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Apple’s new iPad can max out your data plan in 10 minutes

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    Apple’s new iPad can max out your data plan in 10 minutes

    Apple’s new iPad can max out your data plan in 10 minutes



    One of the hallmark features of Apple's new iPad is its support for faster 4G mobile networks from carriers Verizon and AT&T, and from experience you will certainly benefit from truly impressive data speeds as a result. Unfortunately, all that blazing speed is going to come at a blazingly high price to match.

    As the graphic below shows, you'll be paying the same price for either 2GB or 5GB worth of monthly data on either carrier at $30 and $50 monthly, respectively; AT&T also offers a smaller 250MB plan for $14.99, and Verizon offers a higher 10GB plan for $80 per month. The trouble is, none of those data caps are actually very high when you start factoring things in like streaming video, audio, beaming high-resolution photographs (one of the features in the new iPhoto for iPad application), or syncing all of your various media files using Apple's own iCloud storage service. Even some apps, particularly games, can clock in at hundreds of megabytes.

    Combine the realities of multimedia file size and a blazing fast connection that allows transfer of said files at unprecedented speeds, and you have a recipe for potentially expensive disaster. One careless download of a 1080p high-definition movie from the iTunes Store over 4G could eat up your entire monthly plan and then some. In fact, if you could achieve download speeds at the theoretical maximum 72Mbps of LTE, you could blow through a 5GB plan in just under 10 minutes, and Verizon's largest 10GB tier in about 20. Real-world speeds of course are actually going to be somewhat lower, but we're still talking about the potential to obliterate your entire expensive monthly data plan in much less than a single day.

    Data pricing remains the Achilles' heel of 4G. Carriers and manufacturers alike are avidly attempting to seduce consumers with the allure of always-on connectivity offering speeds comparable to, if not faster than, our cable internet service at home -- but both sticker and bandwidth shock are going to increasingly confront the average consumer as devices like the new iPad spur greater interest in and adoption of 4G service. To live up to the true promise of 4G, carriers will need to stop pricing mobile data for gentle sipping and find a way to offer reasonable plans that reflect real-world usage of 4G devices.
    Last edited by blacksunshine; 03-08-2012, 12:51 PM.

    #2
    ...I had wondered about that.

    Comment


      #3
      With just two of us on a Verizon air card....2 macs and an ipad....we go thru an average of 8GB a month,

      it's probably closer to 10, but we use wifi in some locations when we are on the road.

      Something's gotta give.......

      Comment


        #4
        [QUOTE=Atfulldraw;5019539]With just two of us on a Verizon air card....2 macs and an ipad....we go thru an average of 8GB a month,

        it's probably closer to 10, but we use wifi in some locations when we are on the road.

        Something's gotta give.......[/QUOTE]

        Too bad it won't be the providers.

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          #5
          The real problem is the fact that they try to limit bandwidth usage by applying a cap. The amount of data that is downloaded is not the problem. It is the amount of data being used by the collective at once. Just because I might download 50GB in a month, doesn't mean that ATT or Verizon is going to run out of data. If I want to download 50GB, I should be allowed to, but at a lower rate. Data is not a bucket, its a pipe. Its not how much you can move through it, its how much you can move through it at a time. The mobile broadband companies understand this, but it is not as lucrative for them as having a CAP.
          thats my .02

          Comment


            #6
            WiFi is your friend.

            Todd

            Comment


              #7
              cha-ching

              Comment


                #8
                I just debated this with someone.

                4g doesn't inherently stream higher amounts of data. It's faster thats all.

                Now it may create an environment where your wants increase but your data usage is going to go up exactly zero from where it is today doing the exact same thing.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Sprint!

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by txdukklr View Post
                    I just debated this with someone.

                    4g doesn't inherently stream higher amounts of data. It's faster thats all.

                    Now it may create an environment where your wants increase but your data usage is going to go up exactly zero from where it is today doing the exact same thing.
                    you got it

                    Comment


                      #11
                      yep.....thats all been in the plans. Every since I saw Steve Jobs say things are going to be free now and not cost 99.00 a year....I smelt a skunk. We've been duped.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Just be wise about it. The best thing is that you get higher speeds for what you are doing now. If you want big pictures and video, do so on a wifi instead of 4g unless you are stuck at an airport or someplace where you have to have that movie. Otherwise, use your head.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by elkbowhunter View Post
                          yep.....thats all been in the plans. Every since I saw Steve Jobs say things are going to be free now and not cost 99.00 a year....I smelt a skunk. We've been duped.
                          what part

                          faster
                          better graphics
                          more features
                          better performance
                          larger number of business applications
                          larger number of personal applications
                          quicker access to information
                          faster networks
                          stronger networks

                          The ipad HD is more powerful then a desktop from ten years ago. Technology, pricing, speeds keep getting better . . . . we want all that we just don't want to pay for it.

                          you play you pay.

                          if you don't want to participate in the unbelievable advances in technology so be it.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            also, the texting plans bit ATT and verizon in the butt when apple launched iOS 5 and now you can text via wifi. I'm sure that's eating into their bottom line and such the price of data had to go up. But yeah, the savings I got in imessage was pretty good. Pay 5 bucks a month for text messages but they don't offer that anymore.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Does it have a SD slot??

                              Comment

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