HTC’s buttonless slate spotted in the furry wilds

A second HTC phone to escape the netherworld of disputed renders has just been discovered. This touchscreen slate for Verizon lacking a front-side camera was last seen in the Pocketnow leak but is now snuggled up with a Harrods bear in a Chinese user forum. How cozy. Better yet, we’ve now got a view of the Droid-Incrediblish backside showing a dual-LED flash. Again, no detail to confirm but we’ll bet it’s announced with Android at a Mobile World Congress press event in February.

[Thanks, LIMIX]

Continue reading HTC’s buttonless slate spotted in the furry wilds

HTC’s buttonless slate spotted in the furry wilds originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Jan 2011 09:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AT&T trying to cling on to iPhone customers by offering them unlimited data (again)

Were you riding one of AT&T’s unlimited data deals until recently? If so, this whole new Verizon iPhone thing is about to work in your favor, as the Associated Press is reporting AT&T iPhone users are being offered a sort of unlimited data amnesty: if they had it before, but switched to a limited data plan since, they can now have it back. This is clearly in response to Verizon’s promised $30 uncapped deal, though it remains entirely unofficial and unannounced — no reason why AT&T would want to advertise its desperation, after all. When asked for comment, a company spokesperson would neither confirm nor deny the news, saying only that AT&T handles “customers and their situations individually.” Still, we’d pick up the blower and threaten to start wearing red to see what the incumbent iPhone carrier might offer up as an incentive to stay blue.

AT&T trying to cling on to iPhone customers by offering them unlimited data (again) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 17:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Price Chart: Verizon iPhone vs. AT&T iPhone


Bits and pieces about the Verizon iPhone have finally fallen into place to tell the full story on how much the coveted handset will cost you.

Apple’s website this week temporarily revealed that the Verizon iPhone voice plans start at $40 per month. Text-messaging plans start at $5 per month, or you can pay per use for 20 cents each text.

Also news is that Verizon’s hot-spotting feature — the ability to turn the handset into a Wi-Fi network to share an internet connection with multiple devices — will cost an extra $20 per month on top of voice and data plans. As part of the same plan, customers will also have the option to use tethering, which shares the iPhone’s internet connection with one device. The plan includes 2 GB of data for hotspotting plus tethering per month.

As for the price of internet usage, Verizon said Tuesday that the iPhone would offer an unlimited data plan for $30 per month. However, Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam clarified that this plan would be available for a limited time, as Verizon will eventually move to a tiered pricing structure for data.

  • Voice
  • Data
  • Text
  • Verizon iPhone
  • 450 minutes for $40/month.
    900 minutes for $60/month.
    Unlimited minutes for $70/month.
  • Unlimited data for $30/month (temporary offer).
    2 GB of data for tethering or hot-spotting for $20/month.
  • 250 messages for $5/month.
    500 messages for $10/month.
    Pay-per-use for 20 cents/text.
    Unlimited messages for $20/month.
  • AT&T iPhone
  • 450 minutes for $40/month.
    900 minutes for $60/month.
    Unlimited minutes for $70/month.
  • 200 MB for $15/month.
    2 GB for $25/month.
    Tethering for $20/month; no additional data included. (No hot-spotting available.)
  • 1,000 messages for $10/month.
    Unlimited messages for $20/month.

So there you have it: the Verizon iPhone starts at $200 with a two-year contract, and if you go with the minimum voice, data and texting plans, you’ll pay about $75 per month. Factor in tax and government fees, and that should amount to roughly $90 per month.

On AT&T, the options are a bit different:

  1. Unlimited data is no longer an option for new subscribers, though many old subscribers still have the option to stay on their unlimited data plan. The cheapest data plan costs $15 per month for 200 MB.
  2. There isn’t a pay-per-use option for texting.
  3. AT&T doesn’t support hot-spotting, though it does offer tethering for the same $20-per-month rate.
  4. However, AT&T doesn’t give you additional data for tethering when you pay $20 each month; this comes out of your data plan. (So if you buy a 2-GB data plan for general internet usage, for example, tethering counts toward the 2 GB.)

So with the tiered data-pricing structure, the minimum you’ll pay for an iPhone on AT&T per month is $65 for voice and data; after fees and taxes that comes out to roughly $75 per month.

Confused yet? See the chart above for a side-by-side comparison of AT&T and Verizon iPhone costs.

The Verizon iPhone hits stores Feb. 10.

Updated: A clarification of the AT&T iPhone’s tethering plan was added to this story Jan. 27, 2011 at 10 a.m. PT.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Wired Explains: What U.S. Carriers Mean by ‘4G’

Updated: We changed the speed data to reflect carrier-reported speeds for all four carriers, on January 26, 2010 at 1 p.m. Eastern.

In 2011, wireless carriers are banking on you going 4G with your next smartphone purchase.

Verizon says it will release 10 different 4G-enabled handsets in the next year. AT&T says it will double that number, with 15 of its own offerings being Android OS-based devices. And T-Mobile, which offers a handful of 4G phones, claims its network is “America’s largest 4G network.”

But with all the wireless industry jargon being thrown around in marketing campaigns these days, it’s still unclear just what each carrier means when it touts its network as “4G.”

Let’s take a look behind the fog of marketing jargon that U.S. customers face today.

4G Technologies

Loosely defined, 4G stands for the the fourth generation of cellular wireless standards. In the narrow terms originally defined by International Telecommunication Union standards, it doesn’t count as 4G unless it offers download speeds of 100 Mbps to 1 Gbps. That’s about 100 times faster than any speeds we’re seeing on networks now.

If we were to judge the networks available to us now by this standard, none of them would be considered 4G.

Luckily for the carriers, we aren’t judging that way — at least, not anymore. In December at the ITU World Radiocommunication Seminar in Geneva, the ITU allowed the term “4G” to “also be applied to the forerunners of these technologies, LTE and WiMax, and to other evolved 3G technologies providing a substantial level of improvement” compared to current 3G networks.

AT&T wasted no time embracing the new nomenclature, relabeling its network overnight.

And well it might, as rival T-Mobile has been using the same nomenclature for the same technology since early 2010.

Before we delve into each carrier’s offerings, let’s review the competing technologies being used today.

WiMax

Developed by the IEEE, WiMax is one of two competing technologies to blaze the 4G trail. WiMAX, also known as 802.16, is in the same family of standards as Wi-Fi. Sprint and Clearwire own the biggest share of the 2.5-GHz spectrum — “the most readily usable licensed spectrum in the United States,” according to information site WiMax.com – across which WiMax is carried.

LTE

LTE stands for long-term evolution, the leading competitor to WiMax for next-generation wireless data. Instead of expending efforts deploying a new network infrastructure — like Sprint has done and continues to do with WiMAX — LTE proponents like AT&T update existing 3G networks. While the WiMax network is more fully developed at the moment, LTE won’t be widely available until 2013, according to forecasts from both AT&T and Verizon.

HSPA+

This is where it gets a bit tricky. High-speed packet access, or HSPA, is a third-generation (3G) data technology that’s widely used today. A faster version, HSPA+, has been widely considered 3.5G, until the ITU decision in December opened up those terms to a more liberal interpretation. Sprint, Verizon and AT&T weren’t happy. The technology is an incremental approach to upgrading existing HSPA networks, not a whole new generation of technology.

Still, the ITU decision means carriers can start referring to their HSPA+ networks as 4G.


Verizon iPhone Tethering Plan: $20 and Two Extra Gigabytes

Verizon’s personal hotspot feature for the iPhone 4 will cost subscribers an extra $20 per month on top of their regular data plan. This is the same pricing structure you get with Verizon’s other smart-phones.

There has been speculation that Verizon would stick it to AT&T by offering the hotspot feature – which lets you share your internet connection with up to five devices via Wi-Fi – for free. As it is, the feature costs the same as AT&T’s tethering plan. It is also possible that the wireless hotspot feature will come to all iPhone’s with the release of iOS 4.3.

Verizon still wins, though, even if AT&T allows the hotspot feature. Whereas AT&T charges you $20 just to share your already limited pool of data, Verizon gives you an extra 2GB. This is separate from your iPhone’s regular data allowance, and presumably precludes the use of Verizon’s limited-edition unlimited data plan with the service.

The biggest news about the Verizon iPhone isn’t about coverage or network performance. It’s about competition. Look anywhere else in the world and the choice between multiple carriers has lowered prices. Now, with the Big Two going head to head over the exact same hardware, things may get a little better for the consumer.

Verizon dishes on iPhone hotspot pricing [Macworld]

Photo: Jon Snyder / Wired.com

See Also:


T-Mobile expected to cut Galaxy Tab pricing to $249.99 (update: drop is official!)

After initiating the first on-contract Galaxy Tab price cascade back in December that quickly led Sprint to respond, T-Mobile may chop subsidy prices again today for the 7-inch tablet to just under $250 (after a pesky $50 mail-in rebate). Together, that’s only $62 more than the bargain bin CherryPad, which should infuriate early adopters who paid double that only a few months ago, not to mention sober up Samsung. However, when you consider that pseudo-4G tablets like the Dell Streak 7 and LG G-Slate will join Magenta’s lineup soon, it is a viable strategy for extending the Tab’s consumer appeal in this viciously competitive Android tablet world we live in. Then again, if the dual-core processors teased for the Tab’s successor actually pan out, we doubt Samsung will need any assistance getting back to its smug position on top of the Android heap. We’ll be keeping our eyes peeled on T-Mobile’s site today and be sure to update should the price change actually materialize.

Update: A recent peek at T-Mobile’s site shows the price drop is now official. If you’re in the UK and prefer buying the Tab unsubsidized, Amazon and Tesco have also chopped their prices to a palatable £341.24 ($542) and £359.20 ($571), respectively. Thanks, Raphael and Rupert!

T-Mobile expected to cut Galaxy Tab pricing to $249.99 (update: drop is official!) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 01:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon’s 4G LTE dongles get Mac support in February

Verizon’s LG VL600 LTE modem received a software update today, but there’s no need to wake your MacBook from its peaceful slumber — there still aren’t any drivers for Apple computers, over a month after we were promised a relatively imminent update. That said, Verizon told PhoneScoop today that the carrier’s LTE dongles will indeed support Apple at some point next month, which is itself only days away. Pantech UML290 owners can bide their time with a workaround, but we LG users will take what we can get, eh?

Verizon’s 4G LTE dongles get Mac support in February originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Jan 2011 18:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon offering BlackBerry 6 upgrades for Bold 9650 and Curve 3G tonight

RIM and its partner carriers have been promising BlackBerry 6 updates for a number of recent models, and Verizon’s getting a couple of the heavyweights out of the way today with the introduction of official upgrade packages for the Bold 9650 and Curve 3G 9330. In addition to universal search and an overall streamlined UI, one of the most important improvements here is the addition of RIM’s WebKit-based browser that makes hitting your favorite pages moderately less painful than before. Look for the update to become available at 8:00PM Eastern this evening, both online (see the Source links for instructions) and over-the-air.

Verizon offering BlackBerry 6 upgrades for Bold 9650 and Curve 3G tonight originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Jan 2011 17:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Facebook Mobile Users Receive 911 Messages, Verizon’s Fault

Some people using Facebook Mobile on Verizon received misdirected texts referring to “911.” Verizon found and fixed the issue.less than a minute ago via HootSuite

I wonder if any silly Facebook Mobile users actually called 911? If they did, I would love to here the recording. “Hello, 911. What’s your emergency?” “Err, Facebook told me to call.” Turns out that the these messages were Verizon’s fault, and Facebook made that pretty clear in its tweet. Oh, silly Verizon.

Verizon ramps up trade-in, upgrade programs in advance of iPhone 4 launch

Not exactly a huge surprise here, but it looks like Verizon will be doing everything it can to pair folks with a new iPhone 4 when it launches on the carrier next month, even if they’ve just purchased a new phone on Verizon or another carrier. During an investor meeting this week, Verizon CFO Fran Shammo revealed that the carrier will be using its existing trade-in program (which launched in October) to lure would-be customers, with a Verizon rep further detailing that it will be “more actively” promoting the plan in the lead up to the iPhone 4 launch — under that program, a 16GB iPhone 4 from AT&T will net you a $212 credit. In addition to that, Verizon is also rolling out a new “Special Upgrade Offer” that will let existing customers trade in a phone they’ve recently purchased for a Visa debit card ($200 for a smartphone trade-in, or $75 for a feature phone). Only those that have purchased a phone between November 26th, 2010 and January 10th, 2011 will be eligible, though, and you won’t exactly get that cash right away — you’ll first have to first buy and activate your iPhone 4 at the full retail price, send in your trade-in phone within 30 days of activation, and then wait four to six weeks to receive the debit card.

Verizon ramps up trade-in, upgrade programs in advance of iPhone 4 launch originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Jan 2011 16:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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