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Old 07-20-2009, 03:57 PM
Bassplus
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Default Re: Mobile Internet

On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 07:17:13 -0700 (PDT), Furry Fred
<furrysnews@googlemail.com> wrote:

>On Jun 5, 2:31*pm, RCC <richard@mapson_cowling1.demon.co.uk> wrote:
>> I bought the Voda dongle - it works fine. *There is a requirement touse
>> it periodically (I think once every 120 days). *My main requirement is
>> to collect e-mails and do very basic web searches, look at train times,
>> stuff like that, on the few days I am away from home. *E-mail collection
>> is very cheap - the balance goes down by about 10p every time I use it.
>> I still have over £14 left so GOK how Vodafone will make much money out
>> of me. *I guess if my home office broadband goes down I will use it as a
>> backup, again mainly for e-mail so might spend a bit then.
>>
>> I collect from a number of POP 3 addresses using Thunderbird,and an
>> associate company's Outlook web mail system. *It connects via 3G when it
>> can and GPRS when it can't. *Speed has not been an issue - but I am not
>> trying to download large files apart from the odd excel spreadsheet, and
>> am quite happy to sip my coffee whilst it gets on with things.
>>
>> They are so cheap now - less than half a tank of petrol - and if I
>> travelled *a lot I would be tempted to have 2 or 3 from different
>> networks and use whichever is best on the day. *With some hotels
>> charging £15 a night for wireless access in London, it's a no brainer.
>> Beats having to eat in Macdonalds for their free wifi too.
>>
>> It has a Micro SD card slot, so can use it as a memory stick as well.
>> One less thing to carry.
>>
>> I am a very happy customer.
>>
>> In message <78s5amF1n0lo...@mid.individual.net>, Roger Mills
>> <watt.ty...@googlemail.com> writes
>>
>>
>>
>> >In an earlier contribution to this discussion,
>> >Jim Kewley <JKew...@noanswer.com> *wrote:

>>
>> >> Dunno how many here are internet nerds, like me. *In my attempts to
>> >> maintain a web connection on our travels with the van, I bought a 3
>> >> mobile PAYG dongle internet connection thingy. *Big mistake.

>>
>> >> 3 mobile appears to offer the cheapest way of getting on the web
>> >> whilst travelling, consequently I bought one of their dongles. Sadly
>> >> 3 mobile merely serves to emphasise the truth of ' you get what you
>> >> pay for '. Despite the apparent value in it's bandwidth offering the
>> >> truth is most of the time the connection is so slow and unreliable,
>> >> with frequent dropped lines, that anybody would be hard pressed to
>> >> take advantage of the bandwidth available.

>>
>> >> Finally, after my umpteenth dropped/slow connection, I gave up with3
>> >> and decided to try an O2 version of a similar PAYG dongle set up. *O2
>> >> is slightly more expensive than 3 but so far I've found it's
>> >> connections to be consistently far better and so much more reliable
>> >> than 3 mobile.
>> >> Sent from the Caravan Club, Wirral Country Park site, via my O2 PAYG
>> >> connection. *O2 is retaining a steady 3G connection at 3.6 gigs,
>> >> checking the 3 mobile dongle it seems to be struggling to find a GPRS
>> >> connection at 56 mbs.

>>
>> >> HTH for anybody interested.

>>
>> >I too bought a '3' dongle, and have been very disappointed with its
>> >performance. I don't think I've *ever* achieved download speeds in excess of
>> >1Mbps, and it's often not much better than dial-up speeds. In a recent
>> >caravan trip to the New Forest I couldn't make the bl**dy thing work at at,
>> >despite having had some sort of connection on the same site a few weeks
>> >earlier - and despite hoisting the dongle high up outside the caravanon the
>> >end of a USB extension lead.

>>
>> >The version I bought came bundled with 12G of usage - which expires after 12
>> >months - and further top ups cost £10 for 1G or 1 month - whicheveroccurs
>> >first. [There's no way I'm going to use 12G in 12 months because my use is
>> >only occasional, when away from home - but it was a reasonably good deal at
>> >the time].

>>
>> >One of the problems with the '3' setup (apart from it not working!) is that
>> >it's time limited. So, for example, if you want to use it on a short caravan
>> >trip, you have to buy a month's worth, and if you go on another trip (say) 6
>> >weeks later, you have to buy another month's worth even if you've only used
>> >a fraction of the previous month's bandwidth.

>>
>> >I see that Vodaphone are now offering a PAYG BB dongle for £39 - including a
>> >bundled 1G of usage. AIUI - unlike the equivalent '3' offereng - this
>> >doesn't time out, so you don't have to top it up until you actually run out
>> >of bandwidth. Top-ups appear to cost £15 per 1G (as opposed to 3's £10) but,
>> >if they don't expire after one month, may represent better value for
>> >occasional users.

>>
>> >When my year's worth of '3' expires, I shall be very tempted to ditch'3'
>> >and try Vodaphone instead - particularly if user reports in the meantime are
>> >favourable.

>>
>> >Anyone got any experience of Vodaphone mobile broadband?

>>
>> >[I'm cross-posting this to uk.telecom.broadband and uk.telecom.mobile
>> >because I think it's of wider interest than just the caravanning fraternity]

>>
>> --
>> Richard C

>
>I used the Camping and Caravanning Club's WiFi system when away
>recently.
>
>Expensive - £25 for a week but varied very much from site to site.
>
>CCC Dartford - reasonable speed, CCC Veryan (in the same week) total
>KRAP!
>
>CCC Verwood - worked long enough to take my money and then packed up
>and then I used up the balance at CCC Blackmore - perfect!
>
>You just can't win!


Stick with the Vodaphone dongle at least if it doesn't work you only
lose pennies.



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