Have ordered AT&T PocketNet Service
We at MyFamily.com are evauating wireless services and I have just placed an order for AT&T's new PocketNet Service.
The good stuff:
* Wireless internet access ranges from free for the basic plan to $14.99/month for the premium plan. This is in addition to any of AT&T's voice plans. (E.g. 49.95/month OneRate)
* Usage is unlimited.
* The Mitsubishi T250 phone combines analog cellular (AMPS), two bands of TDMA digital voice, and CDPD data into a little handheld device.
* The phone has an embedded 10-line browser that supporting WML (WAP) and HDML (a reduced wireless form of HTML).
* You can plug the T250 into your notebook and get 19.2Kbps internet access.
The bad stuff:
* CDPD is not as broadly deployed as we would all like.
* Hidden in the fine print is the fact that AT&T charges 5 cents per kilobyte for internet access from the notebook. (Access from the phone is unlimited but notebook usage charges could add up fast!)
More info is at http://www.attws.com
I'll post more information after I've had a chance to try it out.
Enjoy!
BR
AT&T & Verizon Wireless both "supporting CDPD"
Greetings Brandt,
RW: Thanks for letting us know that you have taken the plunge and ordered the PocketNet & CDPD service. A couple of heads-up for you:
BR: You can plug the T250 into your notebook and get 19.2Kbps internet access.
RW: Actually, CDPD is similar to cable TV in that the rate of service you can expect is entirely dependent upon how many other users are using the network when you are using it. 19.2Kbps is the rated top maximum speed, but there are very few areas in the USA where the actual thru-put will exceed 14.4Kbps. In fact, many areas can only support a thru-put of about 8-10Kbps.
RW: The bit of "good news" is that despite much evidence to the contrary, (eg: some local telecos have been known to remove the CDPD hardware to gain sprectrum for better ROI services) I recently attended a press briefing in Austin, TX at which the senior managers for AT&T Wireless and Verizon Wireless both stated a public commitment to support CDPD for the next few years.
BR: The bad stuff: * CDPD is not as broadly deployed as we would all like. * Hidden in the fine print is the fact that AT&T charges
5 cents per kilobyte for internet access from the notebook. (Access from the phone is unlimited but notebook usage charges
could add up fast!)
RW: Please give us some updates on your billing and service as they develop!
Thanks for the posting!
RW
Report on a Summer with AT&T Pocketnet
Here's an update on using the Mitsubishi T250 for a summer on AT&T Pocketnet.
We did a lot of travelling this summer which gave me a chance to try out the phone in a lot of different places.
First off: With the exception of a couple of non-coverage places in remote Utah this phone has never failed to obtain Voice coverage. Three of its four modes are voice (analog and two digital modes) and it always seems to find something to connect with. This includes a remote spot at camping with the scouts at 9500 feet Uintah mountains fifteen miles from any paved roads. At Lake Powell in Southern Utah I had to climb up to the canyon rim but then had an excellent (Digital!) connection.
However, I could only get CDPD data coverage in relatively large communities. In Utah, CDPD coverage extends from Springville (five miles to the south of me) up to my parent's home in Logan (150 miles to the north). This covers about 95% of the population of the state but less than 10% of the area. Travelling to Southern Idaho and in various rural parts of Utah there was no data coverage.
We flew back to Boston and spent a week in Maine and New Hampshire. Data coverage worked well in and around Boston but in the rest of New England there was only voice coverage.
Regarding the data service itself, it's pretty nice. I can receive and send eMail, read the latest news and do most of the other advertised things. However, I'm still not ready to entrust stock trades or e-commerce orders to this thing.
Overall, it's a useful device for traveling executives because there is good coverage in Metro US. But the coverage doesn't offer dashboarders what we're looking for.
Enjoy!
BR
Great Field Report -- Kudos!
Road Greetings Brandt!
The more things change the more Dashboarders have to keep looking. Look at the posting 09/27 from Terry -- who thought he was seeing a new product called Starband.
The most interesting aspect of your field trials (to me) was the difficulty in reaching CDPD. That digital over-lay transponding equipment was built on many of the analog towers and I find it weird that you had so little success.
Your tests seem to belie and over-rule the ardent marketing of both Verizon and AT&T about continuing to support CDPD on the networks.
Looking forward to more news as the Systems get more tweaking.
RW