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Viability of Mobile Broadband For Home Use?

mighty7sd writes "I am about to be released from my contract with Time Warner for my home internet service, and I am evaluating alternatives to my current cable modem setup. I would love to use AT&T U-Verse or Verizon Fios, but they are not available in my area. I have a good idea of the costs and limitations of Cable and DSL service, so I am considering using mobile broadband for my home internet connection. Most providers seems to cap the connection at 5 GB of data transfer per month. I am a relatively heavy internet user using streaming video and a web server, so I need decent down/upload speeds and a large data transfer cap. Has anyone in the /. community had a good experience using mobile broadband cards at their home, specifically with lots of streaming video or a home server? What has happened if you have gone over your data transfer limit? Cricket Wireless is available in my area for $40 per month with 'unlimited' service, but I am skeptical that it is truly reliable and unlimited. I also found products that act as a WiFi router for mobile broadband services, but it seems that this is against most carriers TOS. Can they really detect these, and are they comparable to a wired broadband router?"

3 of 177 comments (clear)

  1. No by dr_strang · · Score: 5, Funny

    Terrible idea. Just steal your neighbor's wifi.

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    This is a sig. It is like every other sig in the world, except that it is mine, and it is different.
  2. Title Answers Itself? by Jon.Laslow · · Score: 2, Funny

    Viability of Mobile Broadband For Home Use?
    >> Viability Mobile Broadband Home Use
    >> Mobile Broadband Home Use
    >> Mobile Home

  3. Re:"Prolly" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    It means you're over 40.