Originally Posted by DMSFCA
I have the Cingular 860 Aircard by Sierra, picked it up about three weeks ago, haven't seen another one around.
I live in San Francisco, which is covered by the new service. Here are my thoughts so far:
- When you do get a 3G connection, it is great, but you don't get the service everywhere, even in SF. I get it in the office fine, but at home I only connect with Edge (~150k).
- You get about 1000-1100 down, but only about 60k upstream. I tried to use it with Cisco IP Communicator for my office VoIP and the connection was awful and spotty.
- It doesn't give instant gratification. You fire up your computer (I use it on a Thinkpad X31), plug in the card and fire up the Cingular Communications Manager and it takes a good _4_ minutes before you are ready to connect. You can't just whip open your laptop from hibernate and then decide to connect to work really quick and exchange email. The 4 minute wait is painful and is mentioned in the help file that this can often be the case. I've never had it take less than about 3 minutes before it says "ready to connect" even in prime 3G territory with a really strong full-bar signal. I'm not sure what it is doing during this time, but it is kind of like when you turn on your cell phone and it takes a bit to find a carrier/signal, except it takes a looong time.
- It isn't super-cheap, it is like $70/mo for unlimited use. Cheaper than the old Ricochet service, if anyone remembers using that one....?
- One of our guys takes a long train into work in Boston where there is coverage, so I picked it up to play with it to see if it would be something he would want. If he rolls into a tunnel and loses connection, he may be stuck waiting for another 4 minutes before he can connect again - ugh.
I've used the Edge service for about a year now with a Nokia 6230 under AT&T/Cingular and while not fast, beats dialup and was always pretty reliable. This one is much faster, but the long start-up time is really painful on the laptop, maybe if they integrated it into a cell phone or something it might be a little better?
I've had it a couple of weeks now, those were my thoughts so far. Anyone else have any opinions of it?
--Doug
The four minute connection wait you mention is odd... mine finds the APN in no time (I assume that's what the wait is for, the card finds the signal and then attaches to the APN) and lights up the "ready to connect" button. I don't think I ever waited more than 10 seconds. Perhaps it's a usage issue? I doubt many folks were using UMTS in Houston on Christmas Eve near the Galleria.