Internet Enabled Cellular
Unless your worried about doing a lot of computing on the road, you can always get an Internet enabled phone. Most allow access to the more popular Email Services (Yahoo, Gmail, etc). When I was with T-Mobil I was able to set my phone to access my home email (at that time it was People PC) through T-Zones Mobile Web. Typing by phone is a pain, but, I was also able to keep up on a couple of important emails that way on a trip to Washington a year ago.
Also, perhaps if you spend that much time on the road, a Blackberry might possibly be a good investment...
-Brad
I have experimented with most of what is out there
Quote:
Originally Posted by Arizona Brad
Have you used Satellite internet? If so, do you think it's cost effective?
Cost effective? Compared to what? If one needs Web access, it works in most places in North America -- but it is not what most of us would consider broadband these days. Here are some of the field reports we filed in the "early days". The sad thing is that there has been very little improvement with satellite web access since 2004.
1/25/04: Dashboarder Ron Bunge's field report from South Texas!
4/18/04 Bill Adams' article about DataStorm: New Age in Mobile Connectivity.
A Quick 'n dirty overview by me.
Mark Wright's company is still in the forefront of what is new (not much)
Other field reports of interest:
06/20/04 Wi-Fi Field Report, by Jon R. Vermilye,
Mark
Most of the Palm-iser are good
Quote:
Originally Posted by Judy
I was just checking out a Treo to run on the Verizon network.
All of the palm-sized devices are built to run on everyone's platform. To retain market share for the different platforms, they limit models to specific ones (like that Treo on Verizon's). Yeah, where the network exists -- it works great. But just because it looks like the Verizon map covers the entire country -- that is marketing hype -- the "red" map is attempting to show coverage where they think their customers are -- it is not the same as real, blanket coverage.
It used to be that consumers could use analog for web access -- slow but it worked. But very few (read none) accounts are still available. If you plan to limit your exploration of America to major cities and Interstate highways, you will be able to obtain some level of wireless broadband about 55 to 73% of the time. And if you fill those gaps with the Wi-Fi and local WLAN (wireless local network systems) found at Kinko's Starbucks, motels, campgrounds, etc. etc. you can extend broadband access to 85 to 90%.
Mark