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Today’s column isn’t
Mac-only. In fact, the story you’re about to read could
happen to anyone, regardless of computing platform, gender,
age, sex, or education. So even you Windows users might want
to read on—the information below could save you hundreds
(or thousands) of dollars.
It all began with my Sony Ericsson T68i wireless
phone, a Bluetooth-enabled marvel that works beautifully with
and without my Mac. Because it’s got Bluetooth, I can
do all of the following without connecting a single wire or
cable:
• Synchronize its address book with
Address Book on my Mac.
• Synchronize its calendar with iCal on my Mac.
• Use Address Book on my Mac to select and dial any
phone number with a single click.
• Use an optional wireless Bluetooth headset
• Use it as a cellular modem.
It’s that last one that caused all my
troubles. You see, I thought it sounded so very cool that
I got myself software that makes the connection faster—the
excellent Mobile High Speed for Mac OS X from Nova Media (www.novamedia.de)—and
put it to the test during my trip to Macworld Expo.
My hotel in San Francisco offered Ethernet-based
Internet access for $10.95 a day or $44.95 a week. I giggled
as I connected to the Internet from my room via wireless phone
and downloaded a day’s worth of email—about 200
messages. But even with Mobile High Speed, that took just
over 40 minutes. So I concluded that wireless Internet connections
were cool, but fast Internet connections were cooler. Using
the phone to connect was still too slow for anything but emergencies,
so I abandoned the experiment and paid for a week of high-speed
Ethernet.
It’s a darn good thing I did,
because that one Internet connection—downloading a whopping
7 megabytes of mail, mostly Spam—cost me $226.80.
At first, I thought there must be some mistake, but AT&T
wouldn’t budge. A 40-minute Internet connection via
AT&T Wireless costs more than my phone, more than four
months of high-speed cable modem (or DSL) service, and roughly
as much as an entire year of AOL!
I could have AT&T said my plan
included Internet usage billed at $.03 per megabyte. Three
cents a meg I could live with. The actual price, though, is
$.03 a kilobyte, or roughly $30 per megabyte. The AT&T
customer service rep even said, “megabyte” when
she meant, “kilobyte,” and not just once, but
twice. Even so, the best they would offer was to split the
cost with me.
And so, gentle reader, the moral of
this story is that you should read the fine print or pay for
it later. Put another way, I paid $113.40 for a mailbox full
of spam so you won’t have to.
By the way, to add insult to injury,
the AT&T customer service rep ended our conversation by
offering me promotional packages with up to 4 megabytes of
Internet access per month for $12.99 or up to 10 megabytes
a month for $29.99. While I don’t expect to use the
phone as a wireless modem much in the future, I bought the
$12.99 deal anyway, just in case.
P.S. Apple just announced a new 20-inch
flat-panel Cinema display; price reductions on the 23-inch
Cinema HD and 17-inch Studio flat-panel displays (from $3,499
to $1,999, and $999 to $699, respectively); and an improved
lineup of Power Mac G4s with faster processors, FireWire 800,
and support for AirPort Extreme and Bluetooth. As usual, I’ll
cover them in more detail once I’ve spent some quality
hands-on time with ‘em.
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Bob LeVitus is a leading authority on Mac OS
and the author of 41 books, including The
Little iTunes Book and Mac
OS X for Dummies, 2nd Edition.
E-mail comments to doctormac@boblevitus.com.
Copyright © 2004 Bob LeVitus
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