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Archive for the ‘WiFi’ Category

The Cloud’s stupid, stupid policy on device MAC addresses

The Cloud is a UK network of WiFi hotspots.

They do an unlimited subscription for £9.99 per month. That means you can go to any of their hotspots (think train stations, pubs, hotels) and use their service. If you just want your Nokia N95 (for example) to access the service, then it’s £6.99 a month for unlimited usage. (But you can’t use this connection with your laptop or any other device).

You can, I think, still buy hourly access from The Cloud’s portal if you want — but the most sensible way to access their service is via an unlimited subscription.

I’ve had a subscription for a long time — maybe a year or so — and, generally speaking, they’re pretty reliable. I have put them through their paces now and again. For example, when I was in Hartlepool recently, not a single one of their hotspots worked. However they’ve been a lifesaver (or business-saver) when I’ve needed internet access urgently.

I was copied in on an email from an SMS Text News reader this evening who is APOPLECTIC with annoyance. He’s just got himself a new iPhone and naturally, wants to use the device in some The Cloud hotspots. He can. He’s got an unlimited subscription. The only arse? He needs to manually log on with this username and password every time he visits a hotspot.

BUT, The Cloud offer a MAC-address registration option. That is, you can automatically register your Nokia N95, iPhone, iPod, PSP (etc) with The Cloud, so that whenever you hit a The Cloud hotspot, you’ll get internet access. You don’t need to first load up the device browser and login. You do this by registering the device’s unique MAC address with The Cloud thus:

Picture 18

All is ok, so far.

However, the reader is going nuts — justifiably — because he subscribes to the unlimited service plan.

He got a note from The Cloud customer service this evening explaining that if he’d like his iPhone (or any other device) to be automatically switched on to The Cloud, he needs to buy another ‘Cloud unlimited’ or ‘Cloud music’ subscription.

‘Why?’ He asks.

It’s ridiculous. Why do Unlimited £9.99/month customers not get the option to add, say, 4 device MAC addresses as well as use the standard laptop login service?

Does anyone else subscribe to The Cloud? How do you rate your experience?

o2 UK iPhone users and free wifi from The Cloud…

Just got this in from SMS Text News reader, Dan:

Well, I don’t think I’ve seen it mentioned anywhere else but I logged on to a cloud hotspot with my [unlocked] iPhone yesterday and it showed an O2 branded splash screen that required me to enter an O2 phone number and, presumably, receive an SMS with a verification code to avoid unlocked iPhones getting the free wifi without an O2 contract.

Theoretically speaking, Dan, you could get an o2 pay-as-you-go sim card and do that? Then you’d get free wifi for your unlocked iPhone? I wonder if the system actually verifies if you *bought* an iPhone, or if you’re just an o2 customer?

Da da da de da.. I’m Wi-fi’ing it

Link: McDonald’s offers free wi-fi Internet service in 1,200 U.K. outlets - MarketWatch

Next time you’re in McDonalds it might not be just the choice of food that’ll save the pounds, following the announcement that they’re planning to roll-out free wi-fi by the end of the year.

The fast food chain has struck a deal with hotspot provider The Cloud to bring free wireless internet access to their 1200 UK outlets by the end of the year. They’ve already got a deal with BT Openzone for paid access, which will continue for the foreseeable future.

Wi-Fi in your Avis rental car

Link: Avis to offer wireless Internet gear

This is an interesting one. Car hire company Avis are launching a Wi-Fi service that’ll work in your rented car, hotel room, or by the sounds of it pretty much anywhere you go. It’s US-only at the moment and is only available from a select number of locations, but it sounds like a nice idea for a service.

The new Avis Connect service, priced at $10.95 per day, can transmit a Wi-Fi signal to multiple laptops and other mobile devices at the same time.

The service is provided with a portable device developed by Autonet Mobile that gets its Internet connection from a cell phone network. The company declined to disclose which one, though the cellular technology involved suggests that it is being provided by either Verizon Wireless or Sprint Nextel Corp.

Given a choice between fiddling with mobile data and just firing up my laptop and finding the access point, I know what I’d rather do. Wonder if there’s any plans to launch a similar service in the UK?

Internet on the train. I just love it!

I am thoroughly enjoying the GNER on-board Wi-Fi service. I find it absolutely invaluable.

I’m still very much like a previously very cold caveman having just been given a box of lighters.

I’m tickled pink that the technology actually works. High speed internet. On a train doing 100 miles per hour. That’s pretty shit hot.

Wonder what voip is like on such a service? I’ll bring my headphones another time and try it out.

Swisscom’s shite deal with Premier Travel Inn

Picture 18Back in Hartlepool this evening and this time I’m checking out the Premier Travel Inn at the Marina. Welcome to the centrally managed corporate bosom — I like the fact that everywhere you look here, it’s corporate. Like a McDonalds style hotel. Whatever your viewpoint of Premier, at least there’s a consistent service level.

The only arse is the WiFi, cunningly provided by Swisscom, who, it appears, are doing their best to extort as much cash as possible out of a dying market. Although Hartlepool’s a possible exception, I make my hotel purchasing decisions based on whether they offer ‘free’ WiFi.

I am not feeling much love from the Premier Travel Inn people because of their stupid decision to do a deal with Swisscom.

I’ve got a BT Openworld account and a Cloud account — but, of course, Swisscom don’t have any peering arrangements with them, so you’re forced to pay the shite fees if you want internet access.

Well screw you Mr & Mrs Swisscom, next time I will use T-Mobile or Vodafone. Or, actually, I probably won’t come back to the Premier Travel Inn. I’ll try somewhere else.

The prices?

£3.00 buys you 30 minutes.

£5.00 buys you 120 minutes. And so on. The usual shite.

What a piss poor service offering.

The speed’s fine. I’m just not happy with the cost. Still, paid it, did my work, next. Won’t do it again.

Norwich, UK, offers free WiFi across the city

Got this in via Jon Snow’s Channel4 Snowmail newsletter.

Wireless in Norwich
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Finally, good old Norwich. And I am not using the acronym pasted on the back of so many Valentine cards this week, I am talking about the East Anglian town. They have decided to offer free Wifi across the whole city.

Needless to say the mass of multinationals who like charging between £10 and £30 a month are up in arms. Ben Cohen is there logging on chilling out and doing it all for free.

See you at seven

Jon

I bet the multinationals are absolutely outraged! ;-)

I haven’t managed to find any other news sources for this — when I do, I’ll post them. Very, very cool.

Truphone launches N80 internet edition

Link: Truphone press office

Truphone provisions the Nokia N80 Internet Edition’s native VoIP application to use Truphone’s VoIP service. Truphone is available for free, either ‘over the air’ or via download from the Truphone website, www.truphone.com.

There’s a lot happening at Truphone Towers this week — they’ve just announced support for the N80. I know quite a lot of people who’ve been waiting for this!

Visit www.truphone.com for more details.

Truphone now available via The Cloud’s 7,500 UK wifi hotspots

Link: Truphone press office

From today, owners of the latest generation of Wi-Fi-equipped mobile phones can make ultra-low cost calls from any of The Cloud’s 7,500 public Wi-Fi hotspots in the UK.

Truphone is free software that enables Wi-Fi-equipped Nokia mobile phones to make internet-rate phone calls (VoIP calls) over Wi-Fi connections. When the phone is not in Wi-Fi range it reverts to being a normal mobile phone, so people need only one phone.

An agreement between Truphone and The Cloud means a Truphone-enabled mobile phone can now make internet-rate calls whenever it’s in range of one of The Cloud’s hotspots, ensuring its owner is making the cheapest call possible. No passwords or credit card details are required.
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Ah well that rocks, big time. Very cool indeed.

World Economic Forum rates Truphone as Technology Pioneer 2007

truphone logo

Link: Truphone press office: Truphone selected by the World Economic Forum as Technology Pioneer 2007

Truphone has been chosen by the World Economic Forum as one of 47 Technology Pioneers for 2007, of which six are from the UK.

The World Economic Forum’s Technology Pioneers are companies that have been identified as “developing and applying highly transformational and innovative technologies in the areas of energy, biotechnology & health, and information technology.”

This year’s companies were selected not only because of their cutting-edge work, but also because their work has potential long-term impact on business and society. Previous Technology Pioneers include Autonomy, Cambridge Silicon Radio, Encore Software, Google, Millennium Pharmaceuticals and Napster.

Congratulations to the team at Truphone!

By the way, I really like the Truphone strap-line when you do a Google for them. It reads: “Truphone - Stop talking to your PC”… heh.

Challenges using Wifi hotspots to make voip calls … London’s hotspots unfit for voice | The Register

Link:
London’s hotspots unfit for voice | The Register

Most of London’s wireless hotspots can’t support more than one voice-over-IP call at a time, according to a survey by WLAN analysis specialist AirMagnet.

While they’ve only surveyed about 15 sites in and around the Oxford Street area, AirMagnet have a point. There’s nothing worse than setting up your laptop, getting connected, bringing up Google and having to wait 6 seconds whilst your wifi connection tries to locate the Google server, … tick tick… find the server … tick tick tick… and eventually bring up the massively simple Google homepage.

Totally depressing. In Geneva, wherever I found a wifi connection (pay or free), the speed was phenomenal. I mean *phenomenal*.

Back here in London, I’m convinced that a lot of the hotspots I use are running on some crap 512k connection. I’ve never tried making a wifi call from them — Youtube videos don’t even stream properly. I’m generalising, but I’m doing so from experience. It’s a total arse saying to a friend, ‘hey, look, let me show you this video on Youtub,’ and then having to sit there in silence watching the red bar inch along whilst the flash system caches it.

Anyway, interesting article nonetheless.

Supporting The Gadget Show’s Campaign for Free WiFi

Link: The Gadget Show Campaign for Free WiFi

This week on The Gadget Show, Jason explored a pilot scheme which supplies the city of Norwich with free WiFi internet access for its people.

A great idea, but not enough. We want to see free WiFi in every major town and city in the UK; for business, for tourism, for the future, and for anyone and everyone who relies on the internet.

If you agree, please sign up to our online campaign here, and we’ll take it all the way to the top.

Got this from viewer Jeremy who’s signed the petition. I have too.

Free Wi-Fi for Singapore

Link: Singapore Plans Free Wireless Internet - washingtonpost.com

Singapore’s government said it plans to cover most of the island with public wireless Internet access by next year and offer nearly 10,000 subsidized computers to low-income students to offer digital opportunities to all its citizens.The government will increase the number of public wireless “hot spots” from 900 to 5,000 by next year as part of the plan, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong told an audience late Tuesday evening while launching the Wireless@SG initiative marking 25 years of a drive to boost information technology in Singapore.

Bring it on! Could something like this ever happen in the UK? Heh. We’ll see.

Nokia: WiMAX cell phones by 2008

Link: Nokia expects to sell WiMAX cell phones in 2008 - washingtonpost.com

Nokia expects to start selling cell phones using the new WiMAX Internet technology in 2008, the world’s top handset maker said on Wednesday while unveiling network technology for WiMAX.

Soon I might not need to pay 36 pence a minute just to talk to someone on another mobile network, eh? I’m looking forward to the introduction of this kind of technology.

My internet connection; Vonage

I’m 30 miles from London in a suburban, reasonably small commuter town with a high street, three high schools, a park, a swimming pool and three golf courses nearby. The town isn’t big enough to warrant it’s own area code. Instead it shares the code with its much larger companion, Brentwood.

On all ADSL maps, my phone number and post code indicates we can receive — nay, we are *on* — a 4.5mpbs connection.

I’ve been seeing “2272kbps” on the Linksys modem page for so long. I upgraded to 8mbps a while ago. It seems that this is only available if you’re right next to the exchange. We’re about 1.5/2 miles from it, I reckon. Got an email saying ‘you’re upgraded’ a few weeks after clicking the upgrade link on the Bulldog control panel … but nothing appeared to change. Then I thought this might be because the Linksys router isn’t ADSL2+ compatible. Basically it’ll only do 2mbps.

I got hold of a new Linksys ADSL2+ device this afternoon and plugged it in. Moment of truth.

It’s still stuck at 2272kbps. Who knows? What the hell is the difference between 4.5mb and 2mb anyway? Not much it seems.

Anyway I took this opportunity to try out Vonage again. I’ve been blowing a tenner a month for a good 1.5 years on Vonage and it’s never sodding worked. Not once. It works pigeon-English style. Pick up the phone plugged into the Vonage box and there’s a dial tone. Dial a number and it rings. I’m able to hear the other personish, with a bit of a choppy sound. But they can’t hear me at all. I cut out, I sometimes echo, … esentially, it’s a total load of shit. I and my token caller (I have to persuade friends and business associates to genuinely help me test it now and again) end up doing that stupid annoying satellite thing of talking over each other then stopping then starting then wondering if it’s Vonage screwing up, or us, or connections or……………

It just doesn’t work.

I can’t believe the industry has degenerated so badly. 100+ years ago, Alexander Bell was able to get it to work with bits of wire. Here I am in the 21st Century paying a tenner a month for a piece of shit.

Now, let’s be clear here, Vonage must work for some people. Surely? If it’s working for you, please do email me and let me know.

You see I reckon that my entire problem is down to the woefully pathetic ridiculous and wholly embarrassingly shit connection provided by British Telecom to my area.

Yes it’s a 2mb connection. Er, actually it’s MEANT to be 8mb and is apparently 4.5 on all the ADSL lookup sites…………….. but yes, that ACTUALLY translates into about 200k per second download (if the server’s located somewhere fast, like the UK’s docklands) and about…….. what? 25k-45k per second up?

So NO WONDER Vonage doesn’t work. Ergo, it’s potentially rather unfair for me to describe their service as ’shit’. But then……….. shouldn’t their service come with a warning or some sort of clause stating that if you don’t live in 24mb central London, expect your Vonage to be appalling?

Now, here’s where it gets interesting. Skype works perfectly satisfactorily.

Which gets you wondering.

How come Skype or GoogleTalk works and Vonage doesn’t? Is this the flipping great wads of processor power being thrown at the voice compression by the Apple? I’d have thought the Vonage box would have been more efficient. Perhaps it’s the difference between a Ferrari (Skype) and a Horse Drawn Carriage (Vonage Box)?

I was so willing it to all work. I have been through all the Vonage FAQs, settings and so on :|

I think, in the end, I need to just go and move into London.

I was, by the way, thinking of getting a place in the countryside recently. Just a small place to visit now and again, perhaps work there for a few days at a time. But I discounted doing so because I know the places I was considering are miles from their local telephone exchanges. I’d only be able to get that crappy ‘well……. look…….. it’s a signal, so shut it’ 128k broadband.

It’s saddening when you begin making location decisions based on the quality of the internet supply.

But then it’s shit all over the place.

Last week I was getting so annoyed I was thinking about buying satellite internet. However I doubt that would ease my pains.

Anyway here are some questions for anyone still reading:

1. Have you or anyone you know actually got Vonage working?
2. If they got it working, what DSL speed did they have? I refuse to believe Vonage works on anything other than a 2mbps connection *IN* central London. Open to being proved wrong. I really want it to work.
3. What do you reckon to dumping Vonage and getting another phone line installed by BT instead? I seriously can’t believe I even wrote that. I’m talking about regressing — about getting another copper wire installed so I can receive and transmit 8k/sec landline calls reliably because my existing wire seems incapable.
4. Is there anything I’m missing?

Skype Zones: Only gives you Skype access, nothing more. My mistake.

Well that is a load of shit, isn’t it?

Here I am delighted to see that Skype were leading the way in the worldwide WiFi marketplace by releasing Skype Zones.

I took a look at the price. £4.20. Wicked.

I took a look at the ‘wifi’ bit. Wicked.

And that was me sold.

I didn’t question it at all. I’m a victim of my Skype experience you see.

I ASSUMED that since it was a WiFi connection you could OBVIOUSLY use the internet through the connection as well.

NEVER for a moment, not even a milisecond, did I think to read the small print to see if this was only giving you Skype as opposed to open internet access. NOT for a moment.

Surely the whole point of having your LAPTOP open (so that you can *USE* the Skype Zones software) is that you can a) use Skype and b) use the internet? You know, for email?

So now if I’m sat in the Blue Boar Skyping someone with Skype Zones — and the guy says ‘ah right, ok, I’ve sent you the spreadsheet.. open it now, let me know what you think?’

What exactly am I meant to say to him? ‘I’ll call you back when I’ve connected to a proper internet service so I can get your email’

Er, no.

Thank you to eagle eyed Paul and Carlo who posted comments alerting me about just how stupid I was. Never ASSUME eh. It makes an ASS out of U and ME. And Skype Zone users.

Seriously, you need our head examined if you’re going to pay £4.20 a month for Skype access via The Cloud here in the UK when you can pay £11.99 and get proper internet access at more or less the SAME hotspots.

(I get it if you’re using a Skype phone… that could be rather cool. But using a laptop? No way.)

When a company does something like this, you know there’s a problem. It’s time to run for the hills. Trouble ‘t farm. What smart team of business smart arses got round the table at Skype HQ and said ‘Nic, mate, you know Skype Zones? Let’s make it that you can only use Skype. Wicked? Yeah? Deal?’

They should have been laughed out the board room.

Skype Zones - unlimited wifi for £4.20 a month

Update: Yeah, this is total bollocks unfortunately. Check out this post for the update.

Link: Introducing Skype Zones - Skype in United Kingdom

Ever tried logging onto the net in a public hotspot? If so, the cost may have surprised you. That’s “surprised” as in “made you snort food out your nose in horror”. At around £6 an hour, hotspots look like a very bad deal indeed compared with internet cafes that rarely charge more than £1 a pop.

Skype is helping to bridge the gap with Skype Zones, a beta service that allows you to access Skype and make calls from your own laptop in more than 18,000 Skype-friendly hotspots around the world, including 8,000-odd in the UK. The fees – just $2.95 (£1.60) for two hours or $7.95 (£4.20) unlimited for a whole month – put other commercial WiFi services to shame.

So the unlimited wifi account which I’ve just bought from The Cloud (at £11.99 a month) has now just been eclipsed by the Skype one for less than half the cost. I like it when the market moves fast. Interesting. Looks like Boingo Wireless have obviously done a deal with The Cloud since the hotspot directory is exactly the same — theoretically I can soon use this service to connect in the Blue Boar pub. Slight arse that it only appears to be available for Windows at the moment. I’m sure an Apple one will be forthcoming. (Well spotted Jeremy)

Talkster: The next big thing

Still in Alpha — I’ve been having a look Talkster this afternoon. I like it. Going to look in more depth shortly.

T-Mobile UK Wireless Hotspot service for a tenner a month - existing customers only

Link: T-Mobile (UK) :: customer services

Check out this totally consumer friendly text promoting the T-Mobile unlimited hotspot deal. Seriously this is the text they’re using to market it.

£10 price plan for existing customersWe will register and check your details with credit reference agencies to help us make credit decisions about you. On acceptance, your login and password will be sent to you by email – this can take up to 48 hours. Existing pay monthly (excluding U-Fix) T-Mobile customers only.Subscription provides unlimited use (subject to the following fair use policy) of T-Mobile HotSpots in the UK and 300 minutes a month to use at BT Openzone owned and operated Hotspots in the UK. 30 days notice required to cancel your contract.

Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiight. So, well spotted Carlo. You know I’ve been spouting off about how ridiculous the T-Mobile hotspot charges are (principally in Starbucks)? You know, 75p for 10 minutes. Stupid.

Well. Turns out they have a £10/month option for existing customers. Apart from the inexcusably badly marketed text above, it’s a pretty good option I reckon. Shame it’s not included with my web ‘n’ walk deal.

However this is yet another reason why T-Mobile should have a blog rep monitoring stuff being posted so they can help folk out. I phoned T-Mobile support the other day asking for clarification on the Hotspot deal and the lady who answered mumbled something about it ‘being another department’ and didn’t once mention their unlimited option.

It took another blogger, Carlo of MobHappy — sitting in America, no less — to point out that there was an unlimited option for existing customers.

Techdirt: Starbucks Managers Begging To Free Up The WiFi

Link: Techdirt Corporate Intelligence: Techdirt Wireless - Starbucks Managers Begging To Free Up The WiFi

It doesn’t take an economic genius to figure out that charging for WiFi is a dead end model when the competition is giving it away for free. While many of the restaurants and cafes offering free WiFi are singing its praises as it brings in more customers — especially during the off hours — T-Mobile is stubbornly sticking to their high priced plans. It appears, however, that their major retail partner, Starbucks, may be pushing back.

Carlo saw this and thought of me going nuts in that Starbucks in Paternoster Square in London ;-) The above Techdirt article was from almost 2 years ago. No change in the UK. You know what it’s actually no biggie. Starbucks has always monumentally wound me up by never, ever, ever selling any kind of Coca Cola whatsoever. I don’t drink coffee so I end up having to have mineral water or some £5 orange smoothie. Add overpriced Wifi together with the desperate desire to sit there looking cool with my new MacBook (Pro), and no wonder I was blowing a gasket.

WiFi in hotels overpriced, WiFi in Starbucks 100% ridiculous

ZDNet - Hotel Wi-Fi rates slammed

The Good Hotel Guide 2007 has named and shamed hotels that charge the earth for Wi-Fi access, but analysts suggest they may still be good value compared with mobile data roaming charges

Seriously! If it wasn’t for The Cloud, I’d be forced to pay similarly stupid daily rates at Starbucks.

Update on The Cloud

Connected with Duncan via The Cloud support line. Turns out that the router here in the pub needed a reboot. Duncan called the pub lady who duly kicked/rebooted the router.

That allowed the rooter to connect to the authorisation system.

Alas my username has (temporarily) stopped working. That’s a secondary issue. Duncan gave me a temporary code to login.

Conveniently it’s still working so I can get my work done.

I reckon it would be good if The Cloud implemented a traffic light status system to let users such as me do a quick hotspot search and check that service is currently operational at the location where I’m about to go.

More Wi-Fi wanted; T-Mobile costs stupid

Link: Punters want more Wi-Fi hotspots
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Have a read of this text that Alex spotted on The Inquirer:

UK PEOPLE apparently want Wi-Fi access from more places, according to a report from T-Mobile.
The report said more than half of punters want information when they are on the train and a quarter wanted access while they were on the tube.
Another 13 per cent wanted to use their computers to surf the net while they were on the beach.

What numbskull T-Mobile executive thought it was a good idea to knock up this survey?

YES people want more Wi-Fi access. But not at T-mobile’s outrageous rates. 75 pence for 10 minutes or five quid for an hour.

I note they have a 23.50 a month (inc vat) unlimited option. Rubbish. The Cloud is £11.99 a month.

GET WITH THE PROGRAMME!

Seriously, you, Mr & Mrs T-mobile Management, are on a different planet to everyone else.

My FON router update

Picture_3_20
No one’s used my FON router yet.  I think this is because I live in a totally backward little town.  It’d be half exciting to see a few geeks sat out at the edge of the driveway with their laptops using the FON service.  Although no doubt I’d be a little bit put out if it began to interfere with my network session.

Quite interesting reading on the login page though — I’ve been using the FON router to connect to the internet since it has a better wi-fi signal.  It means logging in now and again but it’s rather nifty being able to see my traffic usage.

Looking at the stats there is absolutely no way I could  use a broadband connection that was limited to 1,000 meg of traffic a month!

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