New Hampshire Underground

Regional Discussion => Dartmouth Sunapee => Grafton => Topic started by: OferNave on July 23, 2008, 11:59 AM NHFT

Title: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: OferNave on July 23, 2008, 11:59 AM NHFT
My Sprint phone is useless in Grafton, but I'm out of contract, so I could switch if I wanted.  Does anyone get any reception anywhere in Grafton on any of the cellular networks?
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: 41mag on July 23, 2008, 05:33 PM NHFT
Really depends on where in Grafton you are.  I'm pretty sure they all have dead areas.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Giggan on July 23, 2008, 09:36 PM NHFT
With Verizon I got a faint signal in some places, but nothing dependable.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: OferNave on July 23, 2008, 11:32 PM NHFT
I'd be happy to find at least one spot in town that gets decent reception from at least one carrier, so I could sign up with that carrier and go stand on that spot when I need to make phone calls or check messages.  It would still be an improvement over what I have now.  :)
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Lloyd Danforth on July 24, 2008, 06:35 AM NHFT
Someone said Tracfone.  You could PM    MTPorcupine3, he used to get a signal up on Neils Lane.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Free libertarian on July 24, 2008, 06:50 AM NHFT
Ofer...so that's why I couldn't call you!  Unicell works in some spots, I can show you where,  better than any others we tried.   It does not work at Ofer's though. 

I have also heard some trac phones might work, but I cannot verify this with any experiences.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: J’raxis 270145 on July 24, 2008, 03:12 PM NHFT
During Burning Porc, someone told me some services work along Route 4 near the store. I've not tested this myself.

I could get my T-Mobile phone working at the very top of the Landing Zone property, but not near the house.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: error on July 24, 2008, 03:50 PM NHFT
T-Mobile if you can stand them. Of course the reasons T-Mobile annoys me are common to all the other wireless carriers, so it makes no difference.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: jerry on July 30, 2008, 06:49 PM NHFT
The other day I saw a woman sitting in her car chatting on a cellphone at the corner of Iris Lane and Rte 4 so I stopped to ask her which network she was on.  Tracphone.

jerry
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Mike Barskey on July 30, 2008, 08:06 PM NHFT
I have heard there is a device you can get that plugs into your home network that converts between cell signals and the internet (so you'd need internet access - probably higher speed than dial-up). So if you're in an area without cell reception but with internet access, you can get this device which acts like a tiny cell tower (I guess it creates a reception area roughly the size of a house). Does this exist? Would it work with any cellular carrier? If it exists, what does it actually do (does it broadcast and receive cellular signals so your phone works, and then send those signals to a special server hosted by a cellular carrier? do you need to host another of these devices in an area with cell reception so you're essentially just transporting cellular signals over the internet to a place with reception?)?
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: 41mag on July 30, 2008, 08:22 PM NHFT
I know you can get a card or usb plugin that will allow you to connect to the internet via cellar service.  I've never heard of anything that will create a "micro tower" and broadcast over the internet.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: K. Darien Freeheart on July 30, 2008, 09:09 PM NHFT
Quote from: 'Mike In CA'I have heard there is a device you can get that plugs into your home network that converts between cell signals and the internet (so you'd need internet access - probably higher speed than dial-up). So if you're in an area without cell reception but with internet access, you can get this device which acts like a tiny cell tower (I guess it creates a reception area roughly the size of a house). Does this exist?

Yes and no. Firstly, T-Mobile is beginning to roll out their Wifi based phone service and it does seamless handoffs between cell networks and wifi access points to save you minutes. There's also 3G+ devices which use a cellular network to create a wifi accesspoint. The problem is that you're essentially still screwed if you can't cell coverage.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Mike Barskey on July 30, 2008, 11:18 PM NHFT
Quote from: Kevin Dean on July 30, 2008, 09:09 PM NHFT
Yes and no. Firstly, T-Mobile is beginning to roll out their Wifi based phone service and it does seamless handoffs between cell networks and wifi access points to save you minutes. There's also 3G+ devices which use a cellular network to create a wifi accesspoint. The problem is that you're essentially still screwed if you can't cell coverage.
I think the device I thought existed must not exist then. The device/service you're describing is like extended cellular service, where your phone can switch between cellular and wifi. What I thought (and hoped) existed was a device that created a small cellular area (like in your home) but converted the data and actually transferred it via internet. Bummer.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: KBCraig on July 31, 2008, 02:06 AM NHFT
Given the option of wifi or cellular, iPhones will automatically switch to wifi mode. That means big cost saving for u sers who wander into hotspots.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Pat McCotter on July 31, 2008, 04:21 PM NHFT
I found this doing a google search for 'personal cellular'.

Can Personal Cellular Sites boost cell service? (http://gigaom.com/2006/12/10/femto-cellular/)
By Allan Leinwand

Mobile operators are on the verge of asking you to help them solve one of their biggest problems – how to get more signal strength where you need or want it most. Their plan? Allow end users to buy personal devices that act like Wi-Fi routers, providing nearby cellular bandwidth in hard-to-reach places like offices and homes.


These next type of cell sites, named femto cellular (femto being smaller than pico, the term used by mobile operators that refers to smaller cell sites) are setting out to solve carriers' often-expensive problem of providing complete coverage. Mobile phones usually work well in metropolitan areas, but travel a few miles off the Interstate or into the country and signal bars drop rapidly. Most frustrating to many people is that the signal strength at their homes or inside offices is often unusable.

The forthcoming femto solution? Having end-users buy a small femto device, similar in concept to a Wi-Fi access point, that is a personal cellular site. The femto cellular device has a cellular antenna to boost the available signal as well as an Internet connection. The device uses your Internet connection to connect to your mobile provider's' network and route your phone calls.

There are a few limitations, or benefits, to this approach, depending how you see it. First of all, the femto device you buy will probably only connect to a single mobile provider's network. That's good if you like your mobile operator and bad if you want to switch operators on a regular basis. This approach is clearly good for the mobile operator because you buy a device that uses your Internet connection to extend their network and gives you less incentive to switch providers.

Since femto cellular devices are not available yet, there are some unknown issues – will mobile operators charge the same for minutes via femto cellular devices? Will enterprises buy femto cellular devices like Wi-Fi access points to extend cellular coverage? How do you stop your neighbors from using your femto cellular device and the associated broadband bandwidth (or do you care)? And how much are you willing to pay for a device that lets you use mobile phones in your house?
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Pat McCotter on July 31, 2008, 04:25 PM NHFT
The technology is known as femto cellular.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Mike Barskey on July 31, 2008, 04:27 PM NHFT
Wham! That's precisely what I was thinking of. That might even be the same article I read - I vaguely remember the term "femto cellular." Thanks for finding and posting that, Pat.

I hope the technology comes to market!
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: K. Darien Freeheart on July 31, 2008, 05:12 PM NHFT
Wow. Okay, that's neat in concept.

But realistically, why do you need cell coverage if you're internet connected?
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Mike Barskey on July 31, 2008, 06:10 PM NHFT
Need? Maybe there is not a need. But desire? My desire is very specific: if I lived where there was no cell signal, I'd still want to use my iPhone as my sole phone. :)
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: K. Darien Freeheart on July 31, 2008, 10:45 PM NHFT
The iPhone doesn't let you install a VOIP client? WTF.

To me, phone coverage is like... the most basic form of "communication". You can make voice calls over the internet. I guess I can understand that you'd like your gadgets, but practically speaking buying an iPhone when you don't get coverage where you go is dumb. I mean, if you go there frequently enough to need a box to give you coverage, shouldn't you just buy a phone that can get online when you've got an internet connection. :P
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: error on July 31, 2008, 10:56 PM NHFT
Apple doesn't want you doing jack or shit with the iPhone that they haven't pre-approved. And if you try to do so, they kill your iPhone remotely. This is why I won't buy one.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Mike Barskey on July 31, 2008, 11:06 PM NHFT
Well, you got some of that - at least as it applies to me. I do like my gadgets. :)

Apple (and, I presume more strongly, AT&T) don't want iPhone users to use VOIP because then AT&T loses money. I'm guessing Apple only prohibits VOIP clients because of AT&T. I jailbroke my previous iPhone and installed some VOIP clients, and iPhone's 2.0 software has now been jailbroken (http://blog.wired.com/gadgets/2008/07/pwnage-20-relea.html) (although not unlocked) so VOIP clients are surely on the way there, too.

One thing you got wrong, though, is that I'm dumb for buying an iPhone while I live where there is no signal. I'm dumb for other reasons, but not this one. :) I've had an iPhone for a year (although I just got the 3G a week ago) and have had great reception where I live. I'm considering moving to an area without a signal, hence I'm asking about the pemto stuff.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Mike Barskey on July 31, 2008, 11:07 PM NHFT
Quote from: error on July 31, 2008, 10:56 PM NHFT
Apple doesn't want you doing jack or shit with the iPhone that they haven't pre-approved. And if you try to do so, they kill your iPhone remotely. This is why I won't buy one.
How do they kill your iPhone remotely? You mean by distributing a malicious firmware update? I hacked my previous iPhone for maybe half a year and installed tons of apps - Apple never knew, let alone did anything about it. I even installed Apple's firmware upgrades during that period.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: K. Darien Freeheart on July 31, 2008, 11:26 PM NHFT
Quote from: 'Mike In CA'Well, you got some of that - at least as it applies to me. I do like my gadgets.

Firstly, I'm sorta kinda teasing you. I'm a geek at heart and I love my gadgets too.

Here's a link from Engadget Mobile linking to my blog with exclusive screenshots of a pre-release Linux based phone that's designed from the ground up to be user controllable and customizable and open for use on any network. http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2008/06/11/openmoko-freerunner-gets-reviewed-early/

Now, that's just to "show off" but I want to highlight that 1.) I'm mostly attacking Mac Fanboi-ism and 2.) I really truly don't see why the iPhone, with all the effort required to take control of it like every other basic piece of property, is appealing to people.

Quote from: 'Mike In CA'I've had an iPhone for a year (although I just got the 3G a week ago) and have had great reception where I live. I'm considering moving to an area without a signal, hence I'm asking about the pemto stuff.

What... You signed up for a contract? That sounds stupid to me. :D Why didn't you just buy the phone without a contract... Oh, wait... My bad... :D

No, I get it, I think. Free Software was actually the thing that got me thinking about freedom in a more broad perspective - property rights and law and force used to prevent people from innovating and producing wealth. That said, I'm still really REALLY peeved by the frequency at which the force of law (copyright, patents, DMCA, et cetera) is used to prevent people from being in control of their property and Apple is one of the single biggest offenders of that in the digital realm, even worse even that Microsoft and as a Linux user, that says something.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Mike Barskey on August 01, 2008, 12:14 AM NHFT
Quote from: Kevin Dean on July 31, 2008, 11:26 PM NHFT
Firstly, I'm sorta kinda teasing you. I'm a geek at heart and I love my gadgets too.
Yeah, I got that you were teasing. I was trying to tease back. I should have thrown in more emoticons :)  :-[  :P  ^-^

Quote from: Kevin Dean on July 31, 2008, 11:26 PM NHFT
Here's a link from Engadget Mobile linking to my blog with exclusive screenshots of a pre-release Linux based phone that's designed from the ground up to be user controllable and customizable and open for use on any network. http://www.engadgetmobile.com/2008/06/11/openmoko-freerunner-gets-reviewed-early/

Now, that's just to "show off" but I want to highlight that 1.) I'm mostly attacking Mac Fanboi-ism and 2.) I really truly don't see why the iPhone, with all the effort required to take control of it like every other basic piece of property, is appealing to people.
The "open phone" you describe sounds pretty cool. As much control as you can have over your computer, you can have over your phone. Nice.

I think I have some Mac Fanboyism in me, but not as much as I used to, and I think I can back up what I like about Apple with reason - it's not just blind faith or cult-like following. That said, though, some of the traits I like about Apple and Apple products have declined in quality in the past 2-3 years.

Quote from: Kevin Dean on July 31, 2008, 11:26 PM NHFT
What... You signed up for a contract? That sounds stupid to me. :D Why didn't you just buy the phone without a contract... Oh, wait... My bad... :D
Doh! The tie to AT&T specifically and the 2-year contract with any carrier really ruffled a lot of Apple Fanboy feathers.

Quote from: Kevin Dean on July 31, 2008, 11:26 PM NHFT
No, I get it, I think. Free Software was actually the thing that got me thinking about freedom in a more broad perspective - property rights and law and force used to prevent people from innovating and producing wealth. That said, I'm still really REALLY peeved by the frequency at which the force of law (copyright, patents, DMCA, et cetera) is used to prevent people from being in control of their property and Apple is one of the single biggest offenders of that in the digital realm, even worse even that Microsoft and as a Linux user, that says something.
I don't want to argue whether Apple is the biggest offender of using govt. force to prevent people from being in control of their property (because I may lose that argument :) :( ), but they definitely do it. I don't have a problem with a company - in a free market - selling their product only with a contract that says "you can only use the product This Way." If people really didn't want to use the product This Way, they could choose not to buy it, or if they bought it and used it Their Own Way then the company could bring them to arbitration for breach of contract or whatever. And the popularity of the company and the product would be affected by such decisions. I don't see how this would be different than a Deed Restriction on real estate or other such agreement.

And, of course, whether intellectual property exists at all or should be regulated by government (in this society) or by some voluntary means (in a free market) might affect this discussion. The phone is property, but is the OS? Are the software applications?
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: error on August 01, 2008, 12:17 AM NHFT
Quote from: Mike in CA on July 31, 2008, 11:07 PM NHFT
Quote from: error on July 31, 2008, 10:56 PM NHFT
Apple doesn't want you doing jack or shit with the iPhone that they haven't pre-approved. And if you try to do so, they kill your iPhone remotely. This is why I won't buy one.
How do they kill your iPhone remotely? You mean by distributing a malicious firmware update? I hacked my previous iPhone for maybe half a year and installed tons of apps - Apple never knew, let alone did anything about it. I even installed Apple's firmware upgrades during that period.

The firmware update killed unlocked iPhones, which is about the most useful thing you can do to any GSM phone sold in the United States. Not only does it let you use the device on other providers, it dramatically increases the resale value, not just of the iPhone, but of any phone.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Mike Barskey on August 01, 2008, 12:27 AM NHFT
Quote from: error on August 01, 2008, 12:17 AM NHFT
Quote from: Mike in CA on July 31, 2008, 11:07 PM NHFT
Quote from: error on July 31, 2008, 10:56 PM NHFT
Apple doesn't want you doing jack or shit with the iPhone that they haven't pre-approved. And if you try to do so, they kill your iPhone remotely. This is why I won't buy one.
How do they kill your iPhone remotely? You mean by distributing a malicious firmware update? I hacked my previous iPhone for maybe half a year and installed tons of apps - Apple never knew, let alone did anything about it. I even installed Apple's firmware upgrades during that period.

The firmware update killed unlocked iPhones, which is about the most useful thing you can do to any GSM phone sold in the United States. Not only does it let you use the device on other providers, it dramatically increases the resale value, not just of the iPhone, but of any phone.
Well, I know that unlocked phone are more valuable. I sold my original iPhone - unlocked - for more than I paid for my new G3. :)

There were definitely "bricked" iPhones, but I'm not sure it was Apple's intent. I think it's more likely that Apple simply didn't care that it was bricking iPhone that people were using outside the boundaries of Apple's and AT&T's contract. I think this because not all iPhone were bricked by firmware upgrades. I think it depended on some combination of whether the phone was unlocked, had certain third party software installed, etc. But like I said, mine was jailbroken (which is against the contract, but likely not as serious to Apple or AT&T as unlocked phones) and it was never harmed by firmware upgrades or software resets.

I realize that it seems like I've been all about "protecting" Apple in this thread. And I do like a lot of Apple products and its history of innovation (yes, I realize Apple "stole" the mouse idea from Xerox). But really I just think that anti-Apple-dom is perhaps as mistaken as Apple Fanboyism.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Pat McCotter on August 01, 2008, 04:01 AM NHFT
Sprint begins nationwide femtocell rollout (http://telephonyonline.com/wireless/news/sprint-home-base-station-0730/)
Jul 30, 2008 2:44 PM, By Kevin Fitchard

Samsung femtos go on sale at Sprint stores Aug 17; rollout focuses on coverage first, cheap minutes second

Sprint is taking its Airave femtocell pilot commercial, announcing today it will begin selling the home base station technology on Aug. 17 to its customers across the country. Sprint, however, seems to be defying industry expectations for the service, charging customers both for the femtocell and the service, effectively asking subscribers to subsidize the cost of expanding network coverage.

Sprint first launched the pilot program (http://telephonyonline.com/wireless/technology/sprint_tmobile_femtocells_091707/index.html) last September in Kansas City and Denver, selling a Samsung-designed femtocell, which routes CDMA calls over a home broadband connection to the Sprint network, effectively giving individual customers private base stations at their homes or offices. While femtos have become a hot topic worldwide (http://telephonyonline.com/wireless/news/femtocells_standards_wimax_122007/index.html), they have so far only been used in trials as operators await the global standards bodies to set technology and protocol specifications (http://telephonyonline.com/wimax/news/femotcell-forum-standard-0521/index.html) that would ensure interoperability between networks and drive down production costs. Sprint--as it is often inclined to do to gain first-mover advantage—bucked that trend today, announcing a full nationwide rollout and becoming the first operator to offer the technology commercially.

Sprint is also questioning other preconceived notions about femtocells. Industry experts from the Femto Forum to analysts have projected femtocells would be deployed in two possible scenarios: as a means to expand coverage or as a means to offer discounted voice plans. In the first scenario the carrier has the most gain, allowing it to expand network coverage and capacity without investing in expensive macro-cells. The second scenario implies the customer stands to gain the most, allowing it to gain discounted or unlimited calling plans by supplying the infrastructure and back-end connection to the network. The first case implies the carrier subsidize the cost of the femtocell and service, while the second implies the customer pays.

Sprint, however, is charging for the femtocell ($100) and the basic femto connectivity itself ($5 a month), and then layering calling plans on top ($10 or $20 a month for unlimited individual or family voice calling plans). Sprint is essentially asking customers to subsidize the cost of its own network expansion, said Peter Jarich, wireless infrastructure analyst for Current Analysis. "It's $5 a month just to have it in my home," Jarich said. "It's a hybrid of two models."

Femtocells are a way for operators to fill in dead zones in the network in low-traffic areas as well as add additional capacity to an already built-out network, Jarich said. What's more they require little capex investment and add only incremental opex costs since the customer is supplying the connection back to the network core, Jarich said. By charging a monthly fee just to have an active femtocell, Sprint is doubly advantaged: it makes money off of the subscription while saving network and operations costs, Jarich said.

"The value proposition is weighted much more heavily toward the operator that it's weighted toward the customer," Jarich said.

Capex savings may be exactly what Sprint is after with the femto rollout. On Tuesday, Alcatel-Lucent recorded a huge loss primarily due to a fall-off in North American CDMA revenues (http://telephonyonline.com/wimax/news/alcatel-lucent-losses-0730/), which Alcatel-Lucent attributed a single customer. While Alcatel-Lucent did not name that customer, analysts indicated the most likely operator was Sprint. Skyline Marketing Group president John Celentano said Sprint is not only facing financial and operational pressures, but it has shifted its capex focus to the upcoming launch of its 4G WiMAX network (http://telephonyonline.com/wimax/news/clearwire-sprint-wimax-0507/index.html) with joint venture partner Clearwire. That could mean Sprint is looking to scale back its network spend on the CDMA, Celentano said. Femtocells may be one means of achieving that, allowing it to grow the coverage and capacity incrementally without costly macro base station deployments.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Pat McCotter on August 01, 2008, 04:07 AM NHFT
I really like how innovation gets around politics and emotions. People want cell-phone service but they don't want that cell-tower marring their views - introducing femto-cellular.

People want electricity to run all of their toys but they don't want that power plant in their neighborhood - introducing distributed grid technology.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: error on August 01, 2008, 04:33 AM NHFT
Sorry, if you want me to put up a femtocell here, you're going to have to pay me.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: Russell Kanning on August 02, 2008, 05:53 AM NHFT
my tracfone uses US Cellular and it works on parts of the highway in Grafton .... think parts by the swamp west of the post office, where you can see the tower on silent bobs property

I also can make calls from liberty lane.
Title: Re: Which cell network (if any)?
Post by: OferNave on August 05, 2008, 10:05 PM NHFT
That's funny... I never expected OpenMoko to get discussed in this thread.  I've been waiting for a usable OpenMoko release for nearly a year and a half.  Almost there, I think.  :)  Want to get away from proprietary hardware and OSes ASAP.