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Comparing 3G Networks
Posted by
kdawson
on Tue May 13, 2008 07:59 PM
from the and-the-winner-is dept.
from the and-the-winner-is dept.
bsk_cw writes "Brian Nadel got hold of cellular network cards from AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon, and tried them out with a Lenovo ThinkPad X300 notebook. He watched videos on commuter trains, worked with e-mail at cafes, listened to Internet radio at the airport, and downloaded large files while in a moving car. AT&T came out on top in his tests in the New York area (summary here). Some of the reader comments report different conclusions, so a YMMV is in order."
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IF you have ATT DSL you use there hot spots free.. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:IF you have ATT DSL you use there hot spots fre (Score:2, Funny)
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What's the lag? (Score:5, Interesting)
My big question would be: what's the lag?
The last time I tried to use a cell network for internet access, the lag was horrid (300+ms) compared to real broadband. How is the lag on these systems? I'd rather have the responsive 450kbps connection than the unresponsive 1.5mbps connection.
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Re:What's the lag? (Score:5, Informative)
Location / ping to google.com / max download speed
At my dad's house in NJ / ~400-800ms / ~65K/sec
NJTransit Train in NJ / ~80-90ms / ~110/sec
NJX Airport / ~40-50ms / ~120K/sec
In Brooklyn / ~70-80ms / ~120K/sec
In Manhattan / ~40-50ms / ~120K/sec
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Re:What's the lag? (Score:4, Funny)
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Does anyone see the connection here? (Score:4, Interesting)
Oddly, the telcos start allowing metered access of their 3G networks; no all-you-can-eat plans anymore. In megabyte increments in one case.....
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Hey, it works with text messaging. Why wouldn't they charge large amounts for something that costs them a lot less?
On a side note, Verizon has been doing that for a while with their "data plans". Last I checked they were limiting my phone to 100 MB per month. Good thing I don't use it for internet.
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The reality is that wireless broadband as expoused by the carriers in the US is on the meter now; it's not really broadband just bits-per-buck.
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Yeah, the meter is on. Let's hope this form of 'broadband' changes, and soon. I was hoping that WiMAX would be real, but even with the recent divorce and remarriage of Clearwire and Sprint and Intel, I don't give it much of a chance. I like Craig McGaw's LEO access balloons.....
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It reminds me of the old biker saying, ass grass or gas, nobody rides for free.....
Not AT&T in North Texas (Score:2)
Considering my cell phone is my work phone (I work from home), this is not a good thing. The only reason I use AT&T is because at the time, there was
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Considering the town/city I live in has over 100K people and 2 pretty large universities, it has been surprising how poorly their 3G coverage is.
Hmm
Crowdsourcing the Data (Score:5, Interesting)
The app could tie into the 3G card and pull your approximate location, your carrier, and your average speed and upload it all to a server. As long as it doesn't also upload personal data, or your IP, etc, I can't foresee privacy issues (and it would be opt-in anyway).
With enough people running an app like this, the data could come together quite nicely and allow people to view a map overlayed with the different networks and average performance.
And I bet such a site could be supported by ad revenue. (3: Profit)
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It's too bad they don't have the results broken down in a more useful manner, and don't ask where you are when you do the speed test.
What about roaming in other countries? (Score:3, Interesting)
How do you get data service overseas?
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How do you get data service overseas?
Wireless hotspots or I rent another 3G card. It would seem that Telcos the world over are set on using any kind or roaming and data especially to fund a larger private jet for their execs. Calls I can kind of get, but the cost of providing data access abroad must oly be a fraction more than in the home country of the user it should just be ensuring that the billing and access authoriation infra is in place.
Wireless can work pretty well, I used to use iPass which worked in every country I went to, no ide
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It might be best to get a local subscription if you mostly go to one country and do this a lot.
If you go to Europe and travel between countries, you must check to see that you get one that let you use the free data-rate while roaming though...
Most don't and you still get the rape when roaming.
Examples of 7.2Mbit/s services from www.tele2.se in sweden:
$16.24/month with a 1GB/month cap, then the service gets throttled to 30kbit/s
$26.08/month with a 5GB/month cap
ATT 3G...how much did they pay for that article? (Score:5, Informative)
Our consultants are regularly in NYC, Philly, Houston, Chicago, LA, San Francisco, Seattle, Vancouver and Dallas.
If it helps anybody, Sprint is weak in New Jersey and parts of the Dallas area. Verizon picks up New Jersey nicely and this is where both of our Verizon cards are primarily deployed. Verizon and ATT are both not superior in Dallas so perhaps something else makes them all less than perfect.
One last thing...as soon as iPhone 2.0 comes out, and sells like hotcakes, the ATT network is going to be overburdened...you watch.
Related question (Score:2)
I've been looking for one, but with mixed results.
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Is there an easy-to-use hardware device which will accept one of these 3G cards and act like a WiFi accesspoint, for a mobile WiFi solution?
I've been looking for one, but with mixed results.
These do exist, but I can't remember who makes them. I spent a while in Switzerland with me from the UK, a guy from Germany and a Swiss guy all working at a client, we used the Swiss 3G card and a device which does exactly as you describe and it worked really well. I'll come back if it occurs to me later today
Location, location, ... (Score:2)
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The article didn't say if he was wearing a cap - you don't it would effect reception do you?
5GiB, $60 (Score:5, Informative)
The lower end plans seem so limited as to be useless. How much Google maps usage can you fit into 4MiB before it is $1-8 per extra MiB?
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Re:5GiB, $60 (Score:5, Informative)
In summary, there are cheap, good plans out there, but they're quasi-secret.
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You can get unlimited data and text and 500 minutes of voice for $30/month on Sprint if you get the plan that's been floating around a lot of Hot Deals forums across the net for the last year. You can get it, for instance, with the HTC Mogul, which acts as a wireless router (with modding) to allow however many laptops you have nearby to access the net.
The SERO plan that you're referring to DOES NOT ALLOW TETHERING. You may be happy with your "work around", but any business person foolish enough to do that is just asking for a meaty lawsuit that will cost his/her company lots more money and maybe a misdemeanor for theft. I agree it's not fair that "tethering" costs unreasonably large amounts of money, while "unlimited" on-phone browsing is *much* less. But such is life and it's what the market will bear.
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Re:5GiB, $60 (Score:5, Interesting)
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Not likely, though.
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Re:5GiB, $60 (Score:4, Informative)
Sprint: yes, from http://nextelonline.nextel.com/en/legal/legal_terms_privacy_popup.shtml [nextel.com]
Verizon: yes, from http://b2b.vzw.com/broadband/bba_terms.html [vzw.com]
So, yes, they are all sold in binary units, and the SI prefixes are incorrectly used here.
Parent
Re:5GiB, $60 but Sprint capless (Score:2, Interesting)
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It wasn't a fair comparison (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm also a little skeptical of his bandwidth testing method. I've never heard the Alken site, and the tests I did right now on my own system aren't even close to my actual performance (although, maybe they're justing getting slammed with traffic). It would have been interesting to see if signal strength played a factor as well.
In any case, most people I've heard from have had exactly the opposite results. Usually Sprint is the fastest, with Verizon not far behind and AT&T bringing up the rear. Sprint also has considerably more 3G coverage than the other two carriers. Without saying anything about their customer service, I think Sprint is the clear choice when it comes to data plans.
Parent
Re:It wasn't a fair comparison (Score:4, Insightful)
Why would you choose a server in Norway to test the speed of a wireless connection in New York anyway? Are we testing the speed of the actual wireless network, or the peering arrangements for each provider across the North Atlantic?
Seems to me that you'd want to pick something a little closer, so as to test the actual speed of the provider's network, rather than the speed of the connection to Norway or South Africa or Mars or wherever. Alken just benchmarked my home connection at 1.6 Mbit down. Speakeasy's Washington DC [speakeasy.net] speed test server clocked me at 23.7 Mbit down - which one do you think is a better reading of my ISP's actual performance?
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Re:It wasn't a fair comparison (Score:4, Interesting)
For an even more controlled test you'd need to use the same server hardware and same application layer protocols on each network.
Unfortunately, while this would be a great test for wireless transfer speed it's not a good test of actual browsing/downloading.
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