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WiFi Hotspots to Cost Wireless Carriers $12B 222
j.e. writes "Commercial WiFi hotspots and open WiFi networks will take about $12 billion out of wireless carrier revenue pie, says Starategy Analytics. With high prices of mobile data services from wireless carriers, the users are more prone to use a cheap WiFi connection, if one is available."
In other news (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In other news (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Re:In other news (Score:4, Insightful)
That they dont' tell you also, is that data used to be part of my Sprint Plan. Someone they removed it and now want to charge for data; I used 14.4 on Amtrack with my laptop to sync email in 2000; now they have fast speed and they want much more $$$.
Any serious business user is going to buy a business grade service. Meaning they are using it to make $$$ or the inverse, without it they loss sales, jobs, etc. Everything one else doesn't have a real need and yes, they are NOT going to pay huge sums for it.
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Next, they'll try and make us pay to watch American television.
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Re:In other news (Score:5, Funny)
Obviously said by someone who hasn't met my girlfriend...
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Re:In other news (Score:2)
but if you leave your wireless access point open, then (eventually) YOUR internet costs will be raised by your internet provider.
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Until then, while the *OSes* may be largely interchangeable, the software is not, and no-one in their right minds uses an OS for the sake of using the OS.
Re:In other news (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:In other news (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Re:In other news (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:In other news (Score:2)
Everything is a "loss" for someone. Its a gain to others too. That's life. Its time they got used to it. I sure don't hear the wifi equipment people complaining about their huge sales.
If you listen closely you can still hear the horse and buggy people complain abou this new fan
Perhaps it should be rephrased... (Score:2)
Having used Cingular's EDGE plan. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Having used Cingular's EDGE plan. (Score:2)
Re:Having used Cingular's EDGE plan. (Score:2)
Maybe Singular did and Sprint did it too, but..... (Score:2)
Re:Having used Cingular's EDGE plan. (Score:2, Informative)
The good news is that we are seeing much reduced latency with 3G, down to about 200ms. OK, that is still not wonderful compared to a good broadband connection, but is a big improve
Statistics Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Statistics Bullshit (Score:3, Informative)
Exactly what I was thinking. When I read the headline I was imaginging that cellular data use was way more popular than I imagined and that WiFi hotspots are eating into that side of the business.
Just because the wireless carriers projected ridiculous revenue from their own WiFi hotspots that they won't make doesn't mean the carriers are "losing" anything since they never had the money in the first place.
I have a suggestion for the wireless carriers to "regain" some of the money they never had to begin
What about me? (Score:5, Funny)
I've already lost trillions on my canned-air venture this year alone. I figured that, as vital as breathing air is, people would be willing to pay my reasonable rate of $200 per cubic foot.
Apparently there's a free alternative that people are taking advantage of, driving my company out of business. How can I undersell free? Better label those free-breathers out there as "air pirates" and start a "get the facts" campaign about the total-cost-of-breathing.
Re:What about me? (Score:5, Funny)
= 0.017657 cu. ft. / breath
= $3.5314 / breath
= $42.4 / person
= $22,273,246 person / year
= $1.56 * 10^17 / planet / year
Looks like you lost about 156 quadrillion dollars!
Re:What about me? (Score:2)
Compressed air. It's the new thing I tell you.
Ewen
Un-American air-commies!!! (Score:2)
Re:Statistics Bullshit (Score:2)
An analogy (Score:5, Insightful)
"With all these free movies on TV people won't go to the movies."
Having said that, cellphone service is nowhere near what it should be in terms of reliability and quality. How many of the main carriers allow you to do what you want with your phone (e.g. bluetooth restrictions in many phones) and your service (forward messages & voicemail via email, etc)?
Damien
Re:An analogy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:An analogy (Score:2)
Re:An analogy (Score:2)
But I did learn that if you make a big enough stink in a crowded store in a mall, they actually start to work with you...
Re:An analogy (Score:2)
But what incentive would the phone makers have to build a phone with abilities only to cripple them? From their perspective, the more a phone does, the better it sells. I do believe that it is them who cripple the phones, but only because the carriers ask them to.
Re:An analogy (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, things were still mostly analog, with a few early adopters having digital, but for roaming your analog service was virtually seamless, especially along major interstates.
I recently drove west along I-10 with a digital phone, and spent literally hours where I could not get a call out. Yes it was in some of the "mountain" areas, but it was an area that used to have analog coverage that worked (because I drove it and know).
It really infuriates me what they've done. I spent several years building cellular (analog) networks, even in some mountain areas. I know the service is possible in these areas, but since the "new and improved" digital phones include the ability to restrict what services the phones may roam on (and in some cases, the newer phones won't even do analog), we've gone BACKWARDS. It's pathetic!
Re:An analogy (Score:2)
The analog networks are still there, and even expanding in some areas of the west where digital just doesn't have the range to be feasible.
Just so you know.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Just so you know.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Just so you know.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Just so you know.. (Score:2)
Re:Just so you know.. (Score:3, Informative)
> > > > And 33.23456% are made up right there on the spot.
> > > And 74.3572% are made up on the spot
> >
> I'm not sure your figure is precisely correct.
Boo Hoo (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Boo Hoo (Score:2)
To all the wireless companies out there: Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha. Suck it.
Making up numbers is fun! (Score:4, Funny)
Reading
Re:Making up numbers is fun! (Score:2)
Don't think so (Score:4, Interesting)
WiFi Hotspots to Cost Wireless Carriers $12B (Score:5, Funny)
They shouldn't have bought all those hotspots if they're going to complain about the price! It's amazing how stupid some people can be.
This is step 1 (Score:5, Insightful)
Hey, it worked for the RIAA!!!
Moderate Insightful (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Moderate Insightful (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Moderate Insightful (Score:2)
Re:Moderate Insightful (Score:2, Insightful)
The wireless companies may or may not be charging too much--I couldn't guess at what the overhead is to start up the network. But the real problem is that we have been taught a psychology that companies have any rights at all. If a company does not provide utility, then it should fail in the market. I've ma
Re:Moderate Insightful (Score:2)
Keep in mind that "a matter of time" can refer to any point between right now and the heat death of the universe...
The sky is not falling.
I Interviewed the FBI (Score:2)
Re:I Interviewed the FBI (Score:2)
I should probably get an update and post it.
Are you nuts? Let sleeping lions lie. Even if the agent you talk to has no 'political' aspirations, even if his boss doesn't either, all it takes is for the right idiot to get the wrong idea and we're off on a new crusade agaisnt freedom.
Don't tempt fate. Really.
Re:Moderate Insightful (Score:2)
Re:This is step 1 (Score:2)
Re:This is step 1 (Score:2)
I thought the Airwaves were a Public Trust? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I thought the Airwaves were a Public Trust? (Score:2)
Hobby
Hobbier
Hobbiest!
wireless overpriced (Score:5, Insightful)
Poster forgot some words, it should read:
With the artificially inflated exorbitantly high prices of mobile data services from wireless carriers, the users are more prone to use a cheap WiFi connection, if one is available.
No sympathy for wireless carriers here, now they get to suffer for their own bad pricing plans...
Re:wireless overpriced (Score:2)
Re:wireless overpriced (Score:4, Informative)
They wanted three cents per kilobtye.
That's $30 a Meg - are those motherfuckers crazy?
Download one really good porn avi or mpg and you are talking about $20,000. For $20,000 you should have dozens of real live women delivered to wherever you happen to be using your cell phone, lubed up and ready for sex.
headline should read... (Score:5, Insightful)
Note: you can't lose what you don't yet have.
Interesting fact: you are not entitled to a profit. If your business model sucks, or if your product is too costly, it will fail. See also: airphones. Remember them? All gone now, because using cell phones (which everyone already has) before and after the flight is good enough.
In other news (Score:2, Funny)
*vroom* (Score:5, Funny)
WARDRIVING FOR ALL (Score:2)
Outside the US (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Outside the US (Score:2)
Re:Outside the US (Score:2)
Re:Outside the US (Score:2)
Why buy when you can WiFi? (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides it doesn't COST you $12B when you haven't spent $12B. duh!
I know. run-on. bad punctuation, but hey, you didn't pay to read this!
Re:Why buy when you can WiFi? (Score:2)
Well look at that. (Score:2)
Charge too much for something, and people will find another way to get it.
I wonder if there are any other businesses that could learn that lesson out there right now?
When in Roam (Score:2)
Step 2: legislate.... (Score:2)
Re:Step 2: legislate.... (Score:2)
Hotspot is what it is: HOT SPOT (Score:2)
Imagine a cluster-fuck of freeloaders making nearly dirtcheap phone calls from restaurants, sidewalk cafes, coffeehouses anywhere in the world?
Those businesses are sure gonna be making mucho-dinero on the WiFi side (not to mention their regular business as well.)
A great way to simulate the local economy as well. We all know we need more of that, but the cellphone infrastructure-oriented industry vows not to see this happened.
That WiFi-VoIp shall flourish, u
Maybe Not (Score:2)
This will all come together when we have UMA phones.
If only UMA can come together, see here [slashdot.org]
SteveM
Re:Maybe Not (Score:2)
Misleading title (Score:5, Insightful)
Not making as much revenue as predicted is not a "cost".
How much will the WiFi hotspots make? (Score:2)
Did I mention that I'm now in the Silicon Valley? Definately not BFE. I have an account with T-Mobile because I know that I'm very likely to find a hotspot when I need one. If there were more free hotspots, I might not really need such a service. Sad
Re:How much will the WiFi hotspots make? (Score:2)
They have this backwards. (Score:3, Insightful)
In other news... (Score:2)
WIFI from the bottom up? (Score:3, Interesting)
How hard would a standard be, which would make it possible to extend the official network of the ISP to a users access point, maybe with a VLAN solution. This way if I open up my laptop and there is an access point available of Joe User, I can only hook up to it by propperly logging in to the ISP's network or use the airport/credit card system. This will require many roaming agreements etc, but it would bring security and convenience at the same time. It should be done in such a way that the person opening up his network in this way can throttle the speed of the guest users and/or the times they can access. So I would like to see a rule like "Guests can only connect when I am not connecting" or "Guests only get 1mbit"
Aw jeez, it's the RIAA all over again (Score:5, Insightful)
I wish wireless carriers and others would grow up and quit whining when people figure out that their products and services can be had for free.
These are just market forces in action... (Score:2, Insightful)
Take the T-Mobile hotspot, for example. If you plan on using it a lot (and that's a lot of time spent at Starbucks), you can get away with spending a mere $29.99 a month. If you're not so sure, the price j
The obvious answer... (Score:2)
"WiFi Hotspots to Save Wireless Users $12B" (Score:3, Insightful)
It's all a matter of perspective.
The casino gaming industry talks about its "earnings", not "winnings", or heaven forbid, its customers' "losses".
The next story down is more interesting (Score:2)
To Find These Hotspots (Score:2, Informative)
Hooray for Wi-Fi - Bite me, Verizon! (Score:2)
Go figure. The needs of people are not being met by the current telco carriers. This is good for us as geeks.
We can kinda see a similar pattern, in the way that the diversity of the technologies available are surpassing the market's ability to keep-up -- and unintended uses start to become a factor in these big market statistics. Old modems were like this at the time of 14.4Kbps and USR's 16.8Kbps HST protocols, as attempts to jam more bits through the same pipe. Then there became dig
Rain Slashes Projected Bottled Water Revenues! (Score:2)
It's not even that WiFi is cheap... (Score:2)
Through some quirk of pricing, the T-Mobile T-Zones plan is not too expensive (a few $) and I can use my bluetooth phone to bring the network to my laptop, seemingly with no extra fees.
If I want to add "web browsing" capability to the phone itself - why that is around $15-$20 a month more!!
In short they are missing hardly any
Misleading Title (Score:5, Informative)
It's the same logic the RIAA and MPAA use, and it's fallacious.
It's not their money. It's not being taken from them. It's not costing them shit. It's just diverting money they think should be theirs to other, more worthwhile. uses. But there's no real evidence that it ever would have been spent on what they have to sell, rather than saved, or spent on any other thing in the world that can be bought.
These people's sense of entitlement to what they haven't earned is sickening. Bunch of corporate welfare scroungers. Next they'll go whining for the government to seize the money for them.
Re:WIMAX (Score:3, Interesting)
I doubt we'll ever see many free, open WIMAX hotspots. Open WiFi hotspots only really work because the limited range effectively limits the number of people that can leach any such connection to a handful.
Re:WIMAX (Score:2)
Re:Boo hoo! (Score:3, Informative)
Obviously completely incorrect because people will use it A LOT at the lower price, and almost NOT AT ALL at the higher price. Smells like RIAA and MPAA maths to me.