Motorola Plans Wi-Fi Cell Phones 195
Otto writes "This AP article over at CNN talks about Motorola's plans to create a cell phone that can seemlessly switch calls between cell networks and VoIP over WiFi, when it sees WiFi available to it. Thus reducing on call costs. Personally, I think it'd be cool just to have a cell phone that could use my own WiFi at home and be cellular when I'm out in the rest of the world."
Security? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Security? (Score:3, Interesting)
In order for such a seamless-changeover call to be even possible, it'd have to from the start be passing through the cell provider on the way to the VoIP last mile while it's being used...
Re:Security? (Score:2)
With the call pricing around here I don't see much point in this unless one has to call hours per day.
Re:Security? (Score:2)
Analog phones (generally) don't use encryption either.
Wonderful! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wonderful! (Score:2)
Flarions' OFDM Wireless Broadband service (Score:2, Informative)
Wired WiFi services have limited life, it seems.
Re:Flarions' OFDM Wireless Broadband service (Score:2)
Re:Wonderful! (Score:2)
Re:Wonderful! (Score:2)
Re:Walking before running (Score:2)
VoIP to VoIP calls have the potential for sounding as good as the bandwidth will allow, meaning CD-quality. The nice thing about VoIP is that it allows both ends to negotiate which CODECs to use, an
Where are they? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Where are they? (Score:5, Informative)
Free hotspots are harder to find. In my neighborhood there's one at the food court at the mall and another one at a fast food restaurant. Plenty of unsecured wireless APs on my street too, but the CF Wifi card on my PDA is too weak to connect to them.
Re:Where are they? (Score:2)
Re:Where are they? (Score:2)
>
> It's actually not that hard to find a T-mobile hotspot.
> There's a Starbucks practically on every block.
>
And so I used to think, until I started working in Providence, RI. The third Charbuck's in town just opened. I wonder if there aren't other cities that also lack those chains which are assumed by folks in The Big Cities to be ubiquitous.
We had an NBC show named after us, there was a great show trial a couple of years ago (the mayor, Buddy Cianci) which you may have
Re:Where are they? (Score:2)
Re:Where are they? (Score:2)
well (Score:2)
Re:Where are they? (Score:2)
Re:Where are they? (Score:2)
Serioulsy with this phone if everone who had DSL or Cabel Modems got a WiFi and opned it up we could all have free cell phone service. Mhhhhh good.
A path to rural cell coverage? (Score:5, Interesting)
This could become a low-cost way of extending a cell network into rural areas where it's hard to put up a traditional cell tower due to zoning hassles, but virtually anybody could mount a WiFi antenna on their roof next to their TV antenna.
Re:A path to rural cell coverage? (Score:4, Insightful)
Trust me, my family is in rural Illinios and they don't use networks like the folk in the big cities.
Re:A path to rural cell coverage? (Score:2, Insightful)
Who has an IDT Cell Phone? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd have more confidence in this going to market if one of the big cellular players like Verizon, SBC/Cingular, or T-Mobile was the one doing this test.
Re:Who has an IDT Cell Phone? (Score:5, Insightful)
The last people who want this to work are the big carriers.
(looking up IDTs stock price...)
Re:Who has an IDT Cell Phone? (Score:3)
War Phoning? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:War Phoning? (Score:1)
If you break their encryption and/or hack a password, THEN you're stealing the service.
Re:War Phoning? (Score:2, Informative)
The law views it as if the street had a bunch of houses each with a gated yard. Open the gate and step in the yard (connect) and you've trespassed. Open gate, step in yard, enter the house (transmit something over their network), and you've commited a computer crimes felony.
As well as probably steppe
Re:War Phoning? (Score:2)
Re:War Phoning? (Score:2)
Re:War Phoning? (Score:2)
I disagree. I think the law could be unreasonably applied in that case. If the phone is designed to automatically connect, which is not an unreasonable function, the scenario could play out like this: say you're linked to a free WiFI AP at a local diner, and you walk outside after eating breakfast and
Finally! A way to escape the at-home dead zone! (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes!
Hopefully this would finally be a way to escape the "at-home dead zone" when I try and use my mobile down in the basement and I can get rid of that silly land-line once and for all!
-AP
Re:Finally! A way to escape the at-home dead zone! (Score:5, Informative)
Cell providers already have "mini tower" equipment they can set up in their stores to assure that they never have an embarassing dead spot at their own retail location. They even set those up at business sites to assure an otherwise uncoverable corperate campus gets hit with signal.
I guess it was only a matter of time until they converted such units to a home game model...
Re:Finally! A way to escape the at-home dead zone! (Score:5, Informative)
A simple passive repeater is no problem to install in a dead zone such as a basement.
A high gain antenna on the roof pointing to the cell tower is connected to an omni antenna in the basement. This provides signal in the dead zone.
A small dish works great as it can be pointed to the tower providing high signal strength to feed the basement antenna. Be sure to use antennas cut to the freuency your cell provider is using. Use a large diamater low loss cable or all system gains will be lost in the first 15 feet of the cable. In extreme cases, eliptical waveguide may be used but it greatly adds to the cost of the project. To prevent cable loss, keep the cable as short as possible. Many houses have high attenuation because of masonary walls or aluminum backed insulation in the walls. A roof mount dish coupled with about 6 feet of wire to a ceiling mounted antenna are sometimes all that is needed to couple the signal from outside into the living space covering even the basement with good signal.
Re:Finally! A way to escape the at-home dead zone! (Score:2)
It is a little pricey at $500, though.
Re:Finally! A way to escape the at-home dead zone! (Score:2)
It's pretty hard to find somewhere in this city where you don't have perfect cell coverage (including on the subway trains).
this is /..... (Score:3, Informative)
just get a good old wifi phone and you'll never know the difference.
wifi phones from pulver.com [pulverinnovations.com]
what would be awesome (Score:5, Funny)
I wonder what kind of protocol it could use.. maybe firewire protocol over wi-fi, converted to frames that could be sent over a wire like ethernet. There could be some kind of power-over-ethernet to supply it with DC. Then it could run out to the street, where it would go into a tower and be converted into real wi-fi signals, except encapsulated in GSM data so it could use the existing cellular infrastructure. No that's no good, coverage is spotty. Maybe satellites could be involved. Could be expensive. Maybe it could run over DSL? Hey there's an idea!
Modern technology allows so many simple and elegant solutions to today's problems!
Gotta run, I'm working on my latest invention: a way to take ebooks and permanently output them onto sheets of paper. I think this will revolutionize the ebook industry!
woohoo (Score:5, Interesting)
Suddenly the concept of wardriving has become a lot more interesting. "VoIP wireless hotspot" suddenly becomes synonymous with "Blackmail hole".
Re:woohoo (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:woohoo (Score:5, Informative)
Cracked. [narod.ru]
processing (Score:5, Interesting)
Encrypting a stream text or voice doesn't much matter it's about data rate not content, when you get a lag in an SSL terminal in virtually every case it's not the cryptography that's causing the delay. Modern public/privet key cryptography scales pretty well for various data rates. The rate of your digital voice conversation on your cell phone is pretty low (which is why it sounds like crystal clear 8 bit crap).
Not to mention that you'd only need to start a new encrypted once and a while (to your provider not the WiFi Network) and NOT every time you make a call. Who cares if someone listens in on your traffic on the WiFi if it's just gibberish going to the Cell company any ways? Or did you think by any means your cell company would let you move to VoIP and connect to anyone OTHER than them?
Puleeze these people practically invented sinister strangle hold service.
Re:processing (Score:2)
Encryption could just as easily be designed to run on a DSP.
Re:woohoo (Score:2)
Of course, there are a lot of stupid people...
Re:woohoo (Score:2)
Re:woohoo (Score:2)
Riiight.. nothing new here. Standard household cordless phones are so easy to eavesdrop on, that I do it by accident sometimes.
In the US maybe, but not with DECT.
Most cordless phones nowadays use DECT (at least in Europe).
Ouch... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ouch... (Score:2)
Re:Ouch... (Score:2)
Since the phone would have to have an IP address all that would be needed is something like dynamic DNS so you can directly dial the node that is the phone. It seems to me phone numbers will become relatively obsolete.
With the rising ubiquity of bandwidth it seems to me the cost of TCP/IP time is also going to plummet. If TCP/IP on powerlines ever comes about the cost will really fall.
What would help is if eventually phones could also act as routers so packets could flow from phone to phone to phone. T
Boo Hoo (Score:2, Interesting)
802.11x is probably the only useful innovation left in cell phones, and the major providers are busy either ignoring it or trying to find a way to hijack the wi-fi hotspots that exist already to incorporate them into their networks and charge us for what *should* be free.
E
sigh... (Score:4, Insightful)
Whatever happened to the Motorola that had a Talkabout integrated into it so that you technically don't need to use your minutes if the person you want to talk to is within range??
Re:sigh... (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, this one will be. In order for a seamless jump from WiFi to Cellular to even be possible, the VoIP part of the call already had to be passing through the cell provider's network, since you can't exactly change "local loop"/"last mile" providers in the middle of a phone call.
Whatever happened to the Motor
excellent... (Score:5, Funny)
Dual Mode Phones FYI (Score:5, Informative)
These phones allow you to roam indoors on a DECT local digital connection to your landline and roam outside (or in large buildings) with seamless handover between DECT base stations. They also doubled as GSM but I don't think the handover was automatic, see:
http://www.dectweb.com/Products/dual_mode.htm
for the lazy (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dual Mode Phones FYI (Score:2)
Therefore the handset producers are very careful to not anger the providers by making products like those dual mode phones. Also, that is why the producers are pushing camera phones so heavily. It is not because most consumers really want a camera on their phone, but becau
Re:Dual Mode Phones FYI (Score:2)
This could be possible with practically no extra
Re:Dual Mode Phones FYI (Score:2)
Fundamentally, the issue of standardization vs. market chaos is what differentiates the European and U.S. markets.
Emergency services.... (Score:1)
Re:Emergency services.... (Score:2)
I think what phones need to do for emergency services is to include GPS in every phone.
What costs? (Score:2, Interesting)
Am I the only person who's not counting minutes or worried about mobile phone costs?
Whatever this `plan' may cost, I'm sure there are comprable conventional mobile phone plans that are nearly as limitless as wi-fi.
It would be cool to have a phone that can talk to my computers via wi-fi, but arguing that it would somehow lower costs... that's a bit too much.
Re:What costs? (Score:2)
Vonage offers unlimited residential service for $34.99 per month. $35 to a cell provider will get you roughly 500 peak-time minutes per month with nights and weekends unlimited.
For somebody who makes a lot of peak-time calls, 500 minutes per month simply isn't going to do it. Sure there's a rate plan out there big enough to get all the minutes a user can stand, but it costs a
eh ? (Score:1)
But can we use it? (Score:3, Insightful)
For those of us using GSM networks (i.e. Cingular, AT&T), we could always buy this phone from an independent vendor for top-dollar and transfer our SIM cards. Those of us willing to do this unfortunately represent a tiny part of the cel phone market.
Re:But can we use it? (Score:2, Interesting)
They would stand to *save* money by having you use your own connection at home.
Re:But can we use it? (Score:2, Interesting)
I am interested to see how this plays out, as I have typically awful GSM coverage at home, but excellent WiFi coverage. This would be all I need to give SBC the boot it has long deserved.
A non-starter (Score:5, Insightful)
The point being, I ahve absolutely no need or desire for WiFi for either data or voice. A fat pipe would be nice for streaming audio, but I could live with a lower bitrate. Unless Motorola can make this 100% transparent, it will be such a colossal & immediate failure that New Coke, Audrey & Teledisic will look succesful by comparison. If they can make it 100% transparent, I doubt it will have any application outside of buildings with awful cell coverage; it just doesn't make any sense as a moneysaver, since most providers (e.g., SprintPCS) have excess capacity now.
I remember a similar thing... (Score:3, Interesting)
I think; I may have just been smoking some mighty fine crack and made the whole thing up...
Anyone else in Oz remember this??
err!
jak.
Re:I remember a similar thing... (Score:4, Interesting)
As I recall there was a bit of a tussle over the tracability (or lack thereof) of the phones, but since you'd be able to nail them down to an access point I'd think a 100-200m is better positioning than GSM generally allows.
Re:I remember a similar thing... (Score:2)
There was that urban legend (or was it?!) that if you activated your account whilst standing in the Sydney CBD then everywhere was a local call. And if you tap the street light buttons with SOS morse code it changes the lights to green instantly...
Security and Choices (Score:2)
Of course, that will probably not be the case initially.
Hmmm, may be a good time to invest in Vonage et al.
Handover? (Score:3, Interesting)
So what happens if you move outside the WiFi coverage during a call? Handover between 3G networks and GSM should be possible, but is it possible to switch from WiFi to normal GSM without disconnecting the call? I believe this requires support from the network as well, meaning that the operators will have their say, too. Correct me if I'm wrong here.
Continuing the VoIP traffic over GPRS data could be possible without new features to the network or disconnecting, but that does not sound very tempting, since the rates for standard GPRS are counted in Euros/MB where I live...
I can see the headlines now (Score:3, Funny)
In Bell vs. John P. Citizen today, a federal court judge sentenced the defendant to 16 years jail for failing to pay the plaintiff US$5,000,000.00 in telecommunications charges. The defendant alleged that his Wi-Fi personal exchange was used by unauthorized parties to place multitudes of local, long-distance and overseas calls. By showing that the defendant had failed to secure his Wi-Fi exchange according to the fine print warnings and instructions on the last page of the 10,000 page manual accompanying the product, the prosecution proved the defendant liable for the full amount.
This concept might actually work (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, I think this concept has more potential use and adoption than using public hotspots. This would definitely give people who don't want to pay for an expensive POTS (and have cable internet or be lucky enough to have a local telco that doesn't require a POTS line with DSL service). I know alot of people who only have a cellular phone and complain about not being able to have good reception in all areas of their residence. Motorola's implementation doesn't make much sense, IMO.
Overkill But... (Score:3, Interesting)
Just think of the geeky possibilities.
And images all the babes you could impress!
Nokia 9500 (Score:4, Informative)
There you go [nokia.com]. GPRS/EDGE when you're out and about, and Wi-Fi at your favorite hotspot.
Re:Nokia 9500 (Score:2)
Pointless Idea! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Pointless Idea! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Pointless Idea! (Score:2)
All the money in the US is in voice because, thus far, they haven't been able to get the public to adopt any of the other services over cellular connections yet. Not in any big way.
-Text messaging: Picking up, but still not used by 90% of the US cell carrying public
-Web services like WAP: Used by less than 2%, easily. Everybody hates surfing the web on small screens. They'll go buy a PDA first.. and even then it's rare that they want to pay for wireless web access. I
Re:Pointless Idea! (Score:2)
another of my ideas gone (Score:2)
Save on antennae (Score:3, Interesting)
Wifi + VoIP to save on calls (Score:3, Informative)
Set up Asterisk to try an EnumLookup [voip-info.org] first, then fall back to NuFone [nufone.net] or your home landline using a $16 X100P WinModem from DigitNetworks. [digitnetworks.com]
Get all your friends to register their phone numbers with E164.org too, it's a free ENUM service that also verifies people's numbers.
Then if you're really feeling groovy, help a local Community Wireless Network deploy an 802.11a backbone with 11g hotspots all over the place ;) [seattlewireless.net]
Works great with Asterisk and serexpress. :)
As predicted (or suggested) a year ago? (Score:3, Interesting)
Thanks for listening Motorola!
VoIP (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? Because there were gaps and pits in conversations... awkward silences due to missed packets... missed incoming calls... et cetera. Don't get me wrong... I think the tech has promise, but as it stands right now, VoIP is not ready for primetime.
Furthermore, the broadband providers need to get their shit together, too. DOCSIS nor xDSL are very reliable and I use a relatively respectable provider (RR). It seems that the move to VoIP is being based more on trying to save a quick buck, for customers and providers alike, and less about QoS, rock-solid reliability, and future practicality.
I mean REALLY... what good is side-stepping the CLECs in the name of lower costs when they're the ones we ultimately have to route calls through to call POTS lines from time to time?
Look... I know there are some of you out there who really love VoIP, but I'm worried that five years down the road, the teleco infrastructure will be worse off. Economics are slowly encouraging people to move to an ad-hoc network which was not originally designed to do what we're asking it to do... handing telephone calls. This same network is polluted with worms and viruses. Do you think customers want to lose their dialtone because some asshat decides to release a Windows exploit?
But then you could use the GSM signal as backup! Right. Now what about the people living in rural areas? They count just as much as the rest of the country.
I could go deeper, but I'll stop unless someone encourages me to add more.
Beyond 3G (Score:2, Informative)
This phone got it seriously backwards (Score:3, Interesting)
No, I want a cell phone that can seemlessly switch my iBook's internet access between WiFi and cell networks when it sees that WiFi is not available. Just consider which situation is more common and design products accordingly.
Re:This phone got it seriously backwards (Score:2)
Seen something similar before... (Score:2, Insightful)
My GSM provider offers a virtual "home zone" 1km in diameter around my house, so I have cheap phone calls even using GSM. Plus, I have an additional local p
TapRoot Systems (Score:4, Interesting)
TapRoot Systems [taprootsystems.com] has been working on 802.11b capable phones for some time now.
I live in a rural university town which happens to have a large number of open hotspots in cafes, restaurants, and offices. It also happens to have terrible cell coverage. I'll be first in line for a WiFi capable phone.
How about this (Score:2)
Wouldn't that be more useful, and require essentially the same hardware as this?
And yes, I know you can get a phone with a bluetooth adapter, but unfortunately most laptops now come with 802.11b but not bluetooth.
It's being done (Score:2, Interesting)
Personally, I think it'd be cool just to have a cell phone that could use my own WiFi at home and be cellular when I'm out in the rest of the world.
That's exactly what Kineto's technology is designed to do. Or, for business accounts, it would use your business' WiFi when workers are in the office.
Hopefully this wo
YES!!! (Score:2)
Wi Fi Office Phones (Score:2)
I don't know the real world benefit of Wi-Fi phones for consumers. I live in a reletively small town, 250,000 people, and Wi-Fi networks aren't as well blanketted as they would be in a town of a
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Toy (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Toy (Score:2)
Funny, I seem to have no problems, assuming that the AP's are setup to be open to everybody. That is, no WEP or MAC filtering, and SSID broadcast enabled. Works great.
Just set your card's SSID to "any" and roam away.
Re:Toy (Score:2)
If the phone had two interfaces it could move from one network to another by not "letting go" of the first network until a connection is properly established with the second network.