Three announced unlimited smartphone data for £3 a month

September 28, 2011 – 9:52 am

Three have announced that new and existing smartphone contract customers will be able to take out an all-you-can-eat data package for just £3 a month extra which should help its customers avoid what it calls “data fear” – worrying about being charged extra for data usage.

At the end of 2010, Three bucked the trend by introducing a monthly smartphone contract they called ‘The One Plan‘ which included unlimited data, at a time when other network operators were moving towards reducing the amount of data that customers can use. The company also introduced a £15 a month pay-as-you-go offer which had unlimited data for only £15 a month earlier this year.

“The One Plan quickly became our number one contract tariff and our all-you-can-eat PAYG offer is our most popular bundle. From October 7th we’re opening up all-you-can-eat to everyone else, starting from as little as £18 per month.

Our customers tell us that their use of data goes up significantly over the lifetime of their contracts, as they do more and more with their handset. All-you-can-eat data means that they don’t have to worry, they can have that peace of mind for the long term on a contract of their choice.”

Thomas Malleschitz, (marketing director) Three UK

Three have seen data usage increase significantly this year. In February, iPhone 4 customers averaged around 488MB of data usage per month, but this had risen to almost 1.2GB’s by August. With data usage only likely to grow further, offering unlimited data will be good for customers to avoid high bills and may help retain customer loyalty, particularly at a time when customers may be looking to shop around with the new Apple iPhone 5 expected to launch mid-October.

Article: RSS via ThinkBroadband

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Three announce All You Can Eat Data on PAYG

March 7, 2011 – 2:52 pm

Three have just announced the next step in their All You Can Eat data campaign which started back in December on The One Plan.

You might have seen we recently put this ‘All You Can Eat’ data statement to the extreme and went through over 45GB in just two weeks, well the great news is that AYCE data is coming to Pay As You Go from today!.

Customers can now purchase two AYCE bundles which include an allowance of minutes, texts and of course the all important data allowance, the two deals are:

  • All in One 15 costs £15 and gives 30-days access to all-you-can-eat data along with a massive 300 any-network minutes and 3,000 texts
  • All in One 25 costs £25 and offers 500 minutes, 3,000 texts and all-you-can-eat data for a 30-day period.

New customers can now access all-you-can-eat data by buying one of Three’s new Pay As You Go, All in One 15 or 25 Add-ons. Pay As You Go Customers who joined Three prior to September 2010 will need to migrate onto the current tariff.

And if you still do not believe in AYCE Data, then check out this test we did here.

Article: RSS via CoolSmartPhone

 

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Virgin Mobile to throttle ‘unlimited’ mobile broadband

January 13, 2011 – 10:07 am

Bandwidth penalty for transferring 5GB imposed

Virgin Mobile’s US division has decided its network can no longer support truly all-you-can-eat mobile broadband without slowing down uploads and downloads.

VM’s Broadband2Go package provides customers with unlimited data transfers for a $40-a-month fee. From 15 February, they will still have access to as much data as they like each month, but their bandwidth is throttled when they exceed 5GB, for the rest of the month.

T-Mobile US did the same thing in April 2010.

This is an interesting approach to the problem of consumers who dare to think that subscribing to an unlimited package means they can send and receive lots and lots of data. VM’s conclusion: they can’t, not without affecting other users.

British mobile internet users have grown accustomed to either paying a premium for the data the transfer beyond a contracted limit, or to having their access cut until the start of the next 30-day period.

VM clearly feels it needs to dissuade customers from transferring too much data, but it’s choosing to squeeze their pipes rather than pummel their wallets.

VM said using the package for email, browsing and music downloads shouldn’t be affected – they won’t be using much more than 5GB, if they go past the limit at all. But it is likely to hinder very active torrenters and folk downloading or streaming movies from the likes of iTunes and Netflix.

That will come as a blow to many, particularly as we’re all being increasingly encouraged by technology and media companies to connect more kit to the net, and access ever more multimedia content through it.

Article: RSS via The Register

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T-Mobile tell customers to “Use your home broadband for downloading”.

January 11, 2011 – 11:33 am

We reported yesterday that T-Mobile were reducing their fair use policy for data from 1GB & 3GB (Android) to a mere 0.5GB. They have now clarified the situation and have told their customers that they should only use their devices to “browse” the internet and not download. In fact they stick the boot in even further as the last sentence in their full statement goes on to say “If you want to download, stream and watch video clips, save that stuff for your home broadband”. Charming!

Here’s the full statement direct from the horse’s mouth:

Changes to Mobile Internet fair use policies

T-Mobile is the only operator to give customers the Mobile Internet for a fixed-price. We never charge our customer’s more than they expect for their Mobile Internet in the UK.
Therefore you’ll never need to worry about how many emails you’ve sent, how long you’ve been on-line or the ‘data / GB’s’

Browsing means looking at websites and checking email, but not watching videos, downloading files or playing games. We’ve got a fair use policy but ours means that you’ll always be able to browse the internet, it’s only when you go over the fair use amount that you won’t be able to download, stream and watch video clips.

So Whats Changing? – From 1st February 2011 we will be aligning our fair use policies so our mobile internet service will have fair use of 500MB.

What Does This Mean? – We’ll always let you email and browse the internet and you’ll never pay more than you agree to. We do have a fair use policy but ours is there to make sure we deliver the best service possible to all our customers.  This means that you’ll always be able to browse the internet.
So remember our Mobile Broadband and internet on your phone service is best used for browsing which means looking at your favorite websites like Facebook, Twitter, Gmail, BBC News and more, checking your email and looking for information, but not watching videos or downloading files.

If you want to download, stream and watch video clips, save that stuff for your home broadband.

Our advice: If possible, cancel your contract with T-Mobile under the grounds that they have “significantly” reduced the fair use policy which will affect your ability to use your device without incurring extra costs. Head over to Three’s SIM Only page and get yourself The One Plan @ £25 per month which only has a 12 month contract. As well as the 1000′s of minutes and texts, it comes with All You Can Eat Data with no limits or fair use.

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Three introduces a world without data restrictions on The One Plan

December 15, 2010 – 10:22 am

December 15th 2010: London:

Mobile network Three has opened up data on its ground-breaking tariff  The One Plan.

From today Three moves away from a world of data allowances, to give The One Plan customers all-you-can-eat data, challenging the limited offers and additional charges other operators levy on smartphone users.

The change is aimed at giving customers peace of mind when it comes to data – so they can surf, email, update, watch, listen or play freely on their smartphone – making the most of all it can do.

This is the second time Three has challenged the UK mobile industry with The One Plan.

When The One Plan was introduced in July it was designed to be the most competitive offer on the market – giving customers all the calls and texts they need each month for one simple and affordable price, along with 1GB of data.

But customers say the fear of incurring unexpected data charges is one of the biggest barriers to really making the most of the new smartphone world. With the advent of high definition videos and games, not to mention apps, maps, social media updates, emails music, video calls and much, much more usage will continue to grow and with it the need for a plan that provides reassurance.

So, to ensure our customers continue to experience peace of mind, on the UK’s biggest and best network for smartphones, Three has decided to buck the trend and give people all-you-can-eat data on The One Plan.

While other operators are restricting the data their customers can use before they get hit with out-of-bundle data charges, on The One Plan all limits have been lifted on the amount of data you can consume on your mobile.

Sales and Marketing Director, Marc Allera, said: “The One Plan was already a market-changing offer – we’ve just made it even better.

“At Three we’ve built a network with the scale and scope to meet people’s data needs both now and into the future – and with more and more customers choosing to opt for next generation smartphones, this will prove more important than ever.”

“Everyday thousands of customers buy a smartphone on a two-year contract. The trends clearly show usage grows over time. With its all-you-can-eat data The One Plan will still fit your needs no matter how much data you use.’

“We expect to see more people using mobiles than PCs to access the internet by 2015. all-you-can-eat data is designed to remove the possibility of bill shock when you use data, so you can use your smartphone to do everything it was designed for without the worry of cost.”

The One Plan now offers customer 2,000 any-network minutes, 5,000 Three-to-Three minutes, 5,000 texts and all-you-can-eat data – all from just £25 a month.

Three came first in the most recent YouGov Smartphone Mobile Internet Experience report, and the YouGov iPhone survey, as the number one network in the UK for speed and value.

Following a £400m project to upgrade and improve Three’s 3G network – which was already the biggest in the UK – it now covers more than 97.3% of the UK population.

Article: Local via Go Gadget News

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How the mobile network got chatty

October 22, 2010 – 12:29 pm

When 3G hit the headlines in 2000 it wasn’t the network that was garnering column inches but the extraordinary amount – £22bn – that the mobile operators were prepared to pay for it.

Surely with this price tag it was going to be the technological equivalent of alchemical gold, turning the internet as we knew it then into a magical, fast, and, most importantly, a mobile experience?

Anyone who remembers WAP (Wireless Application Protocol or Worthless Application Protocol as it became known to its detractors) would probably say it turned out to be a very base metal indeed.

3G has spent the last 10 years quietly clawing back its reputation and this year, for the first time, data exceeded voice on mobile networks.

Now mobile firms cope with around five million smartphones running on their network everyday, and data traffic that doubles every six months.

Network collapse

According to ONS figures, 31% of internet users connected to the web via a mobile phone in 2010.

The popularity of iPhones and their equivalents mean that the networks have struggled to cope with a 20-fold increase in data demand in the last year alone.

Three claims to deal with 100 terabytes of data a day.

Gavin Sheldon, head of networks at 02, explained the impact of the new generation of smartphones.

“Watching one YouTube video on an iPhone can be the network equivalent of sending 500,000 text messages,” he said.

Some predict that, as demands grow, the mobile networks will fail to cope.

“The doom-mongers who say that networks will fall over assume operators will do nothing to improve their networks but of course they will,” said Steven Hartley, principal analyst at research firm Ovum.

Chatty apps

Tim Smith, director of the access network at Orange says it is spending “millions and millions of pounds on capacity”.

He is keeping a particularly close eye on the exploding apps market.

“The apps industry is quite diverse and each app has slightly different needs. It is important that developers consider the network,” he said.

Facebook and Twitter are known in the industry as “chatty apps” because they generate multiple requests as often as once every eight seconds to the network.

To meet that level of demand, network operators have to constantly increase network capacity.

Mr Hartley said that there were “101 solutions” to alleviate congestion.

In Belgium, for example, Huawei has overhauled Belgacom’s 3G network with brand new kit, adding new capacity and easing the way into next-generation mobile technologies such as LTE.

Data limits

Consumers are not particularly interested in how the network works as long as it works but they may ultimately pay the price for ever bigger pipes needed to keep up with their demands.

Mr Hartley predicts that the drive to provide ever more efficient networks will mean an increase in tiered packages for light and heavy users, in the same vein as those offered by the fixed line operators.

02 has introduced three new data and pricing tiers – 500MB, 750MB or 1GB, which took effect at the beginning of this month.

“Mobile pricing was designed for the old world of voice and text consumption, not for video and app users,” said Mr Sheldon.

O2 customers will be sent text messages telling them how much data they have used and will then be able to buy bolt-ons if they need them.

Three has also dropped its “unlimited data” tag and predicts further changes.

“In a year’s time I imagine there will be peak and off-peak tariffs for data,” said Marc Allera, sales and marketing director at Three.

Shaun Collins, an analyst with CCS Insight, thinks there will be even greater level of detail in pricing models in the search for ever greater data efficiency.

“Operators may even start to charge by device, forcing those that are data-hungry – iPhone and Android handsets – to reconsider their data footprint,” he said.

It could see a return to the bad, old day of complicated mobile tariffs although the mobile firms stress that the charges will be kept simple for the end user.

The thing that consumers care most about is coverage and it can be difficult to assess which operator does best on this.

No signal

All offer users the chance to check coverage within their postcode but most are using different metrics to measure it, making it hard for consumers to compare like for like.

“The whole area of mobile coverage is a much guarded secret by mobile phone and broadband providers,” said Michael Phillips of consumer website BroadbandChoices.

Three, confident its coverage is better than its rivals, is leading the call for change.

“We’ve challenged our competitors to come up with a common measurement,” said a Three spokesman.

Ofcom did map coverage last year but it relied on information sent by the mobile firms and it was criticised for publishing out-of-date data.

It means that, currently “there is no method of making a sensible geographic comparison of providers and packages”, said Mr Phillips.

Ofcom has now appointed net measurement firm Epitiro to analyse coverage across the UK and the results are expected in January.

It will have to compare a complex set of metrics.

“It is not just about getting a signal but getting a strong signal. Even in urban areas there is poor coverage and there are a lot of factors which affect it, such as how many people are on the network, how many buildings are in the way, how the base station is set up,” said Ovum’s Hartley.

In San Francisco the annoyance over the number of mobile notspots has spilled into a media campaign to map the so-called dead zones in the San Francisco Bay area.

The campaign, co-ordinated by The San Francisco Business Times has plenty of anecdotal evidence about users finding signal strength varying on a street-by-street basis that users in the UK may recognise.

O2 is responding to coverage issues by building 1,550 new sites across the UK by the end of 2010 and Orange and T-Mobile are merging their networks completely.

Three has just announced an expansion to its network, with 12,400 base stations across the UK – compared to 7,800 in 2008.

But operators need to prepare for the next challenge, thinks Mr Allera.

“Tablets will be an amazing growth area for operators and there is a fascinating trend with consumers having more and more devices that carry data. Operators will have to start responding to this,” he said.

Article: RSS via: BBC News

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T-mobile to throttle data beyond 5GB

October 14, 2010 – 11:14 am

Uh-oh. Any data fiends out there on T-mobile may no longer be able to scoff at AT&T’s idea of “unlimited” data, as come October 16, T-mobile are going to start throttling data speeds when a user goes over 5GB.

Of course, data fiends are a special type of person, and most customers won’t even notice the change (T-mobile say that it will only affect 1% of its customer base), but given that their previous limit was 10GB, it does feel like you’re losing a little something.

According to Tmo News, once a customer goes over the 5GB limit, they will receive a free text message from ol’ Magenta, letting them know that they’ve been capped. The cap will remain in place until the next billing cycle.

Personally, I still prefer this to receiving extra charges, but it would be nice to have an option to purchase extra blocks of data, just in case there is something really important that you need to download right now.

Article: RSS via: MobileCrunch

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Verizon Offering Unlimited and 25MB Pre-Paid Data Plans

September 2, 2010 – 11:27 pm

Verizon announced today that they are now offering Unlimited and 25MB 3G data plans for their pre-paid users. The pricing seems reasonable as well — at least on the unlimited plan, which comes in at at $30. At $10 a month, the 25MB plan is a bit steep. Be careful about overages on that 25MB plan; Verizon will charge you $0.20 per megabyte if you exceed your limit.

You can buy the pre-paid plans at Verizon stores today, but they won’t be available online until September 28th.

There is one catch though: Verizon is limiting the new plans to most of their 3G smartphones and multimedia phones, including the Blackberry, Palm, and most Android phones.

Article: RSS via: MobileCrunch

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Virgin Mobile USA fortells unlimited prepaid mobile broadband for $40 a month

August 23, 2010 – 1:38 pm

Whereas AT&T’s move to tiered smartphone data pricing signaled “the end of unlimited” to some, Sprint subsidiary Virgin Mobile USA has just defied that notion with an all-you-can-eat broadband buffet priced at $40 per month. First reported by IntoMobile and confirmed today on the carrier’s Facebook page, the plan will replace existing $20, $40 and $60 monthly offerings that currently top out at just 5GB, so only those accustomed to paying $20 a month (for 300MB) won’t get a totally sweet deal. As you can see above, the $10 for 100MB over 10 days plan will still stay pat, so you can still choose whether to sip or gulp down Sprint network packets when the plans purportedly go into effect on August 24th.

Article: RSS via: Engadget

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Droid X users gobbling up 5x the data of other Verizon smartphones

July 23, 2010 – 12:34 am

Been wondering why Verizon would seek to curb its unlimited data plans with bogus restrictions? Wonder no more. Jennifer Byrne, a business development executive director at Big Red, has shared with us the shocking stat that early data usage from Droid X owners is five times what other smartphones are suckling down. Clearly, the jumbo screen is being used to the fullest by those lucky enough to get an X when they wanted one, and Verizon is (outwardly, at least) really, really excited to see such keen use of its network. Enjoy it while it lasts, Droidsters!

Article: RSS via: Engadget

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