Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-05 Thread Joshua Goldbard
Tier 1 ISPs engage in settlement-free peering. Everyone else pays for transit.

I had a giant reply about politics but figured I'd save everyone the reading 
time.

Suffice it to say, the regulatory environment in Wireless is different. It 
costs more money than their model allows for you to use their service. They are 
not making the profits they need to and cut the service, it's that simple. 
Roaming costs money, you're not crazy, this is 2013.

A DS1 and a cellular link are completely different.

Cheers,
Joshua

P.S. A puck with 10GB is a ton of data; I'd also wager you couldn't use the 
full 10GB on a roaming tower without a warning, but I could be wrong.

Sent from my iPad

On Dec 4, 2013, at 11:30 PM, Warren Bailey 
wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.commailto:wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com
 wrote:

Blanket reply.. :)

So at what point does unlimited mean unlimited? Roaming agreements have always 
been two sided. In my case.. I roam on to ATT's network, the same as ATT folk 
roam into tmo when they do not have coverage. At the end of the month the two 
are reconciled and someone gets paid. If you are selling a service that is 
making generalized assurances in connectivity (nationwide 4g let netwokr) , you 
should make a best effort to honor that. It wasn't even a fair amount of 
bandwidth.. I could deal with a 2gb a month cap or something.. But I am now 
able to use my unlimited data in 100 countries without incurring additional 
charges.. Are we going to start saying that international roaming costs are 
lower than domestic on a regularly used network?

I literally feel like I'm taking crazy pills here. Tmo and Att are far from 
small fish.. And a 50mb per month cap is absolute bullshit. Figure it into your 
business line.. Or do the honest thing and don't offer the service. How you 
guys are justifying this is BEYOND me. You can buy a ds1 for several hundred 
dollars per month.. And unlimited customers get 50 megs a month for data.. You 
can't even check email over the month on that. I'm not an abusive user.. I 
don't download or use my cellular data connection for hacked hotspot use.. Not 
to mention the hotspot I do have with them has 10gb a month nationwide.. So I 
can use my puck for 10gb..but my phone (on the SAME TOWER) is different?

That is like saying sms costs network providers money.. (don't bring up ran 
gear or smsc costs.. It's not related)


Sent from my Mobile Device.


 Original message 
From: Joshua Goldbard j...@2600hz.commailto:j...@2600hz.com
Date: 12/04/2013 4:10 PM (GMT-09:00)
To: Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.commailto:he...@aegisinfosys.com
Cc: nanog@nanog.orgmailto:nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..


Ting is an MVNO (just like my company 2600hz) and while it would violate the 
terms of my NDA to confirm the 10x number I can say that we found it to be 
prohibitively expensive.

One should be aware that, just like in the IP transit world, the small players 
have different rules than the big kids. It might be prohibitively expensive for 
us, but it's a different order of magnitude for a carrier like Sprint proper.

Hope that helps.

Cheers,
Joshua

P.S. shameless plug: we provide white-label cellular service to operators 
including full provisioning and call control plus it can be tied back into 
corporate phone systems (and it's open source!!).

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 4, 2013, at 2:59 PM, Henry Yen 
he...@aegisinfosys.commailto:he...@aegisinfosys.com wrote:

 On Wed, Dec 04, 2013 at 22:18:12PM +, Joshua Goldbard wrote:
 ...  When you send your data
 over a partners network it raises your wireless company's cost of
 delivering service, in some cases so much so that you become
 unprofitable.

 Some folks over at Ting(.com) suggest that the cost for data roaming is as
 high as ten times that for voice/SMS roaming, which is why they don't charge
 extra for the latter, and do not at all provide the former.

 --
 Henry Yen henry@aegis00.commailto:henry@aegis00.com   
 Aegis Information Systems, Inc.
 Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville, New York
 (800) AEGIS-00 x949 1-800-AEGIS-00 (800-234-4700)





Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-05 Thread cb.list6
On Dec 4, 2013 11:31 PM, Warren Bailey 
wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com wrote:

 Blanket reply.. :)

 So at what point does unlimited mean unlimited? Roaming agreements have
always been two sided. In my case.. I roam on to ATT's network, the same
as ATT folk roam into tmo when they do not have coverage. At the end of
the month the two are reconciled and someone gets paid. If you are selling
a service that is making generalized assurances in connectivity (nationwide
4g let netwokr) , you should make a best effort to honor that. It wasn't
even a fair amount of bandwidth.. I could deal with a 2gb a month cap or
something.. But I am now able to use my unlimited data in 100 countries
without incurring additional charges.. Are we going to start saying that
international roaming costs are lower than domestic on a regularly used
network?

 I literally feel like I'm taking crazy pills here. Tmo and Att are far
from small fish.. And a 50mb per month cap is absolute bullshit. Figure it
into your business line.. Or do the honest thing and don't offer the
service. How you guys are justifying this is BEYOND me. You can buy a ds1
for several hundred dollars per month.. And unlimited customers get 50 megs
a month for data.. You can't even check email over the month on that. I'm
not an abusive user.. I don't download or use my cellular data connection
for hacked hotspot use.. Not to mention the hotspot I do have with them has
10gb a month nationwide.. So I can use my puck for 10gb..but my phone (on
the SAME TOWER) is different?

 That is like saying sms costs network providers money.. (don't bring up
ran gear or smsc costs.. It's not related)


If you have a beef with tmo, here is the complaint department
https://mobile.twitter.com/JohnLegere or you can email him at
john.leg...@t-mobile.com

You can probably just forward this thread

Given that tmo now has free (rate limited) intl data roaming, it is a
bummer to see domestic roaming is now less well served.  I think in belt
tightening years limiting domestic roaming saved substantial cost ... since
it can be expensive having some users living on roamed networks

CB


 Sent from my Mobile Device.


  Original message 
 From: Joshua Goldbard j...@2600hz.com
 Date: 12/04/2013 4:10 PM (GMT-09:00)
 To: Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.com
 Cc: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..


 Ting is an MVNO (just like my company 2600hz) and while it would violate
the terms of my NDA to confirm the 10x number I can say that we found it to
be prohibitively expensive.

 One should be aware that, just like in the IP transit world, the small
players have different rules than the big kids. It might be prohibitively
expensive for us, but it's a different order of magnitude for a carrier
like Sprint proper.

 Hope that helps.

 Cheers,
 Joshua

 P.S. shameless plug: we provide white-label cellular service to operators
including full provisioning and call control plus it can be tied back into
corporate phone systems (and it's open source!!).

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Dec 4, 2013, at 2:59 PM, Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.com wrote:

  On Wed, Dec 04, 2013 at 22:18:12PM +, Joshua Goldbard wrote:
  ...  When you send your data
  over a partners network it raises your wireless company's cost of
  delivering service, in some cases so much so that you become
  unprofitable.
 
  Some folks over at Ting(.com) suggest that the cost for data roaming is
as
  high as ten times that for voice/SMS roaming, which is why they don't
charge
  extra for the latter, and do not at all provide the former.
 
  --
  Henry Yen henry@aegis00.com   Aegis Information
Systems, Inc.
  Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville, New York
  (800) AEGIS-00 x949 1-800-AEGIS-00
(800-234-4700)
 
 



Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-05 Thread Warren Bailey
I've been talking to their executive officer after doing that exact thing. 15 
years ago roaming was very expensive.. But when you are selling something using 
terminology like free or unlimited, I believe you should be extremely 
careful. I don't know how or who implemented this policy.. But they have been 
claiming to rock ATT with this actual nationwide and this uncarrier talk. 
If you claim to be unlike your competitors.. At least make an attempt to be.. 
NOT like your competition. I was floored seeing the Nanog tribe reply with it 
was a business decision over cost.. It's 2013 and nearly 14...get your lives 
together. Make these people who give you a paycheck accountable.


Sent from my Mobile Device.


 Original message 
From: cb.list6 cb.li...@gmail.com
Date: 12/05/2013 5:33 AM (GMT-09:00)
To: Warren Bailey wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com
Cc: Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.com,Joshua Goldbard 
j...@2600hz.com,nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..



On Dec 4, 2013 11:31 PM, Warren Bailey 
wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.commailto:wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com
 wrote:

 Blanket reply.. :)

 So at what point does unlimited mean unlimited? Roaming agreements have 
 always been two sided. In my case.. I roam on to ATT's network, the same as 
 ATT folk roam into tmo when they do not have coverage. At the end of the 
 month the two are reconciled and someone gets paid. If you are selling a 
 service that is making generalized assurances in connectivity (nationwide 4g 
 let netwokr) , you should make a best effort to honor that. It wasn't even a 
 fair amount of bandwidth.. I could deal with a 2gb a month cap or something.. 
 But I am now able to use my unlimited data in 100 countries without incurring 
 additional charges.. Are we going to start saying that international roaming 
 costs are lower than domestic on a regularly used network?

 I literally feel like I'm taking crazy pills here. Tmo and Att are far from 
 small fish.. And a 50mb per month cap is absolute bullshit. Figure it into 
 your business line.. Or do the honest thing and don't offer the service. How 
 you guys are justifying this is BEYOND me. You can buy a ds1 for several 
 hundred dollars per month.. And unlimited customers get 50 megs a month for 
 data.. You can't even check email over the month on that. I'm not an abusive 
 user.. I don't download or use my cellular data connection for hacked hotspot 
 use.. Not to mention the hotspot I do have with them has 10gb a month 
 nationwide.. So I can use my puck for 10gb..but my phone (on the SAME TOWER) 
 is different?

 That is like saying sms costs network providers money.. (don't bring up ran 
 gear or smsc costs.. It's not related)


If you have a beef with tmo, here is the complaint department 
https://mobile.twitter.com/JohnLegere or you can email him at 
john.leg...@t-mobile.commailto:john.leg...@t-mobile.com

You can probably just forward this thread

Given that tmo now has free (rate limited) intl data roaming, it is a bummer to 
see domestic roaming is now less well served.  I think in belt tightening years 
limiting domestic roaming saved substantial cost ... since it can be expensive 
having some users living on roamed networks

CB


 Sent from my Mobile Device.


  Original message 
 From: Joshua Goldbard j...@2600hz.commailto:j...@2600hz.com
 Date: 12/04/2013 4:10 PM (GMT-09:00)
 To: Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.com
 Cc: nanog@nanog.orgmailto:nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..


 Ting is an MVNO (just like my company 2600hz) and while it would violate the 
 terms of my NDA to confirm the 10x number I can say that we found it to be 
 prohibitively expensive.

 One should be aware that, just like in the IP transit world, the small 
 players have different rules than the big kids. It might be prohibitively 
 expensive for us, but it's a different order of magnitude for a carrier like 
 Sprint proper.

 Hope that helps.

 Cheers,
 Joshua

 P.S. shameless plug: we provide white-label cellular service to operators 
 including full provisioning and call control plus it can be tied back into 
 corporate phone systems (and it's open source!!).

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Dec 4, 2013, at 2:59 PM, Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.com wrote:

  On Wed, Dec 04, 2013 at 22:18:12PM +, Joshua Goldbard wrote:
  ...  When you send your data
  over a partners network it raises your wireless company's cost of
  delivering service, in some cases so much so that you become
  unprofitable.
 
  Some folks over at Ting(.com) suggest that the cost for data roaming is as
  high as ten times that for voice/SMS roaming, which is why they don't charge
  extra for the latter, and do not at all provide the former.
 
  --
  Henry Yen henry@aegis00.com   Aegis Information Systems, 
  Inc.
  Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville

Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-05 Thread Joshua Goldbard
You are misunderstanding the political reality and are instead making 
impermissible technical inferences.

Is moving bits between networks hard or expensive? No.

Is moving bits between asymmetric power relationships trivial? No.

When you think about how much roaming costs, you're thinking of the settlement 
free model which is not how cellular roaming works. Cellular roaming is a 
fiefdom. There is no common carriage. No one is obligated to carry anyone 
else's traffic.

Therefore roaming is artificially more expensive. It is political not technical.

Bear in mind, you are preaching to the converted. You don't get much more 
hippie-status in the telecom world than writing open-source infrastructure 
(which is what my company does). I know where you're coming from and I'm trying 
to explain why the networks are not behaving in an optimally efficient manner: 
because it isn't profitable.

We can sit here and rail about how bad TMobile is on a mailing list but the 
behavior they are displaying is entirely rational given the rules of the game.

You asked how someone could claim nationwide network without owning all of the 
assets, I answered you and you don't like the answer. Sorry.

If you don't like it, write Tom Wheeler or put in a false advertising claim, 
but you should understand that TMobile's behavior is politically rational.

Cheers,
Joshua

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 5, 2013, at 9:36 AM, Warren Bailey 
wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.commailto:wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com
 wrote:

I've been talking to their executive officer after doing that exact thing. 15 
years ago roaming was very expensive.. But when you are selling something using 
terminology like free or unlimited, I believe you should be extremely 
careful. I don't know how or who implemented this policy.. But they have been 
claiming to rock ATT with this actual nationwide and this uncarrier talk. 
If you claim to be unlike your competitors.. At least make an attempt to be.. 
NOT like your competition. I was floored seeing the Nanog tribe reply with it 
was a business decision over cost.. It's 2013 and nearly 14...get your lives 
together. Make these people who give you a paycheck accountable.


Sent from my Mobile Device.


 Original message 
From: cb.list6 cb.li...@gmail.commailto:cb.li...@gmail.com
Date: 12/05/2013 5:33 AM (GMT-09:00)
To: Warren Bailey 
wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.commailto:wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com
Cc: Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.commailto:he...@aegisinfosys.com,Joshua 
Goldbard 
j...@2600hz.commailto:j...@2600hz.com,nanog@nanog.orgmailto:nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..



On Dec 4, 2013 11:31 PM, Warren Bailey 
wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.commailto:wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com
 wrote:

 Blanket reply.. :)

 So at what point does unlimited mean unlimited? Roaming agreements have 
 always been two sided. In my case.. I roam on to ATT's network, the same as 
 ATT folk roam into tmo when they do not have coverage. At the end of the 
 month the two are reconciled and someone gets paid. If you are selling a 
 service that is making generalized assurances in connectivity (nationwide 4g 
 let netwokr) , you should make a best effort to honor that. It wasn't even a 
 fair amount of bandwidth.. I could deal with a 2gb a month cap or something.. 
 But I am now able to use my unlimited data in 100 countries without incurring 
 additional charges.. Are we going to start saying that international roaming 
 costs are lower than domestic on a regularly used network?

 I literally feel like I'm taking crazy pills here. Tmo and Att are far from 
 small fish.. And a 50mb per month cap is absolute bullshit. Figure it into 
 your business line.. Or do the honest thing and don't offer the service. How 
 you guys are justifying this is BEYOND me. You can buy a ds1 for several 
 hundred dollars per month.. And unlimited customers get 50 megs a month for 
 data.. You can't even check email over the month on that. I'm not an abusive 
 user.. I don't download or use my cellular data connection for hacked hotspot 
 use.. Not to mention the hotspot I do have with them has 10gb a month 
 nationwide.. So I can use my puck for 10gb..but my phone (on the SAME TOWER) 
 is different?

 That is like saying sms costs network providers money.. (don't bring up ran 
 gear or smsc costs.. It's not related)


If you have a beef with tmo, here is the complaint department 
https://mobile.twitter.com/JohnLegere or you can email him at 
john.leg...@t-mobile.commailto:john.leg...@t-mobile.com

You can probably just forward this thread

Given that tmo now has free (rate limited) intl data roaming, it is a bummer to 
see domestic roaming is now less well served.  I think in belt tightening years 
limiting domestic roaming saved substantial cost ... since it can be expensive 
having some users living on roamed networks

CB


 Sent from my Mobile

Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-05 Thread Bryan Fields
On 12/4/13 5:20 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
 I believe you will find that any carrier says Nationwide means where we
 have coverage, and unlimited means 'if you're on our towers'.

TSRH.

When I was at Alltel we discovered one client that was using his 3g card on a
roaming partners network 24/7.  As we could not bill based on this we only
discovered it via a roaming settlement audit.  I think at the time we were
paying .35 cents per kb or something like that (might have been MOU based).
Basically this customer was costing us $10-$20k per month and we had no way to
track it back to them.

I believe they fired the customers using the clause that nationwide is
included, but you your home majority use location must be on our network.  the
lawyers had nicer way of saying it :)

Wireless data interconnect (GRX/CRX) is like the most arcane and backwards
peering there is.  every single bit of use must be tracked and metered back to
the user, and it makes the whole thing more expensive than it needs to be.
It's like going to your users and demanding different payments based on the
amount of data they receive from different ASN's.

-- 
Bryan Fields

727-409-1194 - Voice
727-214-2508 - Fax
http://bryanfields.net



Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Warren Bailey
All,

I realize this is not exactly relevant to the usual topics on NANOG, but I 
thought this list was a decent place to ask a question related to cellular data 
usage limits.

Have any of you experienced or been subjected to a domestic data roaming 
policy? I am a customer of a carrier who advertises Unlimited Nationwide 4G 
data, but limits their customers to 50MB per month while traveling in an area 
they do not have coverage (Alaska, for example). I've never heard of such a 
policy in regards to a Nationwide plan.. I thought the entire idea of saying 
nationwide was to represent you were covering the ENTIRE NATION.

Happy to receive replies on or off-list.

Thanks!
//warren



Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Jay Ashworth
 Have any of you experienced or been subjected to a domestic data
 roaming policy? I am a customer of a carrier who advertises
 Unlimited Nationwide 4G data, but limits their customers to 50MB per
 month while traveling in an area they do not have coverage (Alaska,
 for example). I've never heard of such a policy in regards to a
 Nationwide plan.. I thought the entire idea of saying nationwide was
 to represent you were covering the ENTIRE NATION.

I believe you will find that any carrier says Nationwide means where we
have coverage, and unlimited means 'if you're on our towers'.

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Make Election Day a federal holiday: http://wh.gov/lBm94  100k sigs by 12/14

Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink   j...@baylink.com
Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
Ashworth  Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA   #natog  +1 727 647 1274



RE: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Jack Vizelter
In my experience, nationwide, typically just means the continental 48 states, 
for the most part. 




From: Jay Ashworth [j...@baylink.com]
Sent: Wednesday, December 04, 2013 5:20 PM
To: NANOG
Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

 Have any of you experienced or been subjected to a domestic data
 roaming policy? I am a customer of a carrier who advertises
 Unlimited Nationwide 4G data, but limits their customers to 50MB per
 month while traveling in an area they do not have coverage (Alaska,
 for example). I've never heard of such a policy in regards to a
 Nationwide plan.. I thought the entire idea of saying nationwide was
 to represent you were covering the ENTIRE NATION.

I believe you will find that any carrier says Nationwide means where we
have coverage, and unlimited means 'if you're on our towers'.

Cheers,
-- jra
--
Make Election Day a federal holiday: http://wh.gov/lBm94  100k sigs by 12/14

Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink   j...@baylink.com
Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
Ashworth  Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA   #natog  +1 727 647 1274




Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Ryan Wilkins
Since we're on the subject of T-Mobile USA, who was kind enough to send me a 
notification via SMS that my 10 megabytes of roaming data  allotment was all 
used up yesterday while driving a long stretch of I-77 between somewhere in 
mid-Ohio all the way to somewhere about Wytheville, VA, I'm pretty sure the 
fine print says the unlimited data is only useful while on their network which 
we all know to be anything but nationwide.  

Heck, right now I'd just be happy to get some sort of data at all riding the 
rural stretches of major highways.

The upside is my bill dropped considerably by switching from ATT so it goes 
both ways.

Ryan

 On Dec 4, 2013, at 5:05 PM, Warren Bailey 
 wbai...@satelliteintelligencegroup.com wrote:
 
 All,
 
 I realize this is not exactly relevant to the usual topics on NANOG, but I 
 thought this list was a decent place to ask a question related to cellular 
 data usage limits.
 
 Have any of you experienced or been subjected to a domestic data roaming 
 policy? I am a customer of a carrier who advertises Unlimited Nationwide 4G 
 data, but limits their customers to 50MB per month while traveling in an 
 area they do not have coverage (Alaska, for example). I've never heard of 
 such a policy in regards to a Nationwide plan.. I thought the entire idea 
 of saying nationwide was to represent you were covering the ENTIRE NATION.
 
 Happy to receive replies on or off-list.
 
 Thanks!
 //warren
 



Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Jared Mauch
Traveling, I usually see better data performance natively on a network vs 
roaming.

In outlying areas, such as Maine, Alaska, Hawaii, you're better off using a 
local telco.  More likely to have better coverage.

- Jared

On Dec 4, 2013, at 5:45 PM, Jack Vizelter j...@mail.rockefeller.edu wrote:

 In my experience, nationwide, typically just means the continental 48 states, 
 for the most part. 
 
 
 
 
 From: Jay Ashworth [j...@baylink.com]
 Sent: Wednesday, December 04, 2013 5:20 PM
 To: NANOG
 Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..
 
 Have any of you experienced or been subjected to a domestic data
 roaming policy? I am a customer of a carrier who advertises
 Unlimited Nationwide 4G data, but limits their customers to 50MB per
 month while traveling in an area they do not have coverage (Alaska,
 for example). I've never heard of such a policy in regards to a
 Nationwide plan.. I thought the entire idea of saying nationwide was
 to represent you were covering the ENTIRE NATION.
 
 I believe you will find that any carrier says Nationwide means where we
 have coverage, and unlimited means 'if you're on our towers'.
 
 Cheers,
 -- jra
 --
 Make Election Day a federal holiday: http://wh.gov/lBm94  100k sigs by 12/14
 
 Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink   
 j...@baylink.com
 Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
 Ashworth  Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover DII
 St Petersburg FL USA   #natog  +1 727 647 1274
 
 




Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Henry Yen
On Wed, Dec 04, 2013 at 22:18:12PM +, Joshua Goldbard wrote:
 ...  When you send your data
 over a partners network it raises your wireless company's cost of
 delivering service, in some cases so much so that you become
 unprofitable.

Some folks over at Ting(.com) suggest that the cost for data roaming is as
high as ten times that for voice/SMS roaming, which is why they don't charge
extra for the latter, and do not at all provide the former.

-- 
Henry Yen henry@aegis00.com   Aegis Information Systems, Inc.
Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville, New York
(800) AEGIS-00 x949 1-800-AEGIS-00 (800-234-4700)




Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Scott Weeks


--- ja...@puck.nether.net wrote:
From: Jared Mauch ja...@puck.nether.net

In outlying areas, such as Maine, Alaska, Hawaii, you're 
better off using a local telco.  More likely to have better 
coverage.


Not in Hawaii.  Hawaiian Telcom used to (still do?)
use Sprint's cell network.

scott



Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Joshua Goldbard
Ting is an MVNO (just like my company 2600hz) and while it would violate the 
terms of my NDA to confirm the 10x number I can say that we found it to be 
prohibitively expensive.

One should be aware that, just like in the IP transit world, the small players 
have different rules than the big kids. It might be prohibitively expensive for 
us, but it's a different order of magnitude for a carrier like Sprint proper.

Hope that helps.

Cheers,
Joshua

P.S. shameless plug: we provide white-label cellular service to operators 
including full provisioning and call control plus it can be tied back into 
corporate phone systems (and it's open source!!).

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 4, 2013, at 2:59 PM, Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.com wrote:

 On Wed, Dec 04, 2013 at 22:18:12PM +, Joshua Goldbard wrote:
 ...  When you send your data
 over a partners network it raises your wireless company's cost of
 delivering service, in some cases so much so that you become
 unprofitable.
 
 Some folks over at Ting(.com) suggest that the cost for data roaming is as
 high as ten times that for voice/SMS roaming, which is why they don't charge
 extra for the latter, and do not at all provide the former.
 
 -- 
 Henry Yen henry@aegis00.com   Aegis Information Systems, 
 Inc.
 Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville, New York
 (800) AEGIS-00 x949 1-800-AEGIS-00 (800-234-4700)
 
 



RE: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Frank Bulk
For example, the regional wireless carrier my $DAYJOB has partnered with has
rate-limiting in place with its two major roaming partners, to help control
roaming costs.  And when it uses the word unlimited in its marketing
materials it means you can access data anywhere where there is access, not
unlimited quantity or unlimited speed.

Frank

-Original Message-
From: Jared Mauch [mailto:ja...@puck.nether.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, December 04, 2013 4:53 PM
To: Jack Vizelter
Cc: NANOG
Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

Traveling, I usually see better data performance natively on a network vs
roaming.

In outlying areas, such as Maine, Alaska, Hawaii, you're better off using
a local telco.  More likely to have better coverage.

- Jared

On Dec 4, 2013, at 5:45 PM, Jack Vizelter j...@mail.rockefeller.edu wrote:

 In my experience, nationwide, typically just means the continental 48
states, for the most part. 
 
 
 
 
 From: Jay Ashworth [j...@baylink.com]
 Sent: Wednesday, December 04, 2013 5:20 PM
 To: NANOG
 Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..
 
 Have any of you experienced or been subjected to a domestic data
 roaming policy? I am a customer of a carrier who advertises
 Unlimited Nationwide 4G data, but limits their customers to 50MB per
 month while traveling in an area they do not have coverage (Alaska,
 for example). I've never heard of such a policy in regards to a
 Nationwide plan.. I thought the entire idea of saying nationwide was
 to represent you were covering the ENTIRE NATION.
 
 I believe you will find that any carrier says Nationwide means where we
 have coverage, and unlimited means 'if you're on our towers'.
 
 Cheers,
 -- jra
 --
 Make Election Day a federal holiday: http://wh.gov/lBm94  100k sigs by
12/14
 
 Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink
j...@baylink.com
 Designer The Things I Think   RFC
2100
 Ashworth  Associates http://baylink.pitas.com 2000 Land Rover
DII
 St Petersburg FL USA   #natog  +1 727 647
1274
 
 







Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..

2013-12-04 Thread Warren Bailey
Blanket reply.. :)

So at what point does unlimited mean unlimited? Roaming agreements have always 
been two sided. In my case.. I roam on to ATT's network, the same as ATT folk 
roam into tmo when they do not have coverage. At the end of the month the two 
are reconciled and someone gets paid. If you are selling a service that is 
making generalized assurances in connectivity (nationwide 4g let netwokr) , you 
should make a best effort to honor that. It wasn't even a fair amount of 
bandwidth.. I could deal with a 2gb a month cap or something.. But I am now 
able to use my unlimited data in 100 countries without incurring additional 
charges.. Are we going to start saying that international roaming costs are 
lower than domestic on a regularly used network?

I literally feel like I'm taking crazy pills here. Tmo and Att are far from 
small fish.. And a 50mb per month cap is absolute bullshit. Figure it into your 
business line.. Or do the honest thing and don't offer the service. How you 
guys are justifying this is BEYOND me. You can buy a ds1 for several hundred 
dollars per month.. And unlimited customers get 50 megs a month for data.. You 
can't even check email over the month on that. I'm not an abusive user.. I 
don't download or use my cellular data connection for hacked hotspot use.. Not 
to mention the hotspot I do have with them has 10gb a month nationwide.. So I 
can use my puck for 10gb..but my phone (on the SAME TOWER) is different?

That is like saying sms costs network providers money.. (don't bring up ran 
gear or smsc costs.. It's not related)


Sent from my Mobile Device.


 Original message 
From: Joshua Goldbard j...@2600hz.com
Date: 12/04/2013 4:10 PM (GMT-09:00)
To: Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.com
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Question related to Cellular Data and restrictions..


Ting is an MVNO (just like my company 2600hz) and while it would violate the 
terms of my NDA to confirm the 10x number I can say that we found it to be 
prohibitively expensive.

One should be aware that, just like in the IP transit world, the small players 
have different rules than the big kids. It might be prohibitively expensive for 
us, but it's a different order of magnitude for a carrier like Sprint proper.

Hope that helps.

Cheers,
Joshua

P.S. shameless plug: we provide white-label cellular service to operators 
including full provisioning and call control plus it can be tied back into 
corporate phone systems (and it's open source!!).

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 4, 2013, at 2:59 PM, Henry Yen he...@aegisinfosys.com wrote:

 On Wed, Dec 04, 2013 at 22:18:12PM +, Joshua Goldbard wrote:
 ...  When you send your data
 over a partners network it raises your wireless company's cost of
 delivering service, in some cases so much so that you become
 unprofitable.

 Some folks over at Ting(.com) suggest that the cost for data roaming is as
 high as ten times that for voice/SMS roaming, which is why they don't charge
 extra for the latter, and do not at all provide the former.

 --
 Henry Yen henry@aegis00.com   Aegis Information Systems, 
 Inc.
 Senior Systems Programmer   Hicksville, New York
 (800) AEGIS-00 x949 1-800-AEGIS-00 (800-234-4700)