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."
How can we offer free WiFi to so many people? Volume.
If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
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.
I've had Verizon's service for about a year and am pretty happy with it. They could do A LOT better though.
... 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!).
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
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 =)
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.