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#1
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I have a Nokia 8260 on an AT&T plan. That phone does AMPS 800 (analog)
and TDMA 800/1900. It's got coverage almost everywhere, which is why I have not upgraded it for almost 4 years. The only airport I've ever flown to where I didn't have coverage was Trinity Center, CA (O86) which is in a bowl of hills in the middle of nowhere. Even there I allllmost had a signal. I'd like to get a new phone, but I really don't want to give up the coverage. My friends with tiny, week-long-battery-life GSM phones love them when they're in town, but often have no coverage when they stray more than a few miles from a city or a major highway. Can any of you suggest plans that have good coverage at out of the way airports? Basically I want to land anywhere that's paved and be able to call home or flight service. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#3
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Ben,
I have a friend who works for AT&T wireless. In his area (Phoenix), he's aware of them making a gradual transition of the wireless network from TDMA to GSM. Looking at the coverage maps when I switched from TDMA to GSM, I was concerned by the lesser coverage of GSM. I have yet to stray far from my area so have no real comparison of coverage. IMHO, GSM coverage will get better over time. I'd think that TDMA will be around for quite some time but for how long? Good question. I'd be interested to see follow up posts GSM coverage or lack thereof. Ben Jackson wrote: -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL, IA Student/flying club member/co-owner wanna-be, "When once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the Earth with your eyes turned skyward, for there you have been, and there you will always long to return" - Leonardo Da Vinci (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
#4
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Cub Driver wrote in message . ..
On Thu, 28 Oct 2004 05:11:56 GMT, (Ben Jackson) wrote: I have a Nokia 8260 on an AT&T plan. That phone does AMPS 800 (analog) and TDMA 800/1900. It's got coverage almost everywhere, which is why I have not upgraded it for almost 4 years. I understand that, now that Cingular has acquired ATT Wireless, you may be better off not upgrading. Any new accounts will get a phone on the Cingular system and technology; if they are not strong in your area, you will be out of luck. Cingular's original digital service uses a technology called CDMA. ATTWS's uses a very, very similar technology called TDMA. Both networks are generally very well establish in Northern California. However, the technologies are similar enough that they almost always carry each other's traffic. Most all of the ATT TDMA towers will talk CDMA. However, you need to go out of your way to get phones with these older technologies. Right now the GSM network is what they are pushing. There are several reasons why GSM is better. One, it has always been the international digital standard. Europe and Asia have used it for a while so the equipment is a bit more accessable. Second, you can run GPRS packets across them. GPRS allows for full featured digital service (internet browsing, sending pictures, etc). ATT current does not even allow you to download polyphonic ring tones over TDMA because it over runs the network. GSM is the way to go with that. However, for my personal cell phone, I'm still TDMA. GSM is well covered in metro areas but is playing catch up in out of the way places. Many of the small towns we land in will not have GSM service. Again, you really need to go out of your way to go to the back of the cell phone store to find the old TDMA/CDMA phones. However, GSM is growing very, very fast. I'm not sure at what point GSM will or has overtaken (T/C)DMA in availability. Its getting pretty close. Also, the TDMA phones generally still are dual mode (meaning they talk the old analog technology too). That is a bad thing. You will probably never find an analog only tower but the amps in the phone required to talk analog is what limits the size of the phone. The GSM phones can be much smaller. (As I understand, I'm the software guy not the hardware guy ![]() -Robert (I wrote some of the fault and provisioning software used in CDMA and GSM activation and service assurance). |
#5
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I recently got a new phone and I sacrificed US coverage for global
coverage. Occasionally I find my self walking out of a forest in some 1st-2nd-3rd world nation and need to find transportation and/or food. I got the AT&T GSM plan with a quad-band NEC phone and it works great. I was initially concerned about US coverage but then it occured to me that my US travels are either all metro where any mobile phone works, or BFE where no mobile works. So in my case a smaller US GSM coverage doesn't hurt very much. -lance smith |
#6
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(Ben Jackson) writes:
Can any of you suggest plans that have good coverage at out of the way airports? I've heard good things about GAIT plans. If you want GSM plus coverage, that seems to be the answer. I use SprintPCS with a phone that can fall back to analog. It's rare that I need to do that but it's usually at the places where I *really* need to make a call. I have only been out of coverage a couple times. Basically I want to land anywhere that's paved and be able to call home or flight service. I've been considering (for a looong time) getting a satellite phone for use when I'm in the boonies. It would be easy enough to just leave it in the plane. It would also work in the *real* wilderness and enroute. The plans for pre-paid service are getting quite reasonable. http://skyhelp.net/iridium_calling_card.htm It sure seems worthwhile even just for emergency use. --kyler |
#7
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I used to travel all the time on business and not always to large metro
areas. People I was with had every plan under the sun. Three years ago it was no contest- Verizon smoked everyone else. Now the others have caught up a lot and in the cities it's largely a wash, though I've heard nothing but complaints about Sprint. I always wanted to switch to GSM because I went to Europe 3-4x year on brief trips but in 2002 GSM was useless once you got away from the places that vote Democrat, which was at least 50% of my travel. Verizon has never let me down- they are expensive though. -cwk. "Ben Jackson" wrote in message news:wc%fd.15146$HA.8665@attbi_s01... I have a Nokia 8260 on an AT&T plan. That phone does AMPS 800 (analog) and TDMA 800/1900. It's got coverage almost everywhere, which is why I have not upgraded it for almost 4 years. The only airport I've ever flown to where I didn't have coverage was Trinity Center, CA (O86) which is in a bowl of hills in the middle of nowhere. Even there I allllmost had a signal. I'd like to get a new phone, but I really don't want to give up the coverage. My friends with tiny, week-long-battery-life GSM phones love them when they're in town, but often have no coverage when they stray more than a few miles from a city or a major highway. Can any of you suggest plans that have good coverage at out of the way airports? Basically I want to land anywhere that's paved and be able to call home or flight service. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#8
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http://www.mobiletracker.net/archive...vox_5600_l.php
I was the same way. I would keep 2 phones 1 on the old system and 1 on the new. This phone is pretty need. You can get weather reports on it. "Ben Jackson" wrote in message news:wc%fd.15146$HA.8665@attbi_s01... I have a Nokia 8260 on an AT&T plan. That phone does AMPS 800 (analog) and TDMA 800/1900. It's got coverage almost everywhere, which is why I have not upgraded it for almost 4 years. The only airport I've ever flown to where I didn't have coverage was Trinity Center, CA (O86) which is in a bowl of hills in the middle of nowhere. Even there I allllmost had a signal. I'd like to get a new phone, but I really don't want to give up the coverage. My friends with tiny, week-long-battery-life GSM phones love them when they're in town, but often have no coverage when they stray more than a few miles from a city or a major highway. Can any of you suggest plans that have good coverage at out of the way airports? Basically I want to land anywhere that's paved and be able to call home or flight service. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#9
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(Ben Jackson) wrote in message news:wc%fd.15146$HA.8665@attbi_s01...
I'd like to get a new phone, but I really don't want to give up the coverage. My friends with tiny, week-long-battery-life GSM phones love them when they're in town, but often have no coverage when they stray more than a few miles from a city or a major highway. You might take a look simply keeping your existing plan and just switch to the Nokia 3560 phone. http://www.nokiausa.com/phones/3560 It is a TDMA/Analog combo phone that has battery life nearly as long as the new GSM phones (~ 6hrs digital talk time about twice as long as your 8260, ~ 9 days standby time). I've had one for a year and never been able to run the battery down yet!. Also there is the Nokia 2260 with standby time of 15 days and talk time of 5 hours, but it's a heavy little sucker. ATTWS is still selling both models right now too. If you renew your plan, you might be able to talk them into giving you the 3560 for free. I was able to do that at a time when they were not normally doing that for existing customers. I really like my 3560, at 3.8 oz, it's very lightweight, but is a bit larger than the tiny new GSM technology. |
#10
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Kyler Laird wrote in message ...
I've been considering (for a looong time) getting a satellite phone for use when I'm in the boonies. It would be easy enough to just leave it in the plane. It would also work in the *real* wilderness and enroute. The plans for pre-paid service are getting quite reasonable. http://skyhelp.net/iridium_calling_card.htm It sure seems worthwhile even just for emergency use. The service is reasonable, but the hardware cost is outrageous for sat phones. The Baja flying clubs I belong to is a retailer. I hear the phones work well in Mexico and they sell a kit that hooks it to your aircraft audio. There is no FCC rule against sat phones in the cockpit. -Robert |
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