Reli said:
oldskool69 said:
I have a Sprint 3G Mi-Fi 2200 hotspot card and an HTC EVO that I can use as a 4G hotspot (or 3G). The only problem I've ever noticed is that you will get dropped if you go into roaming. Most of the newer cards won't support 2G technology, especially since 3G is so prevalent (even as a hybrid 2.5G).
When you say roaming, you mean when neither 4G or 3G is available?
I could see this being a problem.........Because my 3G card often drops from "Rev A" (3G?) down to something that isn't Rev A (I don't know whether that's 2G or 2.5G)
So if you're saying that these new 4G/3G cards can't receive 2 or 2.5G at all, then that's a no-sale for me.
Not that 3G/4G isn't available, just not on your network due to issues.
I would get the newer card. 2G essentially doesn't exist anymore for data unless you are in way out in BFE where a 2G site may still exist. (2G is mainly for voice and sloooooooow data transmission. Think old SMS messages.) The Rev. A is recognized when you are attached to your network be it Verizon, Sprint, ATT, etc. When you drop from Rev. A, you are basically attached to a system that is running at a speed similar to 2.5 or 2G technology be it yours or another carrier. And the reality is that it cannot process data packets with any real effort. Actually, it's slower than dialup...as in 14.4 to 33.6kb type dialup or worse. The problem is at the tower itself. Could be overloaded with traffic, especially in major urban centers. Watch what happens between 6:30am -9:00am and 3:30pm to about 6:30pm. Could be system seflf maintenance, or another host of issues.
2G was really designed to support early Balckberry/Palm units and was never meant to support multi-media or content rich pages. The only reason 3G works as well is that additional wireless spectrum was auctioned off by the FCC giving the bandwith range needed (although a narrow one) to support 3G speeds. 3G is relatively reasonable and not horrible with a strong connection. 4G is a heckuva lot better though. The problem once again however becomes bandwidth and the more people begin to take advantage of these devices the less space there is thus the data cap limits. So if you want that movie from Netflix...let it come in the mail or get a land connection. UNless you got money to burn. Fortunately I have a no cap limit at a bargain basement rate.
Keep in mind though if you do end up in rural areas which have small carriers like Cricket or Corr Wireless (or insert your local small cell phone company here) you may be roaming which will result in some fantastic charges based on your plan if your carrier doesn't have the roaming agreements in place. Large major carriers do because of e911 requirments. Think digital money swap.