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20th June 2007, 05:49 PM
#1
Interesting things about migrating from Bigpond EVDO to Next G Broadband.
For EVDO users who are going to be moving to next G soon ( To speed things up, contact service and request it) here are some tips gained by experience -
- The Next G modem will not run on 5v, it requires the 6v from the plug pack ( For the interested, your pc has 5v and 12v DC power outlets to spare. You know them better as the 4 strand red (5v)-black-yellow(12v)-black HDD molex connectors)
- The packers of the modem either place the sim card upside down or push it in too far so it jumps out of it's receptacle. When trying to connect, it will come up with an error message 'no sim card'. To rectify this, use a T6 torx, undo the 4 small screws in each corner, carefully prise off both blue sides, and this is what you see
(Mind you I did ring tech service and have proof that they let me do it - but there are no security seals and it's not complicated)

The sim card is in the bottom left corner - and has a black plastic carrier to hold it in the slot. You can just see the BIG of bigpond in the hole, which means it's the correct side up.
- Note your settings for EVDO - as you'll want to uninstall the connection manager for it before installing the next g version.
- The next G modem does not like long USB cords: If the USB cord is too long, you might get a 'USB device not recognized'.
And, last but not least, to top my eventful day, the registration computer for next g modems has died and is being rebuilt as of 19 June. If, in the unlikely event you get ' a technical fault has occurred.....' page, that may mean that Telstra's end isn't working.
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4th July 2007, 03:53 PM
#2
And this, advances our online experience, in what way did they say?
Hm, I think I will stick with my wireless connection from SA provider Internode,
and the Canopy masthead unit by Agile Communications.
I plug it in, push the button and it works. Just like that.
A leisurely 512K feed, 8Gb/mnth limit shaped, and a download mirror service for updates etc, that is unmetered, and not included in the download limit.
I gave Telstra up as a bad joke, when I threw my last Telstra prepaid phone, in the bore tank on top of the hill in frustration. Standing on top of the highest point on the farm, I could see with my naked eye, 3 comms towwers around me, but do you think I could get a Telstra signal? SPLASH. Stupid phone.
Shorty.
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11th September 2007, 02:13 PM
#3
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