Is this AT&T’s HTC Pure, clad in shimmering magenta?

Is this AT&T's HTC Pure, clad in shimmering purple?

Last month, a leaked and decidedly non-confirmed listing of random phones mentioned something called the HTC Pure. We’ve not heard anything since, but now HTCpedia has what it believes to be two photos of the thing, each one enshrouded in an unattractive case; one silicon, one garish plastic. What’s inside those enclosures is of course largely unknown, but it certainly doesn’t appear to have a slide-out keyboard, does appear to have four buttons on the face, and that’s said to be a 5 megapixel camera on the back. The site goes so far to say that this is destined for AT&T and will be the Touch Diamond2 (nee Warhawk), but if that’s the case HTC has obviously made some tweaks to the design the last time we saw it. We’re not quite ready to say these are anything other than blurry pictures of some random HTC handset, but once we have something — anything — a little more conclusive we’ll be sure to pass it along.

Update: As a few commenters have pointed out, this is the MDA Compact V, currently available in the UK under T-Mobile, which could explain the magenta case. Is this what AT&T is referring to as the Pure? We wouldn’t be surprised.

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Is this AT&T’s HTC Pure, clad in shimmering magenta? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 22 Sep 2009 06:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T’s 3G MicroCell gets unboxed, looks sufficiently cute

It’s sort of outrageous how much publicity AT&T’s very own femtocell has garnered here lately, particularly when you realize that it’s limited to the Charlotte, North Carolina area alone. But look — did you really expect us to pass up what appears to be the very first unboxing of the 3G MicroCell? No, you didn’t. Hit the read link if you’re somehow not quite past the point of saturation, and be sure to have a peek past the break for an unexpected treat.

[Thanks, Aaron]

Continue reading AT&T’s 3G MicroCell gets unboxed, looks sufficiently cute

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AT&T’s 3G MicroCell gets unboxed, looks sufficiently cute originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Sep 2009 18:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T’s 3G MicroCell runs $150 in Charlotte trial, service is free without unlimited calling

Gearlog has scooped pricing details on AT&T’s entry into the up-and-coming femtocell market, the 3G MicroCell, where it’s currently undergoing a public market trial in Charlotte, North Carolina — and basically, it’s a decent deal as long as you don’t want unlimited calling. Stores are charging $150 for the unit itself and service is free (similar to Verizon’s model, though Verizon charges $100 more upfront and the unit doesn’t do 3G); if you want to tack on unlimited calling, you’re paying another $20 a month unless you have some combination of AT&T landline or DSL service at your address. $20 is properly insane, though in exchange, the carrier throws you a bone with a $100 rebate on the device. All they’ve got to do is drop that unlimited service down to $10 a month to bring ’em in line with Sprint and T-Mobile and put some pressure on Verizon, which still doesn’t offer any unlimited add-on.

[Via Mac Rumors]

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AT&T’s 3G MicroCell runs $150 in Charlotte trial, service is free without unlimited calling originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Sep 2009 13:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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3G MicroCells: Carriers Want You to Pay Extra to Fix Their Own Failures

AT&T’s network is basically a huge failure. And if you want to fix their incompetence in your area, you’ll need to pay an additional $150 for a 3G MicroCell. I call bullshit.

Danny touched on this earlier, but the logic here is blowing my mind. How little regard for your customers do you have to have to offer a product that fixes your own product for an additional fee every month? Seriously, somebody explain to me how this is going to fly.

AT&T is currently testing the MicroCell in North Carolina, charging up to $20 a month to people who want to fix the dead spot in their apartment by running their phone through the internet. And they’re charging subscribers $150 for the box itself. It’s all a trial, so any of these prices could change, but as it stands it’s pretty ridiculous.

And AT&T is the last carrier to the femtocell party. Sprint charges $20 a month for its AiRave femtocell and Verizon charges $250 for its Network Extender box. T-Mobile charges $10 a month for its @Home service, which uses Wi-Fi instead of a cellular connection, but does the same thing. All of the carriers are ripping off their customers with these things, since all of the work is being put on your home internet connection, which you pay your broadband carrier for.

AT&T’s new test of their MicroCell seems as egregious as any of the carriers, so let’s use them as an example. Basically, AT&T didn’t have a strong enough network to handle the iPhone. It still doesn’t. Yet they still charge about $100 per month on average to iPhone customers, who have to deal with dropped calls, delayed voicemails and unreliable 3G speeds. If you are in a particularly bad spot, the 3G MicroCell will let you run your calls through your internet connection rather than over their shit network.

Where do they get off charging for this? Femtocells will actually reduce the load on their networks. It shifts the traffic over to the internet provider you’re already paying for (which I’m sure ISPs will just love). How does this earn AT&T $20 per month, no matter how much you talk?

The way the iPhone performs on AT&T’s network—or really, any dead spot for any carrier—they should be giving these out to people for free. In NYC and San Francisco, the service is near-unusable a good percentage of the time. AT&T is always talking about how they’re increasing coverage, but it never seems to get better. In fact, the week after they claimed to have completed upgrades in New York, my experiences with their coverage got noticeably worse.

Imagine this was the case with any of your other monthly bills. Oh, sorry about the brownouts! The power company has had some troubles at the plant. I know it was inconvenient, but they’ll fix it for you with a solar panel for an additional fee per month. As for your gym membership, sorry that it was closed four days a week last month! For an extra fee every month you can get a Bowflex so you can still work out whenever that happens.

It’s ludicrous. If their network was solid, these MicroCells wouldn’t even need to exist. AT&T is cutting off your arm and then trying to sell you some bandages. Hey, AT&T: people are already paying you for cell service. You can’t charge them again for the same service. Fix your fucking network.

AT&T: 3G MicroCell and its pricing structure are in ‘public trial,’ Charlotte only for now

AT&T has let us know this morning that the 3G MicroCell site revealed last night is currently supporting a “public trial” in Charlotte, North Carolina alone — and perhaps more importantly, pricing (including that $20 unlimited, we presume) is being considered a part of that trial. Unfortunately, they’ve got “no other announcements to make at this time,” so it’s anyone’s guess when this will wrap up and the rest of the country can get its hands on some “more bars in your places” (to quote the MicroCell’s perky introductory videos). We’ll update you as soon as we know more.

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AT&T: 3G MicroCell and its pricing structure are in ‘public trial,’ Charlotte only for now originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Sep 2009 10:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ATT Launches 3G MicroCell in Charlotte, NC

3g microcell.jpg

Does spotty reception on your iPhone drive you nuts? Do you live in Charlotte, NC? If so, head on over to AT&T to pick up the new 3G MicroCell, a device which piggybacks on your home high-speed Internet to provide five bars of HSDPA 3.6-flavored 3G coverage inside your home. It works with up to four users at once, though remember: four people hitting 3G sites at maximum speed all at the same time will clog up many low-rent DSL or cable lines!
According to an AT&T rep in Charlotte, the MicroCell costs $150 and service is free (heck, you’re saving AT&T money by using it) unless you sign up for AT&T’s “unlimited talk” option, which gives you unlimited minutes of calling over your microcell. That costs an extortionate $20/month, though it also gets you a rebate on your device.
The MicroCell covers about 5,000 square feet and only works in AT&T licensed coverage areas, so don’t think about taking it on your next international trip. When you’re setting up it uses a GPS to verify its location, which gives me some amusing visions of having to carry your MicroCell outside and wave it around before it works.

Leaked AT&T presentation confirms remaining WinMo releases for 2009, that employees can’t spell ‘proprietary’

Leaked AT&T presentation confirms remaining WinMo releases for 2009, that employees can't spell 'proprietary'

Microsoft’s Windows Mobile 6.5 release is just a month away, and so too are the first phones that will utilize it. Boy Genius Report has managed to get its hands on one slide from a recent AT&T concall confirming a partial list of the handsets set to ship with the new, improved, more finger-friendly flavor of the OS, and even a few models that will be upgraded to it. Two from Samsung, the Epix and Jack, will receive version updates in October, while HP’s Obsidian, earlier targeted for November, seems to have been pushed back to December, and LG’s Monaco similarly has slipped to November. HTC’s Fortress (a.k.a. the Pro2), however, will apparently be ready with bells on next month. As will we, dear readers. As will we.

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Leaked AT&T presentation confirms remaining WinMo releases for 2009, that employees can’t spell ‘proprietary’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Sep 2009 07:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T’s 3G MicroCell site goes live

We still don’t have all the details we’d like on pricing and availability, but AT&T’s official 3G MicroCell site is now up and running where you can enjoy some video overviews and get a good gander at what the finished product looks like (it’s way better than the version briefly shown a few months back, if you ask us). Availability of an unlimited calling add-on is confirmed here, and any calls that originate on the MicroCell before being handed off to AT&T’s old-school towers will be kept completely out of your minute bucket as long as you sign up for the unlimited package. Also notable is that the carrier officially recommends placing the box near a window so that its GPS receiver can get reception — like its cousins on Sprint and Verizon, the MicroCell includes GPS so that it can’t be used out of the country. So far we’re not able to find a ZIP code that works with the availability checker (including the rumored limited release markets mentioned last week), so if you get through, give us a shout.

[Thanks, joe_smith55]

Update: ZIP code 28201 works, though it doesn’t let you see plans or buy online — it just hooks you up with the addresses and phone numbers of nearby stores. There’ll be a few calls being made in the morning, eh? Thanks, ryan0816!

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AT&T’s 3G MicroCell site goes live originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 21 Sep 2009 00:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T’s 3G MicroCell does unlimited calling, but it ain’t cheap

How much would you expect to pay to cover AT&T’s dead zone using your own internet bandwidth? We appreciate that these guys can’t blanket every nook and cranny with HSPA, but carriers need to understand that femtocells are ultimately tools to help them retain customers who’d otherwise have to leave for greener pastures. AT&T’s certainly not treating it that way with the 3G MicroCell. Let’s compare:

  • Sprint’s Airave runs $4.99 a month, but they’ll give it to you for free if the alternative canceling your service. Unlimited use is $10 a month.
  • Verizon charges nothing once you buy the unit, though there’s no unlimited calling option available.
  • T-Mobile offers unlimited calling through its WiFi-based HotSpot@Home service for $9.99 a month.
  • AT&T’s going to charge $19.99 a month for unlimited use unless you’ve got internet or landline (ironic) service with them, in which case you’ll pay $9.99. If you’ve got both internet and landline accounts, it’s free.

It’s nice to have unlimited calling tacked on as an option here, but it should be exactly half as much, end of story — and in an era where landlines are on life support (and femtocells should be helping to accelerate their demise), the triple play tie-in is wrongheaded. Of course, none of this is official just yet, but with pamphlets already circulating in retail channels, these numbers look like the real deal. A shame, isn’t it?

[Thanks, anonymous tipster]

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AT&T’s 3G MicroCell does unlimited calling, but it ain’t cheap originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 20 Sep 2009 18:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T launching 3G Microcell in some markets in the next few days?

Zacks Investment Research is reporting in a matter-of-fact tone that AT&T’s long-rumored, long-desired 3G Microcell femtocell will be hitting some markets “in the next week.” The full list of initial launch areas hasn’t been disclosed, but Atlanta, San Antonio, Seattle and North Carolina are all specifically mentioned; as you might recall, Sprint restricted the launch of its Airave for some time, too, so limited availability out of the gate wouldn’t really come as a surprise. AT&T had no comment when asked about the report, so it’s a wait-and-see game — but if you’re clinging to one bar of service, have hope that help is on the way.

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AT&T launching 3G Microcell in some markets in the next few days? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Sep 2009 12:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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