If you want to connect to the internet using your iPhone you will have to pay an additional fee usually. This connection is called "Tethering". With Optus I think it costs an additional $10.00 per month.
Phone on NextG with a data plan.
Here are the deals (prices per month):
My ADSL2+ costs me $39.95 for 12Gb (6GB peak and 6GB after midnight). I usually use around 3GB.
I can get an iPhone4 with 6GB and $400 of calls for $78.50
Question: Do I then really need my ADSL2+ at $39.95?
Presumably I can connect my computer to the internet via the phone... Bluetooth?
If I dump myADSL2+
iPhone4 with 6GB = $78.50 - 39.95 = $38.55
For $38.55 that's less than what ADSL2+ costs me and I get an iPhone4 with $400 worth of calls and 6GB of data.
Using one of those check your speed sites I get:
Your line speed is 3.56 Mbps
Your download speed is 445 KB/s
Actually, I checked this with several sites and all gave around 3.6Mbps.
If you got this far
This is the big question:
Does anyone run a computer via a phone on NextG?
If so, what data speed do you get?
All comments are welcome.
If I can get close to 3.6Mbps then I could dump the copper connection?
Mike
If you want to connect to the internet using your iPhone you will have to pay an additional fee usually. This connection is called "Tethering". With Optus I think it costs an additional $10.00 per month.
Warren
Currently Landroverless - Still interested
Formerly: 2003 D2a Update TD5 Auto. Platinum edition. ARB Bar, 36" LED light bar, cargo barrier, dual batteries.
Linked article says tethering is okay.
Nope, no way can I make this work for me.
Even with the premium for out of metro adsl2+ it'd still cost too much.
Damn.
Nowhere near as fast...
And works the phone (any phone) harder and hotter... Will eventually reduce life of unit.
I'm with vodafone and no extra for tethering. I have iPad on telstra and speed is ok but I wouldn't like either to be my main connection. Slower and flakier. Also remember that they count the data in both directions on 3G and only downloads on copper. Tethering is not that reliable but better than no connection at all in my opinion. Mike
as i move around a lot and most of my connections are out of town away from a tower the speeds vary from 37 kbs to 180 kbsthats nextg
Hi Mike,
I happen to work for Telstra in the wireless group so here's my recommendation:
Yes, the iPhone 4 device is capable of being used as a tethered modem and deliver download throughput in excess of 3.6 Mbps. The average throughput for file transfers in a test environment is slighlty less than this in a test lab. Peak transfer speeds are well above 3.6 Mpbs.
Out in the real world of course actual transfer speeds depend on your distance from surrounding base stations and the number of other users sharing those base stations using wireless data at the time.
So before you ditch your ADSL and commite to an iPhone, see if you can get a friend to test the actual NextG data speeds in the areas where you want to use the iPhone (at home, down the coffee shop, work etc) during a few different times of the day. This doesn't neccessarily have to be with an iPhone (but would be better). Any recent NextG device connected to a laptop doing a file download will give you a very good indication on how it will perform. For the test, do a file transfer from a known fast site which you normally use on your ADSL service, or used Speedtest.net (there's also an iPhone app of the same).
Hope this helps.
Cheers
Simon
2003 D2a TD5, ACE, SLS, Vienna Green.
G'day Simon ... or anyone else in the know
Along simillar lines, but slightly different tack.
I want to hook up our laptop to the net via Next G. But only for occasional use when out and about. No need for the phone bit, merely an internet connection. What's my best option? Occasional use then re-charge when required seems to be the way to go, but it's bloody expensive.
Any alternatives ??
| Search AULRO.com ONLY! |
Search All the Web! |
|---|
|
|
|
Bookmarks