginally had a Novatel V620 PCMCIA card connection to my powerbook, but when I got my Mac Book Pro, it became instantly useless. As of a few months ago, there are no ExpressCard/32 adaptors available for any of the service providers.

    The solution I went with was to get a bluetooth cell phone (and voice service ... blah) and use the phone as a modem. Works pretty well, though I wish there was a card for it. Of course the verizon morons at the store don't really know what they are selling, so they also had me buy the stupid USB wire to the phone (that doesn't even charge the battery!) that doesn't because, according to them, you can't share the data connection over bluetooth (but you can!).

    So ya, overall i'm happy with it because it works. I'm surprised that i usually have a latency of under 500ms. I can play World of Warcraft from pretty much anywhere =)

  9. Re:Verizon would be neat, but... by rising_hope · · Score: 3, Informative

    My rep seemed to know a bit about it, but I was definitely more a tech-head than he was. Anyway, here in Phoenix, I get about 45-50KB/s on downstream transfers. Latency is notably less so than EDGE on Cingular (my prior data service.) According to the article, it's against the terms of service to stream/download/upload music, movies, or games, and it's also a violation to use VoiP services, such as Skype. That said, I have the Skype client running on my PDA phone and have successfully used it to make phone calls. I also stream Sirius over EVDO all the time, with no problem. I've even used it paired to my laptop via a readily available hack and web conferenced with family from the tops of mountains and such, so it clearly appears that whatever their actual terms of service are, they don't actually block ports or such to utilize such services. It's positively addicting to have broadband like performance everywhere you go. The only part that sucks is leaving down, when you drop to regular 1xRTT speeds, which is marginally better than EDGE.

  10. The best plan depends on local coverage by vinn01 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My advice: use the service with the strongest signal where you will be using your laptop. That may not be the service with the highest published data rate, or the lowest cost plan. Unfortunately, I have no advice for determining the service with the strongest signal other than testing each service.

    As with a cell phone, the signal strength can be very fickle. If your move you laptop to a different desk, your signal strength could plummet.

    You need a strong signal to make wireless broadband work. The published data rates are useless unless you get a perfect signal. What kills the data transfer rate is retries cause by weak signals. With a weak voice signal you can still go about your business, just with a little frustration. Not so with a weak wireless broadband signal. Your connection will slow to uselessness.

    Most all of the broadband wireless cards can be used with a larger antenna. My next bit of advice is to replace the cute little tiny antenna with something that has a higher gain. I've seen antennas that mount on the laptop monitor, table top, or car roof. Use whatever size antenna that you can manage.

  11. Re:Verizon would be neat, but... by vux984 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I also stream Sirius over EVDO all the time, with no problem.

    All the unlimited plans I've ever seen are soft-capped at 1OO MB, 250MB, or half a gig. Streaming music for any length of time is going to chew through it pretty quick.

    I know more than a few people who've had data bills in the thousands. The carriers seem to be pretty reasonable about waiving them for first-timer "OMG I had no idea" types, but I know several people with large monthly data bills.

    For high users its far far far far far far .... cheaper to get get a sirius receiver than to stream it (at least around here).

    it clearly appears that whatever their actual terms of service are, they don't actually block ports or such to utilize such services.

    Yet.

  12. Re:Verizon would be neat, but... by rising_hope · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've had 5 bills in a row now with two devices, both with in excess of 450MB per device. The plan clearly states "Unlimited." I've seen no evidence of SoftCaps that you suggest.

  13. Bluetooth tethering for true mobility by rufusdufus · · Score: 2, Informative

    The article focuses on pc-cards but doesnt mention bluetooth tethering to a cellphone. Using your cellphone as a wireless modem over bluetooth has some advantages over pc-cards. One big advantage of tethering is that you share one account and one bill with fewer fees. Since you probably already carry your cellphone around (with its built in bluetooth hardware), there is a weight/bulk advantage with tethering because you dont need the extra pccard and antennae. Another secret is that the cellphone operates on its own battery so the laptop battery life is effectively extended. These benefits really stand out when you are using a pocket sized computer like the sony 750p; tethering is the difference between an internet computer in your pocket and a computer in a suitcase.

  14. Go T-mobile! by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 2, Informative

    What's wrong with T-mobile's EDGE service?

    1. Get a T-mobile phone with bluetooth and EDGE
    2. Get a laptop with bluetooth.
    3. Enjoy unlimited wireless internet access with (the good) ~120 kbps real-world throughput and (the bad) ~800-1200 ms roundtrip latency, for $19.99 a month.

    I know that EV-DO has better latency, but I didn't think that Cingular's HSDSPA or whatever alphabet soup it is was that much better. T-mobile's EDGE service is acceptable over an NX connection, and works while in the car up to about 60 mph.

    For an addition $10.00, you can get the "T-mobile Total Internet" package, which gives you unlimited T-Mobile hotspots, which are all over the place, and significantly faster than any of the 2.5G-3G data services.

    *shrug*---- I've been tempted by Verizon's EV-DO service, but at 4x the cost, with availability of the high-speed component in metropolitan areas only (my northshort Chicago suburb, near O'Hare airport, at the world's largest industrial park, is NOT served by EV-DO) just doesn't seem worth it.

    Much of the world still lives on dialup. I can get used to using 2x dialup (with 2x the latency, har har) while on the road; and the price cannot be beat (I average 30-50 megs of usage per month, and I get the added side benefit of browsing on either my phone or laptop whenever I want).

    Go T-Mobile. I highly recommend it.

    --
    WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell