Went to my local Vodafone store to pick up the new Huawei E220 HSDPA USB modem, which with a 49 Euro monthly contract gives you 1GB of transfer at 1Mbps maximum, and free mobile to fixed landline calls - pretty good deal if you ask me. For 59 Euro you get 5GB of transfer, at the full 3.8Mbps that HSDPA offers. These are theoretical rates, as they will depend on a number of factors, such as how many people are also using the same cell, your coverage, and the quality of the link.
We can argue all we want about how convenient WiFi is, being omnipresent et al,
but in reality, it’s rather hard to get connected while on the road. Let’s
examine the following scenarios, and you tell me the chances of getting
connected over WiFi:
·
Riding
the train or bus home.
·
Getting
a lift from a friend in his/her car.
·
Opening
your laptop at a random location (cafeteria, bar, etc. that you haven’t before
scouted for open WiFi).
·
On
a plane, waiting for the next free takeoff slot that you hope the pilot won’t
miss because he was checking the fatness of his wallet.
Let’s
be honest - free open WiFi is great once you have identified the locations
where you can get connected, such as a friend’s house or the local coffee shop.
Other solid commercial alternatives make it easier to find WiFi, as they tend
to be present at well-known locations. Walk into any Starbucks or hotel, and
you’re bound to find at least for-pay wireless.
For me, in the 30 minutes to 1 hour, it takes to get home on the train or bus,
being able to get connected is great. The convenience of simply opening the Mac
and getting online beats the guesswork of WiFi. I tried getting the Mac working
with my Nokia N93 over Bluetooth, but it was just too unstable - one day it
worked, the next simply refused to even connect. A more in-depth review of the
device is coming, once I get a chance to roam about with it for a while.
So far,
installation on the Mac was pretty straightforward, download the setup package
from Vodafone’s site (they don’t tell you this in the manual), which then
enables the modem as a networking device. If you don’t follow this step, it can
get recognized as a storage device, which is not particularly useful for a
modem. The one thing I don’t understand is why it comes with a miniUSB cable
that ends in two USB connectors, my guess is it’s power-related (some USB ports
don’t provide the full 500mA they are supposed to provide).
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