As wireless broadband access becomes more ubiquitous, is it becoming possible for a businessperson to conduct his everyday work, at high speed, out in the middle of nowhere? Scott Fulton reports from the wilds of Indiana.
I use the EV-DO service thru Verizon. I find the best way is to use it is to remotely control another machine connected to a hard wired network. I use GotoMyPC but there are lots of ways to do it. Even when the connection slows way down the system is still very usuable.
I finally feel like I can truly work anywhere and I am fully connected no matter where I am - This is the good life!!!
I use this service almost every day. I however use my Blackberry through its USB port (some cell phones have a high speed modem built in). On average I see about 280k for speed. I was using IPsec VPN to get in to my company. On top of that I used Cisco's VoIp product and looged in to a Webex meeting. This way I was able to be in a telecon and watch the presentation. At the end of the meeting I decided to push it a little and I started Remote Desktop Connection to one of my servers and logged in.
It is a very good product Verizon has. I herd the "corprate" rate we have is $15 per month unlimited. At this rate DSL is in real trouble!!!
According to Verizon's coverage maps, Versailles, Indiana does not have EV-DO service. EV-DO has only been deployed in some markets at this point in time -- and these are mostly large markets. Without EV-DO, the connection would be a 1x RTT connection which is significantly slower. I would expect speeds that are much faster in an area that actually had EV-DO service, especially in a peak times. In addition, EV-DO is mostly located on the 1900mhz frequency rather than the 850mhz frequency that most voice traffic is located on -- this would also help relieve bandwidth issues at peak times.
Included is a copy of the aforementioned map -- the purple areas represent where there is EV-DO coverage, the yellow represents 1x RTT service, and the star signifies the town of Versailles.
I use the 1X connection myself. I am sure that is the speed you got out there. EV-DO is up to a 3Mb connection. I use Alltel's 1X. Where I am located my dial-up connection gets me a maximum 5kb/s download. The 1X gets me up to 20kb/s.
Believe me that is a huge improvement when downloadinf patches and files. I am 6 to 18 months out waiting for DSL to bridge the last mile. I would not trade a house in town with broadband for 35 acres of woods, fields and fishing pond on a dead end road.
I was wondering is this type of mobile broadband a solution to play online games via my laptop? perhaps world of warcraft? or mabye something simular that could handle that sort of thing?
I travel from time to time and do not always have a choice where i can stay and something like this being able to use anywhere i can make a cell phone call would be great, iv been hopeing something like this would come out for mobile gaming yet im not sure if this will cut it.
Hi there,
No i would not recomend anything that is latency sensitive to be runned over a UTMS connnection.
You instantly get 2-300 ms under no load here in norway
Perhaps a bit late to this topic, however, I just started using EV-DO w/ Sprint in the greater Portland, Oregon area.
I've tried it in several places throughout the metro and consistently get 480K/120K download/upload. It is like a med-speed DSL link. To test this, I'm tethering a PPC6700 running Mobile Windows 5.0 on a WinXP laptop and using www.dslreports.com/stest (Seattle's speakeasy)
The speeds discussed in the article sound like almost 1xRTT which suprises me.
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