magicbus

Nantucket Island, MA

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Joined: 06/16/2002

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Same here. We just used our Galaxy S2 on At&t as a hotspot today on a long drive up RT 95. Very simple and no charge. I turn on the feature and my wife's laptop sees it and connects.
The reply nice thing is that it uses surprisingly little battery power.
Dave
Current: 2018 Winnebago Era A
Previous: Selene 49 Trawler
Previous: Country Coach Allure 36
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elkhornsun

Monterey

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Joined: 11/29/2011

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DanaMc wrote: Chrishick,
For everyone's benefit, please add a post with the details of the Bluetooth option. I know there are many folks who have more recent equipment than others including myself. So I'm very interested in anything along these lines.
Thanks for your contribution.
Bluetooth is for wireless devices like a mouse or keyboard. WiFi with 802.11n is doing to provide much better data throughput and can be shared with multiple computers at the same time.
We use a Cradlepoint router that has both 802.11n wireless and standard Ethernet cable ports and will work with any USB modem so we are not locked into any one company but can go with whichever company provides the best deal. At this time it is buying the Verizon service through Millenicom which is cheaper than Verizon direct and has with the Verizon towers the best nationwide coverage.
After AT&T handed over more than 300 million emails of US citizens to the military I am not about to use them for anything.
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magicbus

Nantucket Island, MA

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Joined: 06/16/2002

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elkhornsun wrote: After AT&T handed over more than 300 million emails of US citizens to the military I am not about to use them for anything. Not even Google heard of this one. Could you possibly share a link so others may learn?
Dave
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Wayne Dohnal

Bend, OR.

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Joined: 03/09/2003

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It has recently become feasible to use Page Plus cellular, on the Verizon network, for temporary data use. They have a new plan called The Fifty Five. For $55 a month it provides unlimited voice and texts, and a gigabyte of data. I switched over to this plan for a month on the road and will switch back to the lower cost plan when the month is up. You of course have to be careful that the phone you use can be tethered to a laptop. I'm lucky that my old LG clunker can. The data on my phone is 1x, not lightning fast but very usable.
2009 Fleetwood Icon 24A
Honda Fit dinghy with US Gear brake system
LinkPro battery monitor - EU2000i generator
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jaykimnoregrets

Charleston

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Joined: 03/03/2012

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Hey guys :-)
This may be a silly question (I am kinda illiterate un this area) Hubby asked me to post a question about internet on the road.
He is a BIG gamer and loves to play WOW with our oldest son online, He is wondering if the free wifi that some parks offer would be enough for him to play his games online? obviously he isn't real worried about a secure wifi for just gaming. We were thinking about just getting the 1G data plan to do bills etc online and just use that secure wifi for that kind of thing.
any help/info is greatly appreciated, thank you
:-)
JayKimNoregrets
60 days away from buying our Class A DP.
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xctraveler

On the road

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Joined: 10/28/2002

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WOW? World of Warcraft? This kind of game takes significant bandwidth, I believe. Most campgrounds have limited backhaul (connection to internet). They frown on movie downloads and serious gaming as it leaves little room for other users on the network. You need to check with the campgrounds you are going to to see what they offer in terms of connectivity.
We use MiFi with 5 Gb, but don't do movies or gaming. We use 3 to 4 Gb each month when we are on the road long term. As always YMMV (I see you are new, YMMV = Your Mileage May Vary)
Paul
2012 Phaeton 36QSH on Freightliner Chassis with a Cummins 380 pushing it. 2011 Cherry Red Jeep Wrangler Rubicon with US Gear Unified Tow Brake System. Check out my blog
FMCA 352081 SKP# 99526
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Dave H M

IL

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Joined: 08/11/2006

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Deleted
* This post was
edited 07/07/12 03:45pm by Dave H M *
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photonut4

Will need to check our gps

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I am researching new internet options. I am done with the mifis, as I had nothing but trouble with them. Which would give me a more reliable internet connection: tethering a cell phone or a 3G air card in a cradle point router? I currently just use a trac phone, so I would have to sign up with a carrier, if I go the cell phone route. I would go with Millicom if I go the air card route. Thanks for any info. Liz
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Fezziwig

SF bay

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A couple years ago I had great success with a Verizon USB datacard in a Cradlepoint CTR500 router. Worked all over California. It was supposed to be about $60/month, but I kept getting bills for hundreds of dollars (which I always fought and usually got reduced). Finally, I quit just because the billing was such a nuisance. Both Windows XP and linux handle the USB datacard directly, too.
I was hoping that the cellphone data billing would come down, but it looks just the opposite.
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photonut4

Will need to check our gps

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Fezziwig wrote: A couple years ago I had great success with a Verizon USB datacard in a Cradlepoint CTR500 router. Worked all over California. It was supposed to be about $60/month, but I kept getting bills for hundreds of dollars (which I always fought and usually got reduced). Finally, I quit just because the billing was such a nuisance. Both Windows XP and linux handle the USB datacard directly, too.
I was hoping that the cellphone data billing would come down, but it looks just the opposite.
Why the outrageous bills? Was that directly through Verizon or Millicom? TIA.
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