T-Mobile's First HSPA+ Modem Goes On Sale Sunday
adeelarshad82 writes "T-Mobile announced that the webConnect Rocket USB Laptop Stick, the first HSPA+ device for the US, will be available beginning on Sunday, March 14. The device was originally announced at MWC in February. HSPA+ is interesting because it could enable 4G LTE-like speeds using existing 3G infrastructure and according to a hands-on, it smokes Wi-Max. Right now, it's still just for Philadelphia, although we should see several major cities light up with HSPA+ on both coasts well before the end of 2010."
These things are such a joke. I haven't seen any real increase in the actual d/l speed of wireless networks. I feel like we're in some Communist country where you read in the paper about the community 1000 miles away that got some incredible new thing and it's coming soon to your community, except it never actually does and taxes get higher and the work week gets longer and the commute gets drearier and the currency gets weaker and the prices get higher and...
US cell phone market is so pathetic... Here in Portugal, we have HSPA+ for a couple months now...
Up here in Canada, we already have HSPA+ in urban areas... strange that we are so much in advance, we are known to usually adopt technologies well after the US...
Sprint is supposedly rolling out WiMax to even more cities this year. Does anyone know their timeline? I'd think that getting a decent 4G presence earlier would help them fight off this newer, faster offering. The fact that it's unlimited is a big plus too. I'd be happy with either one around me, but preferably both!
How long before we get these in the UK? They sound good.
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Is that a rocket in your pocket? Or are you just happy to see me?
It still has HPSAs awful latency.
LTEs extremely low latency will allow alot of interesting stuff that'll make the devices much more useful.
with a 5GB cap and 60c/mb after that makes it a so what.
(Like having a fast car with a half gallon tank.. you can beat anyone in a race for half a block, after that a geo metro is faster)
IIRC, Sprint's 4G is being advertised as "unlimited" (usual caveats apply) where this isn't. Now that the majority of Joe Consumers are actually consuming more than email (i.e. mobile video, etc.), it'll be interesting to see how the networks respond with their marketing.
From the gearlog link:
The webConnect Rocket USB Laptop Stick retails for $99.99 with a two-year contract and an Even More webConnect data plan. $60 per month gets you 5GB, while $30 gets you just 200MB; both charge 20 cents per megabyte over that. Another new option, Even More Plus webConnect, drops the annual contract and lowers the monthly prices by $10 in each case, but raises the up-front price of the modem.
Yay! Now I can burn through my monthly allotment in 33 minutes and 20 seconds, and incur overage charges at 50 cents a minute for the remaining 43,167.67 minutes of the month!
Does speed really matter if your monthly allotment is that low?
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most of this technology's advantages will be used to improve life for the Telcos (by squeezing more subscribers per cell) than for improving life for the user.
Nullius in verba
These tests are useless without latency measurements. For nearly all practical purposes, a 21Mb transfer rate is not significantly better than a 1Mb rate if the round-trip time is 500ms.
Sorry, 5GB.
5 measly little gigs?
I fart hard and I'm over that cap.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
The most interesting thing is that HSPA+ is getting close to the same efficiency (bits/Hz) as LTE; 21MBit/sec in a 5MHz channel vs. 100MBit/sec in a 20MHz channel.
-- Erich
Slashdot reader since 1997
Actual, this is not the first device. Cincinati Bell is offeing iCon 452, (since last June), and it is HSPA. In several speed test, it tested out faster then there DSL offering.
Which part of this is News?
Telstra in Australia (comparable land area to USA) has had 21 Mbps nationwide for over a year and their network now supports 42 Mbps. At the GSM world congress at Barcelona in February they announced their intent to have 84 Mbps in the network next year.
Yet T-mobile announce they can do this only in Philadelphia and it's considered news? Why are we so far behind the rest of the world and think that a bit of bandwidth in one small area is news worthy?
I have been seeing 3.5G on my N900 in northern VA/DC several times in the past month. While the N900 is interface limited to 10/2 or so, it does have 3.5 tech.
Its distict from the 3G icon but limited to whatever area I notice it in and happen to have it open at the time. Since I'm only around the beltway when I'm at work theres no time to test a bunch of heavy browsing, let alone running a speed test to confirm their stuff is really up or just sending the signals that let my phone know its there.
Guess I will stick with my unlimited EDGE for $20/month then, TMO. It may only be a pathetic 20kbyte/sec or so but I can do that speed all month long for $20, no caps.
really? this is the next big wireless thing to come? it doesn't sound too impressive, especially with the caps. this is not what consumers want. they want ONE connection that can go anywhere with similar speeds wherever they go. can we get rid of home/mobile barrier once and for all? maybe get that network working and leave the other stuff alone until it gets made? it's the same bullshit that doesn't allow for a simple $30/month unlimited voice/text/data(which should just be sold as one fucking thing, as its all 1s and 0s anyways) plan.
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