T-Mobile's First HSPA+ Modem Goes On Sale Sunday 74
adeelarshad82 writes "T-Mobile announced that the webConnect Rocket USB Laptop Stick, the first HSPA+ device for the US, will be available beginning on Sunday, March 14. The device was originally announced at MWC in February. HSPA+ is interesting because it could enable 4G LTE-like speeds using existing 3G infrastructure and according to a hands-on, it smokes Wi-Max. Right now, it's still just for Philadelphia, although we should see several major cities light up with HSPA+ on both coasts well before the end of 2010."
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Yeah! Damn tidal forces sapping our precious rotational momentum and lengthening our days! The moon is a communist!
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I feel like we're in some Communist country...
Good thing things really are getting that bad, otherwise you'd sound like a whiny little bitch.
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Well I live in the Philly Metro area, I'll keep you in mind if it doesn't pan out.
Why anyone would pick Philadelphia as a launch city is beyond me. That's like recruiting beta testers from the Special Olympics.
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Portugal (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Portugal (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem with the US market when it comes to broadband, wireless tech, etc vs. Europe or Japan is population density. US cities (It's an American mentality, I suppose) tend to sprawl out, and most of the country is rural, but still fairly populated. Most countries have a higher density (the US is 178th), and most of the non-3rd-world ones that are lower (Canada, Russia, Brazil, etc) have large areas that are entirely unpopulated (and thus don't need to be taken into account for density when it comes to rolling out tech). Not to mention the US is freakin' huge to begin with -- Portugal is a little smaller than Maine, our 38th biggest state. But with a population of 10 million, that's more than Michigan, our 8th most populous state. Rolling out a technology here in the US requires an _enormous_ outlay of cash because of the area that needs to be covered in order to cover enough people to make it worthwhile.
Re:Portugal (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem with the US market when it comes to broadband, wireless tech, etc vs. Europe or Japan is population density. US cities (It's an American mentality, I suppose) tend to sprawl out, and most of the country is rural, but still fairly populated.
I can buy that argument for the rural areas of the US, but when you areas such as NYC I can't fathom as to why they don't apparently have the population density and size to support all the fancy technologies that seem to spring up elsewhere in the world. If anything NYC should be showcasing to the rest of the world as to what high population densities and capitalism can do for technology. But then again, I suppose the technology they have actually *does* showcase the tech that the companies want to install, and that basically the companies couldn't give a flying fuck about providing the best shiny and newest technology.
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...non-3rd-world ones that are lower (Canada, Russia, Brazil, etc)...
Don't mean to nitpik, but Brazil is a third world nation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_World [wikipedia.org]
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Ah, the old population density bird... it still won't fly. Population density in Sweden - where I live - is lower than that in the US. Mobile telecommunications is quite popular here as you probably know. Ericsson and Nokia are well-known names in the field of mobile telecmmunications. Nokia from Finland, Ericsson from Sweden.
Population density in Sweden comes to about 57 heads per square mile. Finland is lower with 44. Norway is even lower with 39.
The USA has a population density of 84 heads per square mil
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It's awesome that you have something we don't. Congrats. You're much better than we are. You rule. Now that you've heard that, maybe you can leave us the fuck alone already? Sheesh.
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Ok, that explains why Durango, Colorado or Selene, Kansas doesn't get this stuff... but what about New York City? Los Angeles? Chicago? Detroit (oops, never mind that one), Houston, Dallas, Phoenix, Seattle, Atlanta, Minneapolis, Indianapolis, Albuquerque, Boston, Miami, and on and on and on and on.
In other words, you are dead wrong. Thanks for playing. :)
strike
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Canada (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Canada (Score:5, Funny)
Up here in Canada, we already have HSPA+ in urban areas... strange that we are so much in advance, we are known to usually adopt technologies well after the US...
Shhh .. the US likes top think that it gets all the cool new technologies first and that the rest of the world can barely use electric lights. If you let on that you have advanced technology then they will start to feel inadequate.
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Don't worry, the bits take so long to get there they'll never notice.
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Re:Canada (Score:4, Funny)
aren't there only 2 or 3 urban areas in canada?
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aren't there only 2 or 3 urban areas in canada?
Yep -- Detroit and Buffalo.
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I was completely baffled by her story, because I was brainwashed to believe that socialized medicine necessarily lags behind when it comes to new medical technology and procedures.
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Turns out Canada had this amazing system called interact that would let you swipe your credit card just like you were at an atm. It was everywhere.
I got my first Visa check card in late 1997, in the USA, and I knew many people that had one way before me. After that, I don't recall ever using cash outside of fast food places. Perhaps where you lived was just behind the times?
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HSPA+ rollout in Canada was hurried along by Bell and Telus, who wanted to have GSM-compatible networks in place when the world showed up to Vancouver for a few weeks, not long ago. Could you imagine the stink if Van got the hot new toys while Montreal and Toronto and Calgary had to suffer with the old tech?
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Because otherwise, Rogers would get all the heavily sought-after roaming minutes. CDMA just isn't used that widely outside of North America. And with Bell being an Olympic sponsor, that would mean the va
My first first? (Score:1)
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You don't have them? 21Mbps is already old news here, although by law it can't be advertised as 21Mbps (because you'll never get anywhere near that, even theoretically). I think most companies have decided to call it 10Mbps.
It's advertised as a replacement for ADSL, but it just isn't. It beats trying to get on wireless in cafes or trains though -- especially when the train wireless is simply one of those shared by everyone on the train.
WiMAX is worlds better if you have line of sight because of its lower la
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Outside the M25? Could be ages.
Then again, T-Mobile's US UMTS network is practically nonexistent. Take Boston as an example: they've got 3G inside 495, except for a large number of inexplicable nulls and EDGE-only areas. Then you go from Worcester to Springfield and it's EDGE only. 2G coverage for a 4G world.
Is that a rocket in your pocket? (Score:2)
Is that a rocket in your pocket? Or are you just happy to see me?
5GB cap ruins it though. (Score:2)
with a 5GB cap and 60c/mb after that makes it a so what.
(Like having a fast car with a half gallon tank.. you can beat anyone in a race for half a block, after that a geo metro is faster)
4G speed except for the cap (Score:2)
IIRC, Sprint's 4G is being advertised as "unlimited" (usual caveats apply) where this isn't. Now that the majority of Joe Consumers are actually consuming more than email (i.e. mobile video, etc.), it'll be interesting to see how the networks respond with their marketing.
From the gearlog link:
The webConnect Rocket USB Laptop Stick retails for $99.99 with a two-year contract and an Even More webConnect data plan. $60 per month gets you 5GB, while $30 gets you just 200MB; both charge 20 cents per megabyte ov
5GB? (Score:2)
Yay! Now I can burn through my monthly allotment in 33 minutes and 20 seconds, and incur overage charges at 50 cents a minute for the remaining 43,167.67 minutes of the month!
Does speed really matter if your monthly allotment is that low?
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It's actually going to be 15 cents a second, more or less.
Let's assume you want that high speed for... something. Hi-res remote doctor consultations, watching Avatar in HD over the air, using onLive.... you get the idea. Let's say you burned through your allotment already. Let's also assume that you get 3Mbit/sec instead of the full 6Mbit/sec. A 15 minute consultation then will cost you $80, a 5 GB movie $200, and an all-night onLive session will run you a whopping $2500. Somehow, I don't think that whoever
I suspect that (Score:2)
Latency? (Score:1)
These tests are useless without latency measurements. For nearly all practical purposes, a 21Mb transfer rate is not significantly better than a 1Mb rate if the round-trip time is 500ms.
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Streaming HD video is not what 99% of people use these connections for. If you do, the service provider hates you and is likely to cancel your service.
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Browsers don't load every page element in parallel. Usually the concurrency is limited to 4 connections per server, per the HTTP spec.
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Fuck that, I'll stay with Clear/Sprint. (Score:2)
Sorry, 5GB.
5 measly little gigs?
I fart hard and I'm over that cap.
HSPA+ is not HSDPA (Score:3, Informative)
The most interesting thing is that HSPA+ is getting close to the same efficiency (bits/Hz) as LTE; 21MBit/sec in a 5MHz channel vs. 100MBit/sec in a 20MHz channel.
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http://talk.maemo.org/showthread.php?t=35116
To cap or not to cap (Score:1)
Guess I will stick with my unlimited EDGE for $20/month then, TMO. It may only be a pathetic 20kbyte/sec or so but I can do that speed all month long for $20, no caps.
lame (Score:2, Interesting)