On Tuesday 06 February 2007 15:28:34 Mike Klein wrote:
> I have been holding off on 3G data plan due to horrific costs and
> questions about availability/robustness.
>
> Cingular's plan is like $80/mo for all you can eat. Given there are
> comments regarding voice calls dropping when data is incoming and vice
> versa...I'll be a late adopter thanks.
>
> In S.F. there are supposedly multiple forms of 3g....but none of them
> work any significant length down 280 freeway...another deal-breaker for me.

I'm in that area use a Nokia 6130, edge service (additional 29.99 a month 
t-mobile) it runs about isdn speed.  Now as for going down 280 while surfing.  
Haven't tried.  I'm too busy dodging the people who are trying *grin*.  


>
> Additionally there is no coverage where my 2nd home is. The thought of
> going to cellular <possibly> for voice and data (no dsl/cable for isp)
> is somewhat appealing. I have even considered a 3g/cellular
> repeater/antenna installed on my house (>$500 generally).
>
> I recently dropped newspaper subscriptions due to owning PepperPad3 and
> being quite pleased with streaming/reading capabilities...and am looking
> to drop cable tv ($70/mo) when Netflix's streaming service comes of age.
>
>
> mike
>
> Acadia Secure Networks wrote:
> > Michael,
> >
> > in the U.S. all three of Cingular (HSDPA), Verizon (EVDO), and Sprint
> > (EVDO) have deployed broadband mobile wireless services with a
> > national footprint that, if Sprint's vision is correct will become, in
> > Sprint's case,  a stepping stone to full WIMAX deployment a few years
> > down the road.
> >
> > Nokia is, in fact working with Sprint in the area of WIMAX and  and I
> > would be very surprised if Nokia are not considering to put WIMAX into
> > a future version of the N800 or something close to it.
> >
> > I happen to use Verizon's EVDO service and it is very good in terms of
> > bandwidth and U.S. geographic footprint. It supports VOIP
> > satisfactorily and it is being upgraded to higher (Rev. A)
> > performance, as is Sprints EVDO network.
> >
> > I have managed to test out how the wireless "tethering" of the N800 to
> > the Verizon EVDO service via a Verizon handset using bluetooth works
> > but it would be much nicer if I could "lose" the handset and use a
> > future version of the N800 with EVDO and eventually WIMAX in its place.
> >
> > I actually think that the biggest impediment to such a scenario is not
> > so much the need to jam another radio into the N800 form factor as it
> > is the fact that Windows Mobile proves to be much more useful in the
> > corporate world (which is where most of the money to purchase these
> > high end handsets comes from) than a N800.  If the Nokia product
> > cannot meet the same application needs then it will not be competitive
> > in this market segment.
> >
> > Although they are expensive, several handset manufacturers, and, in
> > particular, HTC and its reseller UTStarcom, have produced multi radio
> > handsets (EVDO/802.11/CDMA/Bluetooth/IR) that are quite compact,
> > albeit power-hungry, especially with 802.11 turned on.  Here is the
> > url to one such product available for both the Sprint and the Verizon
> > Networks in the U.S.:
> >
> >
> > http://www.utstar.com/pcd/view_phone_details.aspx?mcode=PPC6700&sAct=0
> >
> > Most of these high end handsets run Windows Mobile 5.0 but it would be
> > nice for Nokia to provide some competition in this segment by adding,
> > for the US market, a CDMA/EVDO radio or GSM/HSDPA chipset to a future
> > version of the N800 product.
> >
> >
> > Best Regards,
> >
> >
> >
> > John Holmblad
> >
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >> On 2/6/07, Zoran Kolic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >>> On Monday 05 February 2007 22:28, Mike Klein wrote:
> >>> > 3rd worst problem is no 3G/cellular capability built-in.
> >>>
> >>> Also my wash machine lacks it. I cannot sleep for that reason.
> >>
> >> Sarcasm aside, Zoran has a very good point. Putting cellular
> >> capability on the IT would be as appropriate as putting it on a
> >> washing machine. While it would be great to be able to talk to someone
> >> while doing laundry, it is not really the purpose of the machine.
> >>
> >> I wouldn't have bought a 770 or a N800 if it had a GSM/3G/Super-duper
> >> next-gen phone built in.
> >>
> >> Reasons:
> >> - It would add $100 to the cost
> >> - It would be a purchase that keeps on costing a monthly fee and cost
> >> even more when using it traveling
> >> - I already have a bare-bones cell phone that makes calls just fine
> >> ... most people have
> >> - It would tie it to region/plan that would be difficult to transfer
> >> out of
> >> - It would tie it to some specific technology that doesn't have the
> >> longevity/compatibility of wifi/BT
> >> - It would consume a great deal more power
> >>
> >> I think these ITs make a good break from legacy tech like cellular and
> >> leave that crowded market to other models.
> >> _______________________________________________
> >> maemo-users mailing list
> >> maemo-users@maemo.org
> >> https://maemo.org/mailman/listinfo/maemo-users
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > maemo-users mailing list
> > maemo-users@maemo.org
> > https://maemo.org/mailman/listinfo/maemo-users


_______________________________________________
maemo-users mailing list
maemo-users@maemo.org
https://maemo.org/mailman/listinfo/maemo-users

Reply via email to