Re: Anyone using 3G Flat-rate data for VoIP / Video / Music / etc?



You may wish to look at "Web n Walk Pro" which costs a couple of quid
more per month, but doesn't appear to have any explicit restrictions on
connecting to a laptop, streaming etc. They won't allow VOIP, and there
is a 2GB Fair usage policy which if exceeded 2 months in a row, then
may contact you and ask you to reduce your usage.

So may be ideal for you depending on likely data volumes.

http://www.t-mobile.co.uk/Dispatcher?menuid=business_im_wnw_pro

IMHO on the non-pro tariff they would find it hard to identify what you
are using the data for and would only investigate if data volumes were
regularly excessive or at max bandwidth over a long continuous use of
time. I would imagine in all these things provided the majority don't
abuse the service then T-Mobile won't restrict it, if you exceed 2GB on
a non-pro tariff they are likely to contact you!

YMMV - Rufus.

dskeeles wrote:
I'm thinking of upgrading my (knackered) P910i to either an HTC TYTN or
P990. Rather than just buy the latest gadget, I'm actually looking for
a new world of functionality when I upgrade to these devices.

What that really means, is being able to connect to Orb on my PC, so I
can occasionally stream live TV; last night's Top Gear; my home webcam;
or other feeds, live to my mobile device; usually by WiFi, but
sometimes by 3G. Or connect to my PC at home using VNC to check a file.
Or be sitting in a park, and download a suitable track from my PC-based
home collection to my mobile device, to play there and then. All
seamlessly, all smoothly.

Of course, the TYTN, and perhaps the P990, will be able to do these
things, and some operators (like T-Mobile) are launching "Flat rate"
Data Services - and then slapping restrictions on them prohibiting
Streaming Video, VoIP, or connection to a laptop; basically, everything
that actually makes HSDPA and multimedia handsets worthwhile!!!!!!!

Now, I'm not intending to "extract the urine" on any of this; I'd only
use HSDPA if there was no WiFi coverage, or for ad-hoc downloads. I'd
almost certainly not use P2P. But I would like to watch the occasional
episode whilst sat in the park, or watch a football game streamed from
my home PC, or download a movie to edit or check my work email via my
laptop.


Soo... I was wondering: does anyone know how these companies are going
to manage these restrictions? Will they use sophisticated packet
monitor / session reconstruction farms to closely monitor for any
prohibited activity? Will they just block those ports commonly used for
Skype, Bittorrent or WMP10? Or will they just trigger a review of any
accounts using a stupid level of traffic (eg. >5Gb/mo)? (How can they
know you're connecting from a laptop anyway??) And once they spot you,
will they give a warning, cut off your account, charge you a per-MB
rate for the overuse, or terminate your contract?

Basically, can I ignore the restrictions as long as I'm careful? Or is
it absolutely not going to work? Is anyone doing these things at the
moment?


Damian

.



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