I’m in a hotel — the Radisson at Fisherman’s Wharf — in San Francisco at the moment. On the web, when I booked it, it said ‘complimentary WiFi’.
The internet is, indeed, complimentary. It’s a good signal too.
But it’s shit-slow. Ultra shit slow. 10k/second throughput. I get a better signal from my Vodafone USB mobile broadband modem, but I am trying not to use it because there’s a hefty bill, I’m sure, waiting for me.
I’m living in the now generation. That is, I don’t bother downloading any email. I have it all stored on Google Apps. It doesn’t matter what computer I use to access it.
I do need to have a fairly decent internet connection in order for Google Mail to be usable though. I’ve used Google Mail on a bluetooth GPRS connection before and it is slow but usable. On this WiFi connection it’s appalling.
I thought of phoning the ‘StayOnline’ (”high speed internet access”?) support line to complain. What’s the point though?
I’m getting to the point that with my business, I need to have ultra fast internet. Not hamster-speed.
Whaddya do? When you’re on the road? I can’t be arsing about with the hotel internet connection lottery.
In the Las Vegas Planet Hollywood hotel, where I stayed for CTIA, I was getting between 1 and 2 megabytes per second download speed.
Fooking annoying.
Just like the hotel’s star rating, it’s internet connection should be rated too.
With the market saying 'no' to Nokia's Ovi Store, what do you think can be done to change this?
