mgcarley
Founder, Hayai Broadband
When you charge exorbitant amounts for the so-called 7 mbit/s speed, it is useless and pointless.
Right now I have to pay around 800 rupees per month for 2 GB of data per month on 3G speeds. What am I going do with 2 GB data cap in a month? What is the point in having 7 MBit/s speeds??
I don't disagree, but this seems to be a problem worldwide - mobile data is always (for some reason) relatively expensive. India has it *fairly* good, especially if you buy larger amounts (15 to 20GB on DoCoMo and Reliance 3G respectively) where it works out to just US$2-ish per GB.
Even in the US, I think nobody has "unlimited" data on mobile anymore - not even T-mobile... and I'm pretty sure it was T-mobile who was saying just a few months ago how great they are because they have unlimited plans
But my opinion on mobile data is that it should be used as a supplementary connection, not a primary connection, in which case 2GB is more than enough for most people, even if you are logging in on a VPN now and then, but part of the problem seems to be that the providers seem like they're selling 3G as a primary Internet connection! Wrong wrong wrong.
I much prefer the model of say, Telecom Italia, who sell their home broadband connection (wired) with an option to pay 10 euros a month more and get a 3G dongle which comes with like 10GB of data for use on the go. This is, in my opinion, how 3G should be marketed.
And then 3G on your actual phone is a different kettle of fish altogether - the product itself (even with it's inherent flaws and speed issues) is *basically* fine for the purpose of most smartphone applications.
When ISPs talk about giving high bandwidth, they should also provide realistic FUPs. Otherwise high speeds mean cr@p to me.
My thoughts exactly.
---------- Post added at 10:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:01 PM ----------
Yup, it would be fantastic and I'll be in dream world.
Excellent.
He can use an OVH mirror.
Seriously? Using France to distribute (presumably somebody else's) copyrighted material? Probably not the best idea.
Right now I have to pay around 800 rupees per month for 2 GB of data per month on 3G speeds. What am I going do with 2 GB data cap in a month? What is the point in having 7 MBit/s speeds??
I don't disagree, but this seems to be a problem worldwide - mobile data is always (for some reason) relatively expensive. India has it *fairly* good, especially if you buy larger amounts (15 to 20GB on DoCoMo and Reliance 3G respectively) where it works out to just US$2-ish per GB.
Even in the US, I think nobody has "unlimited" data on mobile anymore - not even T-mobile... and I'm pretty sure it was T-mobile who was saying just a few months ago how great they are because they have unlimited plans
But my opinion on mobile data is that it should be used as a supplementary connection, not a primary connection, in which case 2GB is more than enough for most people, even if you are logging in on a VPN now and then, but part of the problem seems to be that the providers seem like they're selling 3G as a primary Internet connection! Wrong wrong wrong.
I much prefer the model of say, Telecom Italia, who sell their home broadband connection (wired) with an option to pay 10 euros a month more and get a 3G dongle which comes with like 10GB of data for use on the go. This is, in my opinion, how 3G should be marketed.
And then 3G on your actual phone is a different kettle of fish altogether - the product itself (even with it's inherent flaws and speed issues) is *basically* fine for the purpose of most smartphone applications.
When ISPs talk about giving high bandwidth, they should also provide realistic FUPs. Otherwise high speeds mean cr@p to me.
My thoughts exactly.
---------- Post added at 10:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:01 PM ----------
Yup, it would be fantastic and I'll be in dream world.
Excellent.
He can use an OVH mirror.
Seriously? Using France to distribute (presumably somebody else's) copyrighted material? Probably not the best idea.