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  1. #1
    tdonline
    Guest
    Anyone using ATT's air card service extensively or exclusively for
    internet connection?

    I'm trying to decide if I should go with Verizon DSL for about $45
    monthly with download speeds up to 3mbps. ATT is offering monthly
    service for $60 (but I'd get about 20% discount through my job), but
    download speeds would be from 600 kbps to 1.4 mbps.

    I'm looking at using one of these services exclusively as I can't
    afford both. The pro of the air card is that I can use it anywhere, at
    home, at the airport, at hotels when I travel for my job, etc. I'm
    just a little worried about the download speed. I'm on a laptop right
    now and the download speed varies from 400-1.3 mbps and it's kinda
    annoying. The pro for DSL is that both of my laptops can go online at
    the same (I plan to use WiFi) and that it would be faster.

    I don't mind 400-800K speed while I'm at the airport, but would find
    it annoying if I'm trying catch up on a Lost episode from abc.com
    while I'm at home.

    I'm also considering Verizon's Wireless for the air card.

    TIA for sharing and advice.



    See More: Air card vs. DSL




  2. #2
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    On Sun, 13 Jan 2008 19:14:55 -0800 (PST), tdonline <[email protected]>
    wrote in
    <4d76fd40-01b8-4756-adbb-e1f0a0ac29c7@m77g2000hsc.googlegroups.com>:

    >Anyone using ATT's air card service extensively or exclusively for
    >internet connection?
    >
    >I'm trying to decide if I should go with Verizon DSL for about $45
    >monthly with download speeds up to 3mbps. ATT is offering monthly
    >service for $60 (but I'd get about 20% discount through my job), but
    >download speeds would be from 600 kbps to 1.4 mbps.
    >
    >I'm looking at using one of these services exclusively as I can't
    >afford both. The pro of the air card is that I can use it anywhere, at
    >home, at the airport, at hotels when I travel for my job, etc. I'm
    >just a little worried about the download speed. I'm on a laptop right
    >now and the download speed varies from 400-1.3 mbps and it's kinda
    >annoying. The pro for DSL is that both of my laptops can go online at
    >the same (I plan to use WiFi) and that it would be faster.
    >
    >I don't mind 400-800K speed while I'm at the airport, but would find
    >it annoying if I'm trying catch up on a Lost episode from abc.com
    >while I'm at home.
    >
    >I'm also considering Verizon's Wireless for the air card.


    Both services are fast, but quite a bit slower than the maximum speed
    quoted depending on signal quality and network load. If possible, test
    both services in places you care about most, because different services
    have different coverage. You can't just rely on the maximum speed
    quoted.

    --
    Best regards, FAQ FOR CINGULAR WIRELESS:
    John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cingular_Wireless_FAQ>



  3. #3
    David W Studeman
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    tdonline wrote:

    > Anyone using ATT's air card service extensively or exclusively for
    > internet connection?
    >
    > I'm trying to decide if I should go with Verizon DSL for about $45
    > monthly with download speeds up to 3mbps. ATT is offering monthly
    > service for $60 (but I'd get about 20% discount through my job), but
    > download speeds would be from 600 kbps to 1.4 mbps.
    >
    > I'm looking at using one of these services exclusively as I can't
    > afford both. The pro of the air card is that I can use it anywhere, at
    > home, at the airport, at hotels when I travel for my job, etc. I'm
    > just a little worried about the download speed. I'm on a laptop right
    > now and the download speed varies from 400-1.3 mbps and it's kinda
    > annoying. The pro for DSL is that both of my laptops can go online at
    > the same (I plan to use WiFi) and that it would be faster.
    >
    > I don't mind 400-800K speed while I'm at the airport, but would find
    > it annoying if I'm trying catch up on a Lost episode from abc.com
    > while I'm at home.
    >
    > I'm also considering Verizon's Wireless for the air card.
    >
    > TIA for sharing and advice.


    I have both actually but will drop AT&T's HSDPA as soon as I can get out.
    HSDPA is viable in two situations, 1: You need mobility or 2: You have
    absolutely no other broadband choice. The latency is not bad for HSDPA but
    certainly nothing like my Verizon West DSL and no way can I ever get
    consistent results and be able to use voip cleanly with HSDPA not to
    mention it's prohibited. With a Linux router and a modified usbserial
    driver set for an endpoint buffer size of at least 4096 bytes, I get steady
    download throughput at barely under 1.8mbs from a 1.8mbs tower with no more
    than three bars ever. With the same card in Windows with those drivers,
    800kbs was the maximum I could get. Most driver writing for these cards is
    sloppy.
    Keep in mind that AT&T is now facing a capacity issue and will soon
    implement a 5GB cap per month which may also explain why we haven't seen
    3.6mbs speeds yet much less 7.2mbs. The unlimited plan is going away also
    for new subscribers shortly. When I started hearing about people in some
    cities that can't even get on for four hours every weekday, I knew they
    were becoming oversold for the capacity. God help us if an HSDPA iPhone
    ever comes out. I plan to not be a part of it when that happens. I've
    resigned to leaving wireless to my N95-3 phone and continue using DSL or
    FiOS when the latter becomes available in my home setup. BTW, my patched
    usbserial is part of IPCop 1.4.18 (A firewall distro) and I did run my
    network on HSDPA for a few years. Occasionally I slap the HSDPA card in a
    pcmcia pci card and give it a go for fun but as an early adopter, I can
    honestly say that the party is over at AT&T unless you just email and surf
    a bit.


    Dave




    Dave



  4. #4
    Thurman
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL


    "David W Studeman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > tdonline wrote:
    >
    >> Anyone using ATT's air card service extensively or exclusively for
    >> internet connection?
    >>
    >>..snip..>>

    > I have both actually but will drop AT&T's HSDPA as soon as I can get out.
    > ... Keep in mind that AT&T is now facing a capacity issue and will soon
    > implement a 5GB cap per month which may also explain why we haven't seen
    > 3.6mbs speeds yet much less 7.2mbs. .... I've
    > resigned to leaving wireless to my N95-3 phone and continue using DSL or
    > FiOS when the latter becomes available in my home setup. BTW, my patched
    > usbserial is part of IPCop 1.4.18 (A firewall distro) and I did run my
    > network on HSDPA for a few years. Occasionally I slap the HSDPA card in a
    > pcmcia pci card and give it a go for fun but as an early adopter, I can
    > honestly say that the party is over at AT&T unless you just email and surf
    > a bit.


    You kinda glossed over the fact the restraints are being imposed because of
    actions like yours.





  5. #5
    Mahlon Wagner
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    David W Studeman wrote:
    > tdonline wrote:
    >
    >> Anyone using ATT's air card service extensively or exclusively for
    >> internet connection?
    >>
    >>
    >>
    >> I'm also considering Verizon's Wireless for the air card.
    >>
    >> TIA for sharing and advice.

    >
    > I have both actually but will drop AT&T's HSDPA as soon as I can get out.
    > HSDPA is viable in two situations, 1: You need mobility or 2: You have
    > absolutely no other broadband choice. The latency is not bad for HSDPA but
    > certainly nothing like my Verizon West DSL and no way can I ever get
    > consistent results and be able to use voip cleanly with HSDPA not to
    > mention it's prohibited. With a Linux router and a modified usbserial
    > driver set for an endpoint buffer size of at least 4096 bytes, I get steady
    > download throughput at barely under 1.8mbs from a 1.8mbs tower with no more
    > than three bars ever. With the same card in Windows with those drivers,
    > 800kbs was the maximum I could get. Most driver writing for these cards is
    > sloppy.
    > Keep in mind that AT&T is now facing a capacity issue and will soon
    > implement a 5GB cap per month which may also explain why we haven't seen
    > 3.6mbs speeds yet much less 7.2mbs. The unlimited plan is going away also
    > for new subscribers shortly. When I started hearing about people in some
    > cities that can't even get on for four hours every weekday, I knew they
    > were becoming oversold for the capacity. God help us if an HSDPA iPhone
    > ever comes out. I plan to not be a part of it when that happens. I've
    > resigned to leaving wireless to my N95-3 phone and continue using DSL or
    > FiOS when the latter becomes available in my home setup. BTW, my patched
    > usbserial is part of IPCop 1.4.18 (A firewall distro) and I did run my
    > network on HSDPA for a few years. Occasionally I slap the HSDPA card in a
    > pcmcia pci card and give it a go for fun but as an early adopter, I can
    > honestly say that the party is over at AT&T unless you just email and surf
    > a bit.
    > Dave

    How does the Aircard compare to the Sony Ericsson GC89 card?

    And how do the data plans for AT&T and T-Mobile compare?

    Finally, can the Aircard SIM (or the GC89 SIM) be replaced while in
    Germany with one purchased there, for use there?

    Thanks
    Mahl



  6. #6
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    On Tue, 15 Jan 2008 03:41:58 -0800, David W Studeman
    <[email protected]> wrote in
    <[email protected]>:

    >I have both actually but will drop AT&T's HSDPA as soon as I can get out.
    >HSDPA is viable in two situations, 1: You need mobility or 2: You have
    >absolutely no other broadband choice. The latency is not bad for HSDPA but
    >certainly nothing like my Verizon West DSL and no way can I ever get
    >consistent results and be able to use voip cleanly with HSDPA not to
    >mention it's prohibited. ...


    Well duh -- HSPA isn't a replacement for DSL! That said, it does
    compare quite well to DSL and other forms of broadband. I often get
    better performance with AT&T HSPA than on Wi-Fi hotspots.

    My own take is that AT&T HSPA is excellent for mobile use. I get
    DSL-like speeds with good latency all over the greater San Francisco Bay
    Area and other California metro areas, backed up by usable EGPRS(EDGE)
    service in remote areas.

    > Keep in mind that AT&T is now facing a capacity issue and will soon
    >implement a 5GB cap per month which may also explain why we haven't seen
    >3.6mbs speeds yet much less 7.2mbs. The unlimited plan is going away also
    >for new subscribers shortly.


    These are just rumors that should be taken with a grain of salt.

    >When I started hearing about people in some
    >cities that can't even get on for four hours every weekday, I knew they
    >were becoming oversold for the capacity.


    While there will always be apocryphal stories with every carrier, I've
    seen no persuasive evidence of a capacity problem at AT&T Wireless,
    which is actually well positioned in terms of megahertz per subscriber
    as compared to other carriers (notably Verizon).

    >God help us if an HSDPA iPhone
    >ever comes out. I plan to not be a part of it when that happens.


    It almost certainly will happen, probably soon, and I'm not in the
    slightest concerned, in part because the iPhone also uses Wi-Fi.

    >I've
    >resigned to leaving wireless to my N95-3 phone and continue using DSL or
    >FiOS when the latter becomes available in my home setup.


    Well duh -- wireless isn't intended for home use!

    >BTW, my patched
    >usbserial is part of IPCop 1.4.18 (A firewall distro) and I did run my
    >network on HSDPA for a few years. ...


    Thank goodness you're leaving!

    --
    Best regards, FAQ FOR CINGULAR WIRELESS:
    John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cingular_Wireless_FAQ>



  7. #7
    Thomas T. Veldhouse
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    John Navas <[email protected]> wrote:
    >
    > Both services are fast, but quite a bit slower than the maximum speed
    > quoted depending on signal quality and network load. If possible, test
    > both services in places you care about most, because different services
    > have different coverage. You can't just rely on the maximum speed
    > quoted.
    >


    AT&T Wireless will much more likely have a lower "soft cap" on utilized
    bandwidth compared to DSL. So, if this person downloads any significant data,
    then wireless is probably NOT the way to go.

    --
    Thomas T. Veldhouse

    America is the country where you buy a lifetime
    supply of aspirin for one dollar, and use it up in two weeks.




  8. #8
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    On 16 Jan 2008 14:17:32 GMT, "Thomas T. Veldhouse" <[email protected]>
    wrote in <[email protected]>:

    >John Navas <[email protected]> wrote:
    >>
    >> Both services are fast, but quite a bit slower than the maximum speed
    >> quoted depending on signal quality and network load. If possible, test
    >> both services in places you care about most, because different services
    >> have different coverage. You can't just rely on the maximum speed
    >> quoted.

    >
    >AT&T Wireless will much more likely have a lower "soft cap" on utilized
    >bandwidth compared to DSL. So, if this person downloads any significant data,
    >then wireless is probably NOT the way to go.


    I would agree. Mobile data is for ... well ... mobile. Not a
    replacement for landline data.

    --
    Best regards, FAQ FOR CINGULAR WIRELESS:
    John Navas <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Cingular_Wireless_FAQ>



  9. #9
    David W Studeman
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    Thurman wrote:

    >
    > "David W Studeman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    > news:[email protected]...
    >> tdonline wrote:
    >>
    >>> Anyone using ATT's air card service extensively or exclusively for
    >>> internet connection?
    >>>
    >>>..snip..>>

    >> I have both actually but will drop AT&T's HSDPA as soon as I can get out.
    >> ... Keep in mind that AT&T is now facing a capacity issue and will soon
    >> implement a 5GB cap per month which may also explain why we haven't seen
    >> 3.6mbs speeds yet much less 7.2mbs. .... I've
    >> resigned to leaving wireless to my N95-3 phone and continue using DSL or
    >> FiOS when the latter becomes available in my home setup. BTW, my patched
    >> usbserial is part of IPCop 1.4.18 (A firewall distro) and I did run my
    >> network on HSDPA for a few years. Occasionally I slap the HSDPA card in a
    >> pcmcia pci card and give it a go for fun but as an early adopter, I can
    >> honestly say that the party is over at AT&T unless you just email and
    >> surf a bit.

    >
    > You kinda glossed over the fact the restraints are being imposed because
    > of actions like yours.


    So it's my fault? How convenient. Always looking for someone to blame rather
    than a fragile network. Broadband is broadband, unlimited is unlimited
    regardless of delivery method. The restraints don't apply to me or anyone
    on an existing plan as well as anyone now or in the future on a business
    plan. Keep in mind that AT&T helped Junxion and others fine tune their
    routers to work with this network to be used as a backhaul for businesses
    not to mention that AT&T will tell you where to buy such a router on the
    website. I'm on the Boeing AT&T plan btw.


    Dave



  10. #10
    David W Studeman
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    Mahlon Wagner wrote:

    > David W Studeman wrote:
    >> tdonline wrote:
    >>
    >>> Anyone using ATT's air card service extensively or exclusively for
    >>> internet connection?
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> I'm also considering Verizon's Wireless for the air card.
    >>>
    >>> TIA for sharing and advice.

    >>
    >> I have both actually but will drop AT&T's HSDPA as soon as I can get out.
    >> HSDPA is viable in two situations, 1: You need mobility or 2: You have
    >> absolutely no other broadband choice. The latency is not bad for HSDPA
    >> but certainly nothing like my Verizon West DSL and no way can I ever get
    >> consistent results and be able to use voip cleanly with HSDPA not to
    >> mention it's prohibited. With a Linux router and a modified usbserial
    >> driver set for an endpoint buffer size of at least 4096 bytes, I get
    >> steady download throughput at barely under 1.8mbs from a 1.8mbs tower
    >> with no more than three bars ever. With the same card in Windows with
    >> those drivers, 800kbs was the maximum I could get. Most driver writing
    >> for these cards is sloppy.
    >> Keep in mind that AT&T is now facing a capacity issue and will soon
    >> implement a 5GB cap per month which may also explain why we haven't seen
    >> 3.6mbs speeds yet much less 7.2mbs. The unlimited plan is going away also
    >> for new subscribers shortly. When I started hearing about people in some
    >> cities that can't even get on for four hours every weekday, I knew they
    >> were becoming oversold for the capacity. God help us if an HSDPA iPhone
    >> ever comes out. I plan to not be a part of it when that happens. I've
    >> resigned to leaving wireless to my N95-3 phone and continue using DSL or
    >> FiOS when the latter becomes available in my home setup. BTW, my patched
    >> usbserial is part of IPCop 1.4.18 (A firewall distro) and I did run my
    >> network on HSDPA for a few years. Occasionally I slap the HSDPA card in a
    >> pcmcia pci card and give it a go for fun but as an early adopter, I can
    >> honestly say that the party is over at AT&T unless you just email and
    >> surf a bit.
    >> Dave

    > How does the Aircard compare to the Sony Ericsson GC89 card?
    >
    > And how do the data plans for AT&T and T-Mobile compare?
    >
    > Finally, can the Aircard SIM (or the GC89 SIM) be replaced while in
    > Germany with one purchased there, for use there?
    >
    > Thanks
    > Mahl



    Apples and oranges, The gc89 card is EDGE as well as WiFi. In both cases an
    unlocked card will accept a sim from elsewhere but the gc89 card while
    using EDGE will top out at around 200kbs, The newer HSDPA cards are likely
    to get 1.8mbs or more depending on locale but will revert to edge if that's
    all that's available. The wifi portion of the card is irrelevant for this
    discussion since wifi is easily attainable but geographically limited and
    will outperform any cellular data by a large margin as long as you are
    within a short distance of a coffee shop etc.


    Dave



  11. #11
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    On Sun, 17 Feb 2008 15:11:55 -0800, David W Studeman
    <[email protected]> wrote in
    <[email protected]>:

    >Thurman wrote:
    >
    >> "David W Studeman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    >> news:[email protected]...
    >>> tdonline wrote:
    >>>
    >>>> Anyone using ATT's air card service extensively or exclusively for
    >>>> internet connection?
    >>>>
    >>>>..snip..>>
    >>> I have both actually but will drop AT&T's HSDPA as soon as I can get out.
    >>> ... Keep in mind that AT&T is now facing a capacity issue and will soon
    >>> implement a 5GB cap per month which may also explain why we haven't seen
    >>> 3.6mbs speeds yet much less 7.2mbs. .... I've
    >>> resigned to leaving wireless to my N95-3 phone and continue using DSL or
    >>> FiOS when the latter becomes available in my home setup. BTW, my patched
    >>> usbserial is part of IPCop 1.4.18 (A firewall distro) and I did run my
    >>> network on HSDPA for a few years. Occasionally I slap the HSDPA card in a
    >>> pcmcia pci card and give it a go for fun but as an early adopter, I can
    >>> honestly say that the party is over at AT&T unless you just email and
    >>> surf a bit.

    >>
    >> You kinda glossed over the fact the restraints are being imposed because
    >> of actions like yours.

    >
    >So it's my fault? How convenient. Always looking for someone to blame rather
    >than a fragile network. Broadband is broadband, unlimited is unlimited
    >regardless of delivery method.


    That's nonsense. When a small fraction of users consume a greatly
    disproportionate amount of expensive resources they are being unfair to
    other users and effectively subsidized by them, spoiling it for everyone
    in the long run.

    --
    Best regards,
    John Navas <http:/navasgroup.com>

    "Usenet is like a herd of performing elephants with diarrhea - massive,
    difficult to redirect, awe inspiring, entertaining, and a source of mind
    boggling amounts of excrement when you least expect it." --Gene Spafford



  12. #12
    John Navas
    Guest

    Re: Air card vs. DSL

    On Sun, 17 Feb 2008 15:19:17 -0800, David W Studeman
    <[email protected]> wrote in
    <[email protected]>:

    >... The wifi portion of the card is irrelevant for this
    >discussion since wifi is easily attainable but geographically limited and
    >will outperform any cellular data by a large margin as long as you are
    >within a short distance of a coffee shop etc.


    Not necessarily -- my HSDPA service often outperforms overloaded Wi-Fi
    services.

    --
    Best regards,
    John Navas <http:/navasgroup.com>

    "Usenet is like a herd of performing elephants with diarrhea - massive,
    difficult to redirect, awe inspiring, entertaining, and a source of mind
    boggling amounts of excrement when you least expect it." --Gene Spafford



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