Interesting that most of the chatter on AT&T's rate increase focuses solely on 
prices going up.  There really is a bigger story there:

First, the increases:

   
AT&T Data Plus 300MB: $20 for 300MB
AT&T Data Pro 3GB: $30 for 3GB (up from $25)
AT&T Data Pro 5GB: $50 for 5GB, with mobile hotspot / tethering

The lowest tier is $5 higher (33%) but comes with 300MB instead of 200MB (50% 
more).  The net effect is a reduction in the cost per 100MB from $7.5 to $6.66. 
If my math is right, that's about an 11% decline  

The middle tier also rises $5 (20%) but comes with 3GB instead of 2GB (50% 
more).  So the cost per gigabyte actually dropped $2.50. A net reduction of 20% 
per GB.

At the high end, the rate has actually dropped by $5 from $55 to $50 (see this 
price chart from PCMag just a few months ago). That's a 9% decline.

I suspect that's why nobody is commenting on the higher tier in most of the 
coverage.  The price drop for heavier users, and the fact that you are paying 
less for the equivalent amount of bandwidth, is largely unreported. 


On Jan 18, 2012, at 8:55 PM, Lauren Weinstein wrote:

> 
> AT&T raising mobile data plan prices
> 
> http://j.mp/zNsXti  (Wired)
> 
>    For smartphones:
> 
>    AT&T Data Plus 300MB: $20 for 300MB
>    AT&T Data Pro 3GB: $30 for 3GB
>    AT&T Data Pro 5GB: $50 for 5GB, with mobile hotspot / tethering
> 
>    For tablets:
> 
>    AT&T DataConnect 3GB: $30 for 3GB
>    AT&T DataConnect 5GB: $50 for 5GB
> 
> - - -
> 
> --Lauren--
> NNSquad Moderator
> _______________________________________________
> nnsquad mailing list
> http://lists.nnsquad.org/mailman/listinfo/nnsquad

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