Alaska Airlines offering in-flight WiFi — but not in Alaska

Alaska Airlines offering in-flight WiFi -- but not in Alaska

It’s a sad, sad state of affairs. After nearly four years worth of announcements you’re still more likely to get a good night’s rest on a flight than find wireless internet, leaving us to wonder whether any airline will survive long enough to roll-out the system-wide access they’ve almost all pledged. Another player is now crawling tardily into the ring, Alaska Airlines fulfilling its promise and partnering with Row 44 to offer satellite-based internets on a very limited basis. You should know the drill by now: access is only offered on very select routes, or route in this case, debuting on 737-300 flights running between Seattle (SEA) and San Jose (SJC). At least the service will be free for the first 90 60 days, but the airline isn’t saying how much it will cost after that. We’d guess somewhere between not free and way too much, leaning toward the latter.

Update: Correction, it’s only 60 days not 90, and we’re told by Glenn over at High-Fi News that it’s not just a single route it’s actually a single plane, and while it will be starting out on the SEA/SJC route, it will be making appearances elsewhere — maybe even in the land of the midnight sun!

[Via Electronista]

Filed under: ,

Alaska Airlines offering in-flight WiFi — but not in Alaska originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Feb 2009 16:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Microsoft gets big support for Mobile Broadband enhancements in Windows 7

Just in case Microsoft hadn’t locked down enough support for Windows Mobile at MWC last week, the company also managed to shake hands with a slew of PC makers in order to extend support for Mobile Broadband enhancements within Windows 7. It’s still quite unclear what all this means, but we’re guessing that the likes of Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP and Fujitsu will happily support WWAN modules from Huawei, Option, Qualcomm, Sierra Wireless and ZTE. The writeup also gives us reason to believe that WWAN connections will be more tightly integrated than before, possibly even showing up alongside potential WiFi hotspots when looking for a wireless connection. At any rate, we’re all about getting a signal regardless of location, so we’ll take this as a definite positive despite the glaring dearth of details.

[Thanks, Jacob]

Filed under: ,

Microsoft gets big support for Mobile Broadband enhancements in Windows 7 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 05:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

USA #1 in broadband, time to start making bumperstickers!

Great news, Americans! Despite all the naysayers with their “evidence” otherwise — pointing out that South Korea has more broadband connections than we do, or that in some countries speeds are better than they are here — the United States has come out at the head of the class. And that’s before the government rolls out the “broadband stimulus” bonanza. According to Leonard Waverman (the dean of the prestigious Haskayne School of Business at the University of Calgary), Americans are not only the most productive users of connectivity, but our government’s use of IT is as good as it is anywhere. Additionally, writes Saul Hansell in the New York Times, 57 percent of people in the country now have access to broadband, 9 percent have dial-up Internet access, 9 percent log on at work or at a library but not at home, and some 25 percent don’t use the Internet at all — one of whom said, “what do you want the Internet for? It’s a fad — just like CB radio in the ’70s.”

Filed under:

USA #1 in broadband, time to start making bumperstickers! originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Feb 2009 18:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

NY Times: Despite High Cost and Slow Speed, Were No.1 in Broadband!

NY%20Times%20bits.pngAccording to a bizarre study cited by this morning’s New York Times, the US is number one in broadband. Not on any standard metric, that is, such as overall speed, cost, or penetration, but on a new metric devised by Leonard Waverman, the dean of the Haskayne School of Business. The Times claims “it’s meant to compare countries on the extent that consumers, businesses and government put communication technology to economically productive use.”

Surprising indeed. Mr. Waverman’s statistic really claims that the Internet gets better utilized here in the US–that more businesses, consumers, and government agencies take advantage of their connections. The Times article reads,

“Korea has great broadband to the house, but businesses in Korea don’t use the best networks and don’t have the skills and computing assets they need to take advantage of them,” Mr. Waverman said.

Also, as dusty as your local motor vehicle office may seem, government use of communications technology is as good in the United States as anywhere in the world, according to Mr. Waverman’s rankings.

Hey, that’s super. But that’s got nothing to do with broadband connectivity, a market the US SIGNIFICANTLY lags in! We pay for our access, dearly. The BBC’s Ian Hardy puts it succinctly: “In Manhattan people pay about $30 a month for a download speed of three megabits per second (Mbps) via a DSL line. Many people are very happy with that, until they realise what is going on elsewhere in the world. In Japan you can get 100 megabits for $35.” That final stat according to Selina Lo of Ruckus Wireless. But you’re doing more with your access, right….?

Stimulus bill seeks plan to ensure all Americans have broadband access

As we’ve seen in the decidedly botched digital TV transition, nothing involving government and technology is ever straightforward. With that in mind, let us present to you the most germane portion of the recently passed economic stimulus package with respect to gadgets and the overall nerd kingdom: $7.2 billion. That amount is what President Obama has set aside for “broadband grant and loan programs,” though things get confusing right from the start. $4.7 billion will be distributed through a program run by the Commerce Department, while $2.5 billion is handed out by the Agriculture Department. In theory, at least, that latter chunk would go specifically to rural and underserved areas, but having one goal with two masters just seems like trouble waiting to happen. Oh, and then there’s the mandate to the FCC that instructs it to create (within one year, mind you) a “national broadband plan to ensure that everyone in the US has broadband access.” Granted, these aren’t entirely unheard of — Britain just did the same sort of thing a few weeks ago, and South Korea’s already aiming at 1Gbps for all. We appreciate that the money’s there, but only time will tell if leads to anything meaningful.

Filed under:

Stimulus bill seeks plan to ensure all Americans have broadband access originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Feb 2009 08:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

How To: Tether the iPhone or G1 To Your Laptop For Free 3G Broadband

If you read Gizmodo, the odds are good you’re carrying one of these two pieces-they’re among our favorite 3G smartphones right now. Today let’s learn how to tether ’em up to your laptop.

Note: while data tethering is possible on each phone without any additional tethering plan, you’ll want to be careful that you’re not accidentally seeding a bunch of torrents or something when you’re connected via your cellphone. While we’re pretty sure you’ll be OK doing standard surfing, we can’t guarantee you won’t get slapped with some charge, somehow.

So let’s get started.

What You’ll Need
• For G1: USB cable, Tetherbot App, Android SDK, Firefox
• For iPhone: iPhoneModem app, Jailbroken phone

G1 Tether
This guide is based on the instructions and Android app written by Graham Stewart. Many huzzahs to Graham for figuring out this easy tether setup. This one, however, is a SOCKS proxy instead of a true modem tether, so it’s limited to Firefox browsing-you won’t be able to use any other apps unless you can configure them to connect via a proxy yourself. We’ve tested with Firefox though, and it works great.

1. Go here on your G1’s browser and install the Tetherbot app. If unknown sources are not enabled on your phone (under Settings -> Applications -> Unknown Sources) do that first.

2. Turn on USB Debugging under Settings -> Applications -> Development and connect your phone via USB.

3. Get your Android SDK set up. If you’re on Windows, you’ll need to download and install a driver.

4. On your phone, fire up the Tetherbot app and tap the “Start Socks” button.

5. Now, the SDK incantation. In a terminal window on Mac or a run window on Windows, navigate to the “tools” folder within your SDK directory and then type the following:

Mac:

./adb forward tcp:1080 tcp:1080

Windows:

adb forward tcp:1080 tcp:1080

6. Now, in Firefox, go to Options -> Advanced -> Network, and click to configure how Firefox connects to the Internet. In the window that pops up, choose “Manual proxy configuration” and clear out everything that might be there. Under SOCKS host, type “localhost” and change the port to 1080. Hit OK, and you should be in business. Easy right?

iPhone Tether
For this, you’ll need to jailbreak your phone. All you need to know to do that can be found in this post on the iPhone Dev Blog. If you’re running OS X, I STRONGLY recomment using Pwnage Tool instead of QuickPwn to manually create a jailbroken software image and install it via iTunes-I have yet to get QuickPwn to work with my phone, and I have no idea why.

One caveat: there are two iPhoneModem apps-one, found at iPhoneModem.de is free, and comes with a utility that makes tethering on a Mac easy. That’s the tutorial we’re following here. They claim it’s possible to use on Windows, but there is no companion app and, unfortunately, no Windows instructions.

The other iPhoneModem is nagware ($10 to get rid of the nags), and does include a Windows config app, which we have not tested. If you’re running windows, try that one, and let us know how it goes in the comments. There is also another method using an app called 3proxy that requires lots of manual configuration, but that one may also be worth a try. Update: Commenters are also recommending PDANet for Windows tethering, which is in Cydia as well.

1. Once you’re jailbroken, open up Cydia and install the package called “iPhone Modem zsrelay” – you can find it by searching “modem.” Also install OpenSSH – find it by searching “SSH.” BossPrefs is also recommended, so you can make sure SSH is running.

2. Download the iPhoneModem.de helper app and run it, and go to “Settings…” under the little iPhone icon that just appeared in the status bar.

3. Fill in the following fields:

IP-Address of Mac: Leave the default value (192.168.100.1)
Password of Mac: Your admin password
WLAN Name: The name of the ad-hoc network that will be created – your choice
WLAN Password: It must be 13 characters-your choice as long as it’s 13
SOCKS Port: Leave default (9999)
iPhone root Password: alpine (as long as you’re running 2.x firmware)
iPhone Mac Address: Found under Settings – General – About – make sure you use the wi-fi MAC address.

4. Once your config is saved, go to “start connection” and follow the prompts. Your Mac will create an ad-hoc network, which you will then join with your iPhone (make sure you get an IP address on your iPhone before continuing). Everything should go smoothly, and voila, you’re tethered!

Hope you enjoyed our how-to. For more on iPhone jailbreak apps, see yesterday’s essentials list, and more how-to guides here. Enjoy the weekend!

Southwest Begins Wi-Fi Testing on Aircraft

Southwest_WiFi.jpg

Southwest has become the latest airline to begin testing Wi-Fi connectivity on its flights, following JetBlue and Virgin America, according to Wired.

In a joint effort with airline broadband connectivity firm Row 44, Southwest so far has enabled Wi-Fi on one plane, and will have three more up and running by the beginning of March. In less exciting news, Southwest and Yahoo will work together to develop a custom home page that you can immediately click away from the moment you see the connection works.

Customers on Southwest over the next few months will receive on-board instructions if they happen to be on a Wi-Fi enabled aircraft, the company said in a statement. The service will be free for now, and will see how the test goes as the company waits for FCC approval, according to the article.

South Koreans could see 1Gbps web connections by 2012

The world at large still has aways to go before it catches up with Sweden’s Sigbritt Löthberg, but South Korea’s hoping to take a baby step in that direction by 2012. According to a new proposal by the Korea Communications Commission, it’s aiming to make broadband ten times faster in its nation in under three years, and according to the plan, it’ll take some $24.6 billion in order to make it happen. The central government is looking to cough up around a third of that, with the rest having to come from private telecommunications companies. We’re told that the initiative could create upwards of 120,000 jobs, and citizens will be able to kiss their 100Mbps connections goodbye as they replace ’em with 1Gbps alternatives. The KCC hopes the move will enable more interactive TV services to be delivered along with additional e-commerce and home schooling; South Korean residents, however, are probably just stoked about lowering their ping times.

[Via GigaOM]

Filed under:

South Koreans could see 1Gbps web connections by 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Feb 2009 06:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Charter launching 60Mbps broadband, asks “FiOS what?”

Charter launching 60Mbps broadband, asks

Still waiting for Verizon’s FiOS to come and light up your neighborhood with blistering download speeds? Now you have something even faster to wait for, with Charter Communications announcing it is launching a 60Mbps broadband service, utilizing DOCSIS 3.0 to fit more bits in the same pipes — not quite the 160Mbps Comcast predicted, but we’ll take it. What the company isn’t announcing is when people will be able to tap into this or how much they’ll pay for the privilege, but hopefully it’ll be a little less than the $140 Verizon is charging.

Update: We found word of prices and, go figure, the service costs exactly the same as FiOS: $140 per month. But, you can save $10 if you bundle it with TV or phone service.

Filed under:

Charter launching 60Mbps broadband, asks “FiOS what?” originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Jan 2009 15:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Seattle crowned most wired city in America: where’s your town?

Check it, Pacific Northwest — Seattle, Washington was just named Forbes‘ most wired city for 2009, followed closely by Atlanta, Washington, D.C., Orlando and Boston. Of course, having Amazon and Microsoft within spitting distance probably didn’t hurt matters, and the eleventy billion Starbucks WiFi hotspots likely pushed it over the edge. There are 25 other locales in the top 30 that we’ve yet to mention here, so head on down to the read link to see if your hometown made the cut. Oh, and way to represent, Raleigh — numero fifteen ain’t too shabby.

[Via cnmoody]

Filed under:

Seattle crowned most wired city in America: where’s your town? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 24 Jan 2009 21:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments