Archive for the ‘Wireless’ Category

Verizon Signals the End of the Unlimited Data Plan

The unlimited data plan party could end soon. Verizon Wireless has hinted it is likely to follow AT&T and restrict the amount of data consumers can suck in through their phones.

“We will probably need to change the design of our pricing where it will not be totally unlimited, flat rate,” Verizon’s chief financial officer John Killian told Bloomberg.

For nearly 90 percent of smartphone users, new pricing plans are unlikely to make a big difference in how they use their phones, says Chetan Sharma, who runs a consulting firm focusing on telecom issues. But for super-users, this could signal a change in how smartphones and apps are designed.

It could force developers and entrepreneurs to take a second look at how data is delivered and optimized.

“So far,  the ecosystem hasn’t paid attention to delivery efficiency,” says Sharma. “Content developers rarely care how much data is being transferred over their app. Now there’s room for technology that can help change that.”

Wireless service providers’ decision to do away with unlimited data plans plans runs orthogonal to what smartphones makers are doing. Smartphones today are in a race to offer more storage, along with the ability to shoot high-definition videos and photos. And they encourage you to share, uploading those files to YouTube and Flickr. Add to that video chat capability, especially over cellular networks, and there’s more stress than ever on the network.

“It was unsustainable,” says Sharma. “It couldn’t have gone on forever.”

After Apple introduced the iPhone in 2007, it unlocked a world where users spend more time surfing on the phones, playing with apps and watching YouTube clips than talking on their phone. A Consumer Reports study found that the average iPhone user consumes 273 MB of data per month. About 4 percent users in that study gobbled an average of 1 GB per month.

Sharma estimates an average iPhone consumer uses about 600 MB a month, while a smartphone user who’s not on the iPhone or using an Android device takes in about 300 MB of data monthly. Unless, something changes, that data consumption will only go up, especially with the introduction of more powerful smartphones, straining the network’s capacity, he says.

With the iPhone, AT&T has been the first to feel the pain. In response, earlier this month, AT&T introduced a tiered pricing structure for data. Instead of a flat monthly fee of about $30 for unlimited data, AT&T users will now pay $15 a month for 200 MB, or $25 a month for $2GB. (See what AT&T’s limited data plans mean for you.)

Verizon is not changing the status quo just yet. The company has hinted it will introduce tiered data pricing plans as it opens up its LTE or 4G network. 4G data cards on the Verizon’s network could be launched later this year, followed by the first 4G smartphone next year, estimates Sharma.

A Verizon spokesperson declined to comment on when the company plans to introduce new data pricing plans.

“Unlimited pricing works well when you are trying to create demand,” says Sharma. “But now carriers are facing the reality that while their data revenue is fixed, their costs keep going up.”

Last year, approximately 70 percent of data traffic on wireless networks came from data cards. This year, smartphones will pretty much account for all data requests, says Sharma.

“The iPhone has catapulted the whole data issue to the forefront.”

See Also:

Photo: (DJOtaku/Flickr)

Posted: June 21st, 2010
at 10:50pm by Priya Ganapati


Topics: Android, Chetan, Data, Phones, Service, Sharma, Wireless, att, iPhone, plan, prices, provider, telecom, unlimited, verizon


Major Cable Providers To Share Wi-Fi Networks

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Internet customers in the tri-state region will be delighted to hear that three of the biggest providers – Cablevision, Comcast and Time Warner – just announced a deal to share Wi-Fi networks between each other.

If you are, for example, a Time Warner user in New York, you will now be able to connect to any of the thousands of Wi-Fi access points all over the city. Simply use your existing login info, free of any additional costs, regardless of which cable provider operates it.

“Cable providers interconnecting Wi-Fi services so customers can roam freely across networks is an extremely meaningful development,” John Bickham, president of cable operations at Cablevision, said in a statement.

For now, this is limited to customers in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. But there’s hope it may be extended to other areas.

“This agreement is the first of its kind, and, we believe, the first of many,” said Bickham.

The real significance of the deal is the possibility that such agreements could cover an entire area, thus allowing us to walk around and use Wi-Fi instead of 3G on our smartphones and tablets.

It’s not the first time the Wi-Fi market in that region has undergone a certain amount of liberalization. Less than a month ago, Time Warner Cable announced that New York cable customers would be able to join any of its Wi-Fi hotspots for free, using their Road Runner login information.

But the new Time Warner, Cablevision and Comcast deal dwarfs that and turns New York City into one giant hotspot. Unless you’re using AT&T and Verizon, that is. Hopefully, the trend will continue beyond these three states and providers.

(Photo: nicolasnova / Flickr )

Posted: April 16th, 2010
at 8:15pm by Miran Pavic


Topics: 3G, Cablevision, Time Warner, Wireless, Wireless Tech, comcast, connectivity, sharing, wi fi


Dissatisfied AT&T Customers Plan Network Attack

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Some AT&T customers are taking Fake Steve (who is, in reality, Newsweek’s Dan Lyons pretending to be Steve Jobs) seriously. The satirical blogger on Monday encouraged his readers to take part of Operation Chokehold — a plan to overload the AT&T network by with ruthless, bandwidth-sucking activities.

On Friday, December 18, at noon Pacific time, we will attempt to overwhelm the AT&T data network and bring it to its knees. The goal is to have every iPhone user (or as many as we can) turn on a data intensive app and run that app for one solid hour. Send the message to AT&T that we are sick of their substandard network and sick of their abusive comments. The idea is we’ll create a digital flash mob. We’re calling it in Operation Chokehold. Join us and speak truth to power!

Fake Steve’s post was in response to statements made last week by AT&T executive Ralph de la Vega, who said 3 percent of smartphones were using 40 percent of the bandwidth of its network capacity. He added that the company would find ways to persuade heavy users to reduce activity and that the company could impose caps on data usage, which would put an end to our all-you-can-eat data plans.

Of course, everything on that blog should be considered a joke. However, Cult of Mac’s Leander Kahney notes that comments on Twitter, forums and Facebook suggest people are actually planning to participate in Operation Chokehold.

AT&T has provided an official response, dismissing the act an irresponsible media stunt.

“We understand that Fakesteve.net is primarily a satirical forum, but there is nothing amusing about advocating that customers attempt to deliberately degrade service on a network that provides critical communications services for more than 80 million customers,” a spokesman said in a statement. “We know that the vast majority of customers will see this action for what it is: an irresponsible and pointless scheme to draw attention to a blog.”

AT&T doubts that the protest will have much an effect on the network, as the number of participants may be diminutive. So far the Facebook page for Operation Chokehold has about 300 members.

See Also:

Photo: alexkingorg/Flickr

Posted: December 15th, 2009
at 6:47pm by Brian X. Chen


Topics: Humor, Telcos and ISPs, Wireless, att, bandwidth, consumer reports, networks


FCC keen on commandeering TV spectrum for wireless broadband

We’ll come right out and say it, we like Julius Genachowski. Whether you agree with the dude’s policies or not, you can’t deny he’s pursuing them with gusto. Having already noted the insufficient carrying capacity of current mobile broadband airways to deal with incoming 4G connections, the FCC chairman is now reported to be moving ahead with plans to provide greater spectrum allocation for those purposes. Currently in the draft stage, the latest Commission proposals include a plan to reclaim airwaves from digital broadcasters (and pay them appropriately for it), which are to then be sold off to the highest bidder from among the wireless service providers. Executing the most extreme version of this plan could generate around $62 billion in auction revenues, though it would require transitioning digital TV viewers over to cable or subscription services and is therefore unlikely. Jules and his crew are still “looking at everything” and ruling out nothing, but we can probably expect to see a moderate shift of TV spectrum rights over to wireless carriers in the final plans when they’re revealed in February.

[Via Phone Scoop]

Filed under: Cellphones, Home Entertainment, Wearables

FCC keen on commandeering TV spectrum for wireless broadband originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 28 Oct 2009 07:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mint Studio Multi-Room Wireless Speaker/iPod Dock Review [Review]

The Mint Studio is an update of the Mint 220 wireless speakers we reviewed last year. Although the two units look almost exactly the same, the Studio fixes the complaints we had from its predecessor, AND it’s cheaper.

The Price:

$130

The Verdict:

It’s good! We had three issues with the first one: wireless interference, the inability to adjust the volume from the computer when using the USB wireless audio dongle, and the price. To start, it’s $130, down from $150, and our volume changes on the MacBook Pro transferred directly over the air to volume changes in the player.

If you’re talking sound quality, the Mint Studio is decent. This is more about the convenience of wireless speakers than having a really great sounding set of speakers. For $130, you get a not-too-shabby set that can also act as an iPod dock. It’s definitely better than the speakers you have in your laptop, so that’s already an upgrade.

Lastly, the wireless interference is reduced by hopping over two channels instead of just one, which should help to curb many problems unless you have a lot of wireless laptops using the same frequency. Also, 802.11n laptops and routers are pretty much de facto since we reviewed the previous Mint, so you shouldn’t see any interference if you’re using the 5GHz channel for your N traffic.

One bonus feature introduced in the Mint Studio is the ability to support three different units from one transmitting laptop. We tested this in our house, with the laptop source and USB transmitter on the first floor, and one unit on each of the three floors. It was able to reach all three floors with zero audible loss, which is pretty great, and within its household operating range (with walls and floors) of 100 feet.

And in case there was any confusion, it’s not waterproof—we just enjoy planting it on a shelf outside the shower and streaming music while we bathe. It allows us to keep our laptops out of splash distance too.

It also still supports line-in and still acts like an iPod/iPhone dock, and works fine in those respects too. With the low price and improved featureset, I think the Mint Studio is a pretty good buy for people who want cheap multi-room audio that can also function as an iPod dock. [Mint]

Fixed interference issues and remote volume control from a computer

Cheap way to get wireless streaming music throughout your house

Sound quality isn’t astounding








Posted: October 22nd, 2009
at 12:29pm by Jason Chen


Topics: Apple, Mint studio review, Streaming, Wireless, Wireless Speakers, iPhone, ipod, mint, review, speakers, studio


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