Review Of Verizon's New Wireless Network 202
jagger writes "The service gives you the speed of broadband, the ease of WiFi and the coverage of cellular... sort of. The service is currently rolled out in Washington D.C. and San Diego, CA but offers speeds comparable to broadband. Read the full review from Rob Pegoraro of the Washington Post at Yahoo News."
Suspicious... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Suspicious... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Suspicious... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Suspicious... (Score:4, Insightful)
The gov't will have to raise taxes to make up for lost revenue.
Re:Suspicious... (Score:5, Interesting)
I think that there is another reason for that.
Imagine if people were using that 2-way walkie talkie function for "regular" as in non business related ways.
Picture an executive in a high level meeting. He's laying down the law to mid level execs and as he's deriding them for their lack of vision and focus...BEEP BEEP "Henry! I told you to pick up diapers and tampons on your way home last night. Maybe I should just have the pool boy do it, he takes care of the rest of my needs anyway!"
Or imagine you're at a bank going over the terms of the mortgage for your first home. Suddenly your Stiffler-Esque buddy from college chimes in BEEP BEEP "Yo fuckstick! I've been calling your apartment all day, I know you're not at work, I tried there too. You're not fucking my mom again are you?"
I suspect that only businesses have signed on to this because they still have the ability to fire people for misuse.
LK
Dude, people DO that (Score:3, Insightful)
The same clueless wonders are surprised when their phone cuts off as the train heads into a 2 mile tunnel, too.
I *HATE* Nextel phones for just that reason. People think that the rest of us want to hear both sides of their inane conversation.
Re:Suspicious... (Score:5, Informative)
Finally, thanks to the free incoming calls and unlimited 2-way radio with my wife and best friend my chargeable minutes have dropped significantly. At worst, I used over 1,200 minutes. Then I added unlimited nights & weekends, and that dropped to about 500. Added free incoming calls, and that dropped to under 200! Now that my best friend has the 2-way, too, we ping each other all the time, and I'm thinking about dropping from the free incoming 400 to the free incoming 250.
It makes such a difference when you can get the point across without all the call setup hubub. Not the technical call setup stuff, the social stuff. "Hey, its me, got a minute?"
Now its, "[beep-beep] Can I reboot the server?" "[beep-beep] Sure."
Now that NASCAR's premiere racing series is Nextel Cup, you can expect a lot more subscribers to come online in the coming months and years. We are getting *bombarded* by Nextel ads these days.
Re:Suspicious... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Suspicious... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Suspicious... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, it makes a lot more sense to go around looking for hotspots rather than having broadband access whereever you are. I can just see you running around looking for a free cell spot because you don't want to pay cell phone charges.
Re:Suspicious... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Suspicious... (Score:5, Informative)
There are lots of unprotected default "linksys" and "netgear" wireless points in the residential areas
Re:Suspicious... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Suspicious... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Suspicious... (Score:2)
One of these days you'll be able to live in the country or small towns and have broadband. The broadband revolution in the US sucks.
Commercials (Score:4, Funny)
[Annoying Verizon twit walking around in wannabe geek attire]
Can you ping me now?
[Pauses so camera gan see uber-cool propritary branded gadget BS]
Goood
[Walks off stage leaving camera showing oh-so self-important suits and wanna-be geek types watching in "shock and awe"]
[...and que fine print at bottom of screen scrolling so fast a hamster on crack can't even read it and Verizon Logo]
Re:Commercials (Score:4, Funny)
Which is not to say very fast at all and furtherm.. wha? Holy shit! Your hamster can read?
Re:Suspicious... (Score:4, Interesting)
Wait till it gets popular, then it'll start slowing down.
did you RTFA? (Score:5, Interesting)
By the way, this article was written by a reporter who probably either didn't know very much about the technology or was addressing it as being nice and easy to use, even for lusers (the "difficult to get working in a PC" comment). He claims it works wonderfully without any problem, he hasn't been payed to say it, and didn't say very much of anything on the negative side about it. This technolgy is not new (look at japan) I suggest you save your tinfoil for annother day's hat.
Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:5, Interesting)
The biggest blocking factor for me on Verizon is the lack of bluetooth phones. My t610 joined with my Powerbook is a shear joy (except for the speed). Bluetooth is great. Verizon sucks for not having any handsets that use it (or pressuring manufactures to make a decent CDMA phone with bluetooth).
Re:Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:3, Informative)
The big thing about EV-DO is that it's data-only, with no voice network with it. So the assumption is you just buy an EV-DO card and use that.
The other problem is that Bluetooth is unfairly been victimized by wifi hype and, at the same time, not yet been done "right" in such a way that it becomes a must-have feature.
Re:Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:3, Interesting)
The odd thing is that the idea of a wireless bluetooth headset is very long in the
And, really, a tiny Bluetooth earbud that you pull out like your stylus (shades of star trek, really) is what would make a Treo form-factor phone more marketable.
The other problem, I think, is that nobody's spent the time to really think of some whack applications other than that to sell it. The
Re:Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:3, Insightful)
Cultural norms might kill off that idea... the wired ear-bud phones with the "lapel" mike are bad enough. Ever watch someone walking down the street having an animated conversation with no cell phone in sight?
Now imagine what it looks like when you can't even see any wires...
"Gee, he looks awfully well-dressed for a drugged-out wino, but le
Re:Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, T-Mobile's service is pretty fast. If you're getting consistant speeds of 5-10 kilobytes per second, you're doing well. Really, it's the latency that worries me. I always get 800 to 1000ms in that department. That's fine for some things, but it seems to make intolerant programs time out, and multiplayer gaming is out of the question.
P.S. Look into T-Mobile's Unlimited Internet VPN service. It's no more expensive than the normal unlimited, but you hav
Re:Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:2)
GPRS is a bit spotty where I live (northern Delaware) but was really good in Phoenix area when I was out there in January. I had an ssh session open to my box fixing a problem as my buddy drove from Goodyear AZ about 40 miles to Fountain Hills. Never dropped connection once. Even worked up around Crazy Eds in Cave Creek!
But yeah, latency is a drag. Editing text files over ssh can be a chore. F
Re:Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:5, Informative)
T-Mobile advertises its service as "broadband", but their salesforce tells you (even to this day) that in fact its about as fast as a 56k modem.
Unfortunately, neither claim is anywhere close to the truth:
I spent months on the phone with T-Mobile tech support, and heard again and again that the "3k per second transfer rate you're getting is part of a known issue and our engineers are working on it."
Bottom line: T-Mobile GPRS does not exist yet. You'll have max 5kbps with latency and timeout problems galore. Its busted.
By the way, they finally refunded me retroactively for the 4 months that I "had" the service. So they're liars... not thieves.
______________________________________
"I can't turn left. I'm not an ambi-turner"
Re:Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:2)
ATT's edge is in my tests about 600-1000ms ping times.
Voicestream is 1000-3000 ms on average.
Ping times in seconds is not a good thing.
If the Verizon service is similar, it will work pretty nice for downloading big files but suck for any interactive sessions such as VPN etc. (Not to mention packet loss etc which will make it lots worse!)
Latency Latency Latency...
We all want to know - what's the latency?
Cheers,
Greg
Re:Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:2)
Re:Nice, but how about bluetooth? (Score:2, Funny)
Good stuff (Score:4, Interesting)
We are starting to deploy the cards on sales laptops. While most of our sales guys are out of the highest speed markets noted in the article, the card and software have worked very well and both are an absolute cinch to install and use.
Re:Good stuff (Score:4, Interesting)
My job requires that I do all the development on linux and OSX. Windows isn't permitted except as a leaf node (for UI testing), due to the extreme security problems. So I could easily get a business deduction for it, but not if I have to use MS software in the gateway/firewall.
sign me up. (Score:5, Insightful)
I have to give some credit to Verizon for really putting their competitors to shame. I pay $30 a month for DSL thats 1024/256 Mb/s I get excellent customer service. I had been an earthlink customer prior to this for over 5 years and got tired of there ever creeping up prices. My only concern here is it seems this is basically WiFi via there current cell phone network. if so then again we are going to run into the local bells muscling the market.
Re:sign me up. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:sign me up. (Score:2)
You meant Kb/s, right?
Re:sign me up. (Score:2, Troll)
Sign me too up when it runs on a real OS, not some insecure, overpriced POS.
Re:sign me up. (Score:3, Informative)
So shall I enable EVDO on your account now?
...and the rest of the country? (Score:5, Interesting)
It sounds to me like Verizon has something with much better range going here, but I guess Pegoraro didn't think to ask.
One of the reasons I'm interested is that my parents live in one of those oft-forgotten places in the US where high speed internet is a far-away dream. The town (population 500) is about an hour's drive over a terrible mountain road from civilization, so the local CLEC never bothered to run phone lines in: they just set up this crappy microwave link on top of a mountain.
No cable, no wired phone lines: needless to say, broadband is impossible (satellite being the unacceptable semi-exception). Which makes going back to hang out at the ranch pretty annoying.
The point (I'm getting there!) is that if these guys have figured out a way to get high speed internet to travel a good long distance, this could help solve the access problem for rural america.
Of course, I've seen so many supposed solutions [wired.com] come and fade away, that I sort of doubt it.
Re:...and the rest of the country? (Score:3, Informative)
This is just using turbo codes and CDMA modulation with the same old ante
oh yeah... (Score:5, Funny)
Personal outlook (Score:4, Interesting)
On a related note ... (Score:5, Informative)
This is for your New Yorkers who know what I'm talking about. (wifi service in the island of Manhattan free for all verizon dsl/dialup users)
What is to be careful of? Fake Verizon-WIFI APs. No joke. I was walking down 14th street next to Broadway, and suddenly I wanted to hop online to check what the weather would be for later that day.
I pop out my Zaurus, pop in my wifi card, and start sniffing for whatever wireless networks I can get to. I hit a Verizon-WIFI AP, which works for me being that my company is a customer of theirs. I pop in my Verizon Online password, and my password, hit enter, and I'm in.
Except for ONE problem. I typed in my username wrong! (Zaurus 5600 owners know how much of a bitch it is to type numbers with the damn Fn key.) But I still got in!!! I reconnected, typed in a bogus user/pass, and still had zero issues getting in.
At first I didn't realize what was going on (being that I was late for class, and rushing like crazy). But then it dawned on me, that this was a fake AP setup to steal real verizon user-names and passwords. Pretty slick if you ask me.
Yeah yeah, not too related to the topic at hand, but other verizon customers may want to know
Sunny Dubey
Re:On a related note ... (Score:2)
Couldn't you just wet your finger and hold it up to the wind?
Re:On a related note ... (Score:5, Insightful)
No kidding! OK, so now that we know, how do we ID the fake APs to avoid 'em? Always enter a bogus login first, or?..
Re:On a related note ... (Score:2)
Re:On a related note ... (Score:3, Offtopic)
Re:On a related note ... (Score:2, Informative)
VOIP anyone? (Score:5, Interesting)
But it does sustain rates around 500 kbps or over...
Voice over IP, anyone? It seems like they're practically begging that application- why carry and pay for a cell phone too, especially if you can get this service on a PDA some day?
Re:VOIP anyone? (Score:5, Informative)
In (I'm guessing) early 2005, Verizon, Sprint, should be rolling out a service based on 1xEV-DV. That will provide even higher data rates (in both directions), and (IIRC), voice calls will be VOIP by default!
Verizon (Score:5, Funny)
Sadly, it also gives you the quality of Verizon.
woohoo! (Score:5, Funny)
you cant sue me until you catch me and serve me with a summons
nyah nyah now im in mexico
wtf? (Score:2, Funny)
...and I thought slashdot editors were bad! I get 3oo kilobits per second myself though.
Monet Mobile did it first (Score:5, Informative)
Thing is, this is not a new service and I'm not getting it from Verizon. I'm getting it from Monet Mobile.
...but not for long...
The service is fantastic- I can't imagine a better product. The truly sad thing is that Monet Mobile (www.monetmobile.com) is going bankrupt and shutting me down on April 1, at which point I'm going to have to pay the Verizon fees or go back to wired internet... (sigh)
Good idea.. (Score:5, Insightful)
That means I already pay $70 / month just to get DSL. I already have Verizon Wireless, so I might qualify for some kind of package deal discount.
The wireless phone I have is already a data-capable G3 phone. Possibly just a flash upgrade will enable the higher rates. So, I am probably out just a USB cable to get online. Anywhere, whenever. Hmmm.
Sounds like a good idea to me.
You know, it seems that where the telco's dropped the ball with fiber-to-the-curb, the wireless providers stand to prosper using RF.
Re:Good idea.. (Score:2)
Security? (Score:4, Insightful)
Does anybody know of the security protocals used for this?
Re:Security? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Security? (Score:2)
With normal high speed you get a lot of people using NAT boxes on personal networks, which at least offers some measure of security, but that's not possible with an access device that must be run from the connecting machine.
Seems too good to be true.. (Score:2)
I actually used this... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I actually used this... (Score:2)
I cant wait to get started!
Re:I actually used this... (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.ka9q.net/5220.html
Re:I actually used this... (Score:2)
God bless Phil Karn
Re:I actually used this... (Score:3, Insightful)
It also means that Verizon always know who is connected where and when. It is not at all like war-driving.
Come to think of it, the network pro
I wasnt impressed. (Score:3, Funny)
$80/month must be a business expense?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Grrr. I'm paying $60 for a (highly rate limited due to the # of subscribers) 256Kbps 802.11 uplink, $99 for 128Kbps IDSL (yeah, I know it's just repackaged ISDN) because the former is too unreliable, and $15 for a decent dial-up to backup all the others because I can not afford not to have a connection! If I thought it would help I would kill someone to get 600Kbps for $80.
You can not function in the modern employment world above the level of "service" without solid, fast Internet connections. If you haven't figured this out yet you're grist for the unemployment line. It's a personal expense the same way a plumber pays for a toolbox full of tools. Get it?
Re:$80/month must be a business expense?? (Score:2)
Re:$80/month must be a business expense?? (Score:3, Insightful)
I already have to shell out close to $100 per month for my cellular service, but that gives me the *voice* communications I *need* to do business, plus the ability to get online at a slower speed to send/receive short messages, or look something up on the net.
For me, that's really good enough. DSL giv
A Bit Offtopic.. But I Need Help (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:A Bit Offtopic.. But I Need Help (Score:3, Informative)
Rob says (Score:5, Insightful)
This guy apparently doesn't know any geeks.
With VOIP becoming so popular, a laptop with this would be portable broadband and mobile VOIP all in one. That would be well worth the expense to lots of us.
LK
Card interface? (Score:3, Informative)
With data rates as high as claimed, this one may indeed be proprietary, although it would still, I believe, be *theoretically* possible to emulate a COM port that simply provided data a lot faster than you think it should (all of these virtual COM port style devices all ignored the baud rate setting anyway).
Can anyone confirm or deny? If you're using a Windows XP box, bring up the device mangler, properties of the device, Details, and give us the "Device Instance ID". Decoding that should tell us about the attachment (PCCard or Cardbus) and if it's Cardbus, should give us PCI vendor/device ID info.
Re:Card interface? (Score:2)
EDGE (Score:5, Informative)
So ATTWS has EDGE nation wide, and Verizons EvDO is only in a 2 markets. ATTWS already has UMTS trials in 7 major markets, at speeds faster than verizon, soon to launch commerically!
So you dont hear it much, ATTWS has the fastest nation wide network. When Cingular takes over, and the 2 merges coverage areas, expect the best nation wide coverage, and fastest speeds around.
I'm just wondering when Cingular starts expanding UMTS past the 7 markets, what will Verzion do? It cant offer what it doesnt have, or built out. Be interesting to see what Verizon does to counter the Cingular advantage.
Re:EDGE (Score:2)
Yes, users of attws(like me) know how fast and good AT&T's network really is.
The coverage itself is a damn joke when I compare it with friends who use Verizon.
Re:EDGE (Score:3, Interesting)
- ATTWS/Cingular/T-Mobile all have roaming agreements. Their coverage areas are already "merged". And Verizon's coverage is still *way* better. Try going up into Wyoming with your ATT GSM phone. Then try doing it with a Verizon phone. With Verizon, I had CDMA2000 + 1xRTT in Yellowstone National Park. With ATT, I had nothing. And it's not just Wyoming. I often have trouble in major metro areas with ATT.
- ATT's EDGE is nowhere near "nationwide". It's being rolled out in
Re:EDGE (Score:3, Informative)
- Edge is deployed nation wide, ATTWS converted all coverage areas to EDGE last year, All coverage areas. If you include Tmobile and Cingular, the market combined is larger. Dont forget the UK which is all GSM. (You keep Korea). GSM phones will roam in the UK now, Verizon doesnt have any global roaming phones.
- 1xEV-DO is 2.4Mbps UMTS is 2Mpbs on paper, real world trials are showing 1xEV-DO pushing 650Kpbs and UMTS is
Re:EDGE (Score:3, Insightful)
- 1xEV-DO is 2.4Mbps UMTS is 2Mpbs on paper, real world trials are showing 1xEV-DO pushing 650Kpbs and UMTS is pushing 2100Kpbs.
Um, you can't push more bits than the spec allows. Also, 1xEV-* is running on 1.25MHz wide band. UMTS (WCDMA) is running on a 5MHz wide band. That's a lot more bandwidth for similar data rates.
And there is something called 3xEV (3 x 1.25=3.75MHz) that triples
Re:EDGE (Score:2)
It'll be interesting because you can't intermingle UMTS/EDGE/GSM like that. And ATTWS/Cingular is still un-rolling-out TDMA.
Although, they do have the hope, once they get rid of TDMA, of using the 900 band instead of the 1900 band, which gives them better wall-penetrating abilities, which is the main reason why Verizon often has good coverage.
Re:EDGE (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Verizon has committed to rolling out EV-DO nationwide. I don't work for Verizon, so I don't know any exact dates, but I would guess a year from now would be reasonable to have major city coverage.
2. I doubt ATTWS has trial UMTS stations in all 7 markets. I work for a large cell phone manufacture
Re:EDGE (Score:2)
You so sure? (-:
IMHO, UMTS won't be ready to be rolled out until 2005 at the earliest in the US.
Really. (-:
Damn, I hate non-disclosure agreements.
Goto ATTWS Newsroom [primus.com] and
Re:EDGE (Score:2, Informative)
UMTS (Universal Mobile Telecommunications System) is the CDMA-based successor to GPRS (& EDGE). Its theoretical transfer ceiling (or the ceiling of the Qualcomm UMTS chipset) is 384 kbps down and 6
Nextel doing the same thing (Score:2, Informative)
I doubt this will scale well (Score:2, Interesting)
Poor poor Mac... (Score:2)
Re:Poor poor Mac... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Poor poor Mac... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Poor poor Mac... (Score:2)
I was particularly annoyed by ATTWS publishing magazine ads showing a guy using a PowerBook G4 with one of their cards, and then finding out that as I feared, it was just the usual "hey look we need a photo of a guy with a laptop for the ad, go get the ad agency to take a photo with one of their laptops" bogosity.
I Hate Verizon (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I Hate Verizon (Score:2)
Although they share a name, Verizon and Verizon Wireless are distinctly different companies (in behavior at least, the financial situation is unclear at best). I've hated Verizon for years myself, however I have a Verizon Wireless cell phone and have been quite pleased. Anytime I have to call customer service they practically fall over themselves to help me (not to mention there's no wait times) and always have things fixed quickly. They may not be the best company out there, but they are a far cry from
their 1x is fast and easy (Score:2, Interesting)
A short review of nextel wireless broadband (Score:2, Informative)
The downside is they assign you a private ip address, and route you through a NAT. So bittorrent and game serving stink.
"The speed of broadband, th
Re:huh? (Score:5, Funny)
This is probably why there aren't a lot of posts to this article, yet. Every Slashdot reader is frantically trying to order "boradband".
Re:huh? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:huh? (Score:2, Funny)
It's probably a misprint... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:It's probably a misprint... (Score:2, Funny)
perhaps instead of looking at pr0n you could go outside and get the real deal, sure it might cost you dinner for a few weeks but after the trial you get it for a really low fee
Re:Kickass.. (Score:2, Funny)
They ruined my joke!
Since when did
Re:So how are they doing it? (Score:4, Informative)
They are using 1xEV-DO from their cell towers, on dedicated cellular bands.
Re:I've been waiting for this... (Score:2)
There are supposedly CDMA Bluetooth [phonescoop.com] phones on the way, but it's not necessarily likely that the EV-DO network will be available on said phones because it doesn't contribute to the phone's essential platonic phone-ness.
Wait another year or so when the 1xEV-DV rollout happens and then there'll be some neat choices.
Re:I tested this ... (Score:3, Informative)
1) your usage of the word "shared" isn't clear in its meaning, so I'll just ignore that statement.
2) Security. Each CDMA phone in the world is has a unique ESN that is hardcoded into the phone. Even if it were possible to reprogram a phone with a duplicate ESN, no two mobiles would be allowed on the network with the same ESN. Both mobiles would be denied service and your account most certainly would be flagged. The ESN is used to create a unique offset in the main long orthogo