Thursday, January 27, 2011

Sony Ericsson Xperia Play (PlayStation Phone)

We have already seen some photos and videos of the PlayStation Phone from Sony Ericsson, and now the guys over at Engadget have managed to get their hands on one, and we get a look at the specifications, and its official name is the Sony Ericsson Xperia Play.

The Xperia Play features a 4 inch multitouch display with a resolution of 854 x 480 pixelss, it will come with Android 2.3 Gingerbread.

Sony Ericsson Xperia Play

It looks like the Xperia Play will come with a five megapixel camera, with LED flash, plus dual microphone, head on over to Engadget for lots more photos and a hands on video.

For the Love of God, Make This Snow Scraper a Reality

For the Love of God, Make This Snow Scraper a Reality

Over at Quirky, the Snowdozer, a collapsable, double-bladed snow scraper, currently has 145 of the 1200 preorders it needs to go into production. Is there any conceivable cause more important for you to get behind this morning?

As the snow piled up here in New York last night, I watched out my window as people tried to free their cars from their shrouds of snow and ice. A few had the standard single-blade plastic scraper. One dude was using his umbrella. But they all looked pretty miserable.

For the Love of God, Make This Snow Scraper a Reality

What we need is something that will make snow fear us. Something like the Snowdozer. It has a handle for alleviating strain and two blades for simultaneous scraping action. I can't imagine how it wouldn't drastically improve the experience of liberating your icy windshield. It's currently being presold on Quirky for $17, which I think is like Kickstarter in that it takes a certain critical mass of supporters to actually become a real thing. Currently it has 145; it needs 1200. But after last night, I imagine that people are going to jump on the chance to upgrade their winter weaponry. [Quirky via Uncrate]

Sarah Palin Wins the "Space (Between the Ears) Race"

I can only come to one conclusion...

Michelle Bachmann and Sarah Palin are trying to "out-idiot" each other!

Recently, I wrote about "Wild Eyes" Bachmann claiming that our founding fathers strove to their last breaths to eliminate the scourge of slavery from our land... even though the last of the actual "founding fathers" died some three decades before Lincoln freed the slaves.


Today, Caribou Barbie is claiming that the Soviet Union won the "Space Race" and it was that very race that lead to the ultimate collapse of the USSR.

You think I'm kidding, right?

Sarah Palin thinks President Barack Obama needs a history lesson on the space race between the U.S. and the former Soviet Union.

"He needs to remember that, uh, what happened back then with the communist U.S.S.R. and their victory in that race to space," the Fox News contributor said Wednesday night, reacting to Obama's reference to Sputnik in his State of the Union speech. Palin called the Sputnik name drop one of the "W.T.F." moments in the speech, a play of the President's call for "winning the future."

"Yeah, they won but they also incurred so much debt at the time that it resulted in the inevitable collapse of the Soviet Union," Palin said.

Ay, yi, yi!


Sure, the USSR won some of the earlier races, getting the first satellite up there, getting the first man into space, but the FINISH LINE in this race is GENERALLY considered to be LANDING A MAN on the MOON and BRINGING HIM HOME AGAIN!!!!

And the Soviet Union didn't collapse until 22 years after the moon landing, and that collapse was brought about by unsustainable defense spending of which space spending played a tiny part.


Is she really that dense? Or is she pretending?

And why would she want to turn a perfectly serviceable political phrase like "Winning the Future" (Hey, it worked pretty well as a title for one of Newt Gingrich's books) into an obscene text slang abbreviation? What will she tell her younger children, Trip and Trix and Tralaalaa, if they ask her, "Governor Mommy? What does WTF mean?"

Will she LIE? Of course she will. It's what she does.

"That was a tough speech to have to sit through and kind of try to stomach because the president is so off-base in his ideas," said Palin. "And his theme last night in the State of the Union was the 'WTF,' you know, 'Winning the Future.' And I thought, 'OK, that acronym, spot on.' There were a lot of 'WTF' moments throughout that speech."
Asked what she would do differently to lower the unemployment level, Palin did not offer any specific proposals, but insisted that the president's plan was wrong and said Obama had failed to realize the country was already buried under crippling debt. Palin also called for the elimination of National Public Radio and the National Endowment for the Arts, calling them "fluffery."

I mean, God, it's almost like she's the mean dumb chick in high school that everyone laughs about behind her back but no one wants to say anything to her face because she's the head of the "popular mean girls" clique.

Hmmm... apt analogy?

"I've been accused of dividing within that establishment of the Republican Party too for some years now," she continued, "and I don't see it as division. This is one thing that I love about the Republican Party — we believe in competition even within our own party, you know, and we don't have the fighting instincts of a bunch of sheep like I think a lot of Democrats do."

Tell ya what, Barbie... come out of your little home studio, go on a real news network (are there any of those left?) get away from Fox for a minute. I know it means getting away from your comfort zone because they'll let you and Michelle Bachmann and Sharon Angle and whoever else is the Tea Party Darling of the Moment say WHATEVER wacky, provably untrue and malicious thing you want to say without challenging you. But you wanna REALLY go "rogue," Sarah? Sit down with Katie Couric again. Or David Gregory. Or Christiane Armanpour. Or Lawrence O'Donnell. Or Wolf Freakin' Blitzer!

Show us some of those "fighting instincts," you pale gray and increasingly insignificant coward.

Training teachers to take on the creationism/evolution battle

Between March 5 and May 1, 2007, Michael Berkman and Eric Plutzer, political science professors at Pennsylvania State University, sent out mail and e-mail surveys regarding evolution to US public high school biology teachers. Based on 926 responses that came from nearly every state (no responses from Wyoming), they found that only around 28 percent of teachers consistently taught evolution in a forthright manner. The majority of teachers (60 percent) taught evolution cautiously, allowing room for debate and doubt. The rest of the teachers openly advocated creationism.

In a recent issue of Science, Berkman and Plutzer focus much of their article on that 60 percent of cautious teachers who, for one reason or the other, fail to fully support evolution. The authors propose that it is possible to persuade those timid teachers to become advocates of evolution, as the teachers do not exhibit strong conservative markers like believing that the universe is only 10,000 years old. Berkman and Plutzer suggest that the main cause of the problem is that these teachers lack confidence in their grasp of evolutionary biology.

Many of these teachers lack the educational expertise to defend evolution, so they resort to dodging the creationism vs. evolution "controversy" altogether. Some of them shift the blame of having to teach evolution to state examinations, while pointing out to students that they do not need to actually believe it. Other teachers focus on molecular evolution, avoiding macroevolution of species, which prevents students from understanding the complete picture. Finally, some teachers like to provide students with both sides of the discussion and allow students to draw their own conclusions. Berkman and Plutzer find this last approach particularly worrisome, as it gives students the impression that a well-established concept, which is supported by thousands of scientific papers, is debatable based on personal opinions.

To reduce the harmful effects of teaching evolution in an ambivalent way, Berkman and Plutzer recommend requiring biology teachers to take a course in evolution. They argue that if teachers are armed with knowledge, they will be better equipped to stand up to arguments from students and parents.

To learn more about Berkman and Plutzer’s survey and their viewpoints on teaching evolution in the classroom, Ars chatted Prof. Plutzer about the study.

Ars Technica: What prompted you to conduct this study? What did you want to add to the ongoing battle between creationism and evolution in schools?

Eric Plutzer: Michael (the coauthor) and I had young children entering public schools. As political scientists, we felt we weren’t prepared to enter the argument right away, but we got more interested in the politics of the education process. We started with what we were familiar with, which is public opinion and education finance. Once we were adequately familiar, we came back to the topic that originally got us interested. We felt that as political scientists, we can look at it through a new lens.

People have been talking about it for decades, but typically, people looked at it as a clash of ideas, but ignored the fact that the battle really takes place in the schools, not other institutions.

Schools are quite different. We invest a lot in public schools. Schools are especially a volatile arena for politics, because it’s close to people and it reflects the opinions of local communities.

Ars: Not surprisingly, you found a correlation between social conservatism and the acceptance of evolution in schools. I imagine that even if a teacher wanted to teach evolution in a conservative district, they may face parental censure. In your studies, did you get the sense that teachers are afraid of conservative parents?

Plutzer: To answer that, we have to go through several important findings. First, teachers often end up in districts that are like the communities in which they were raised. You can find conservative districts everywhere, not just the stereotypical Evangelical south. Often teachers reflect the opinions of their district, so many of them don’t have a problem with the parents in conservative communities. As a result, they do the bare minimum in teaching evolution. We have found that 4 in 10 personally do not accept evolution.

Second, it may not be so easy for liberal teachers to find jobs in conservative communities, as they might have red flags in their records like having completed a course in evolution. Or, if they do work in a conservative community, they might become uncomfortable and eventually move away. Homogenous districts are easy for teachers, because they can find the lay of the land without difficulty.

Ars: It’s actually the diverse communities that are the most difficult for teachers?

Plutzer: Where it’s really difficult are in diverse districts, where there is a highly educated and cosmopolitan workforce along with fairly conservative megachurches. The challenge is for these teachers to stay out of trouble. They have to teach in a cautious way to avoid complaints from either side. They want to avoid what everyone wants to avoid, which is being called to the principal’s office.

Ars: There’s a very surprising sentence in your paper. You and Prof. Berkman state that “public opinion has been remarkably immune to outreach and public science efforts over the past three decades.” Can you elaborate on that? How did you come to this conclusion, and why do you think that is?

Plutzer: According to the Gallup organization, the percent of people who give the answer that "God created human beings" have stayed basically the same for the last few decades. The NSF Science Indicators survey has a quiz format on basic science questions, and the percentages on those have stayed relatively the same for a long time, too. This is a population average, so this is not to say that individuals don’t change.

On the one hand, we have a more educated public than 30 years ago, and it’s more diverse. It’s difficult to know the details, but basically in spite of an explosion in higher education, we haven’t seen much change in polls. Public education and outreach take a lot of forms. Anyone who’s gone to a museum has been exposed, along with people who read a magazine article devoted to science, watched discovery channel, etc.

People have a lot of opportunities to take in information about evolution, but there’s a lot of information in churches and the internet that takes a contrary position, too.

Outreach by itself has not been sufficient.

However, almost every American has taken a general biology class in high school. It’s around 97 percent of people. This seems like a place that might make the most difference. We know that the material taught in many schools is really cursory. While there are terrific teachers, most typically teach evolution as an isolated unit. Teachers also dissociate from it and not say it has been confirmed by the scientific community.

Some of these teachers change evolution from an institution to an opinion.

Ars: You suggest implementing a rule that requires biology teachers to complete an evolution course. In your paper, you note that completing an evolution course is a strong predictor of how much time a teacher will devote to teaching evolution. But that can be from natural inclination, right? Do you really think taking a course in evolution will have an effect on people who strongly believe in creationism?

Plutzer: You’re right. Correlation is not causation. For those who have a fairly coherent religious belief system, taking an evolution class will probably not change their opinion of the findings of evolutionary biology.

We recommend targeting those who are in the middle 60 percent, because very few of them are creationists. They are open to finding an accomodation between science and religion. They don’t see an inherent problem with evolution, but they don’t feel confident about their understanding of evolution.

Their command of the material is not there. They don’t feel confident in explaining things to parents. So, when they are challenged, the best way to avoid a problem is not to push the envelope. They then teach in as uncontroversial a way as possible. If we can improve their confidence, teach them the counter arguments, and update them on the scientific evidence, they will be less timid and be more willing to implement an evolution curriculum enthusiastically.

Ars: How do we implement the rule that biology teachers must take a course in evolution?

Plutzer: Curriculum in schools is highly decentralized. The required curriculum for teachers is made by individual institutions, and then it’s subject to approval by the state. For example, the curriculum of UCLA will be different than Cal State University-Chico.

The work to change the curriculum for future biology teachers can be initiated by the faculty at institutions that train teachers. Once initiated, it would need approval at the state level. It does not involve lobbying at the legislative level. The scientific community can take the initiative from institution to institution, and this is especially valuable at the mid-level institutions, where the majority of teachers are trained.

Ars: Overall, you would say that we have to take this fight in the direction of changing how we train biology teachers, who will then go teach future students to be more aware of science. Combined with the finding that the public seems to be immune to outreach, should we just give up on the current generation? Is it a bit hopeless for people who already have been taught wrongly?

Plutzer: If we’ve learned anything, it’s that change is going to be slow. Issues with strong moral components are hard to change over a life course. Very few people change their views that are linked and solidified to their value systems within decades or even in their lifetime.

Public change can happen by replacing the population with newer generations.

Population change is a powerful engine of change, but it is slow. Evolution shares certain characteristics with some of these other moral issues that really require patience and long-term plans.

Young Americans will be the engine of change, so we have to focus on their education.


Berkman and Plutzer’s article in Science is only a brief introduction of their research. A thorough analysis is presented in their book Evolution, Creationism, and the Battle to Control America's Classrooms, which came out late last year.

Switching to Verizon iPhone? 3 Ways to Shave the Termination Fee

The Verizon iPhone is due in stores soon, but AT&T customers aching to switch face one nasty hurdle: the early-termination fee.

Many AT&T customers who bought an iPhone are still stuck in two-year contracts, and they’d have to pay a hefty price to get out. In June 2010, AT&T increased the early-termination fee from $175 to $325.

So that means switching to a Verizon iPhone would require buying a new phone and paying the termination fee, which would set you back at least $525. Yeowch.

Pre-orders for the Verizon iPhone 4 begin Feb. 3, and if you just can’t stand the thought of sticking with AT&T any longer, here are a few simple ways to help subsidize the switch.

Sell your iPhone on Gazelle

I’ve sold a number of electronics on Gazelle, an electronics trader, with no issues. Hop over to Gazelle, type in iPhone 4 and answer a few questions about the condition of the phone. Right now Gazelle is quoting a perfect-condition iPhone 4 for $360. Not bad at all — that covers more than the termination fee.

After you opt to sell your iPhone 4 to Gazelle, you enter your information in the site, and then Gazelle will send you a free box with a shipping label to stuff in your iPhone 4. Drop it off at your nearest FedEx location and wait a few weeks for the money to roll in. You can choose to receive payment in the form of check, a PayPal payment or an Amazon gift card.

I like this option because you can get a quote first and mail your iPhone to Gazelle after buying a new one, so you won’t be left phoneless for a few days.

Sell on Craigslist

This solution is obvious: Put your iPhone 4 on Craigslist and wait for the fish to bite. There’s a good chance you’ll get more money than you would from Gazelle, if you’re willing to put up with often-flaky Craigslist buyers. Some iPhone 4 listings on Craigslist are going for as high as $600.

If you take this route, we recommend erasing all data from the device and removing your SIM card before handing it off to a stranger.

Trade it in to Verizon

Verizon has a trade-in program, where you can swap your AT&T iPhone for a Verizon Wireless gift card, which can go toward your purchase of a Verizon iPhone. To get a quote, visit Verizon’s trade-in program website and enter your iPhone model.

If you choose to sell the device, Verizon will mail you a self-addressed prepaid envelope. Drop it off at a mailing center and wait for that gift card. Verizon is currently quoting the 16-GB AT&T iPhone 4 at $212.

Now for a brief look at what comes after 4G!!

LTE-Advanced tested at 600Mbps in Korea


The South Korean government's Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) has demoed one of the first public instances of LTE-Advanced. A test mobile media broadcast system peaked at 600Mbps, or six times faster than regular LTE, and was capable of speeds that could easily outperform most landlines. The agency downloaded a CD-sized 700MB movie in 9.3 seconds and could stream 3D TV even while roaming in a test vehicle.

The technology is still in its early stages and wouldn't be ready in Korea until 2014, or four years after the first standard LTE networks went live in the US. A single-chip LTE-Advanced design should be ready in the next three years. AT&T, Verizon and most major North American and European carriers will likely have completed their LTE networks by then but might have a quicker path to upgrades than the leap from 3G. [via Telecoms Korea and Engadget]


Motorola admits Verizon iPhone triggered 'slowdown' in Droid

Motorola warns Verizon iPhone already damaging


Motorola chief Sanjay Jha during the company's fiscal results call acknowledged that the Verizon iPhone was already damaging his company's smartphone performance. Shipments were not only down both in the wake of the January 11 Apple news but even in the weeks before it was made official. The CEO wouldn't quantify numbers but admitted that anticipation for the iPhone had led some to hold off on buying a Droid.

"We have seen a little slowdown in our sellthrough of our devices," Jha said. "We have seen that effect even prior to the iPhone."

He was still optimistic that Motorola could succeed but was counting primarily on diversifying its high-end Android mix in the US beyond Verizon, such as with the Atrix 4G at AT&T. Motorola also still had a "meaningful relationship" with Verizon. He didn't assume that Motorola would necessarily hold its leading position at the CDMA carrier and said "time will tell" as to whether the iPhone or Droid lineups would be more popular in stores.

The phone designer added that mid-tier smartphones were a problem in the US. Even after US carriers like AT&T and Verizon imposed bandwidth caps or offered lower tiers, which Motorola assumed would drive users to cheaper phones, customers kept buying high-end phones like the Droid 2 and Droid X. That worked against Motorola as it misjudged sales and had to compete more in the same space as rivals like Apple.

Sony NGP (PSP2) official: 5-inch OLED and 3G rival the iPod

Sony unveils NGP to take on iPod touch

Sony at its special event on Thursday leapt back into mobile gaming with the Next Generation Portable. The soon-to-come PSP2 promises a PS3-level experience with a much faster, quad-core ARM Cortex-A9 processor and a multi-core PowerVR SGX543MP4 graphics chip four times faster than seen before. It centers on a massive five-inch, 960x544 OLED screen that promises a much larger experience than on a smartphone.

The handheld is also the first portable console to have a built-in 3G modem and, if players want, gives them an always-on internet connection for multiplayer or downloading content when not near 802.11n Wi-Fi. GPS is onboard as well. A special app, Near, will let users see what other gamers are currently playing or saying, such as on a train; it should let them join in or download a game they don't yet have. It can even show the most popular game in an area.

LiveArea, the new main interface, completely overhauls the experience and provides both live updates from friends as well as quick access to games, the store, trophies and a web browser.

Control is much broader and brings dual analog sticks with real tilt as well as both a touchscreen and a backside, two-finger multi-touch pad. The touchpad is the same five inches across as the LCD and gives games a one-for-one map of what's happening onscreen. A Sixaxis equivalent with a gyroscope and accelerometer lets players control games by moving and tilting the system itself.

Both front and back cameras are onboard and also raise possibilities of camera-based gaming and video chat. The game system hopes to strike a balance between the original PSP's physical media and the PSP Go's downloads with an option of a new, memory card based format for storage. Games that come on the new card will still have free write space and can save downloadable extras or game saves. Sony noted that the inherently growing capacity of flash memory meant that future games could have more content or more room, something which hadn't been possible with past physical games.

Sony promised a sweeping range of high-profile game series additions from the start, including Hot Shots Golf, Little Big Planet, Resistance, Wipeout and Uncharted. The company also noted that Activision's Call of Duty series would eventually reach the platform, while Konami, Sega and Epic Games showed technology demos of Metal Gear Solid 4, Yakuza 4 andEpic Citadel that proved PS3-quality graphics could work on the NGP, albeit in MGS4's case at a reduced 20FPS in current form.

Downloadable PSP games will still work, as will those from PlayStation Suite, the new cross-platform environment for PS1 games.

The game system is due to ship to at least Japan in time for the holidays and should get many more details, including launch games, at E3 in June. A US date hasn't been given out, but the original PSP reached the US a few months afterwards.

The NGP represents a major leap forward for Sony and a possible recovery of its handheld gaming business, which collapsed rapidly as the iPod touch grew in popularity. SCEI president Kaz Hirai in presenting the NGP acknowledged a "radical change" in the gaming market since 2005 that was triggered largely by the iPhone and iPod; casual gaming was now an option on a smartphone, he said.

In the past year, the company has lost enough share to Apple that it began running anti-iPhone ads to argue that the touch-only platform couldn't provide a deep gaming experience. PSP-level graphics weren't possible on a phone at the time the first PSP arrived, Hirai said on Thursday to justify the lack of development.

Including 3G is a potential major edge for the new console and could eliminate one of the most common gaps in the experience for iPod touch and Nintendo DSi owners, who can't assume they have Internet access and are excluded from many location-based apps. Questions have been raised as to how much 3G will cost as the size of game downloads and the bandwidth needed for multiplayer make it unlikely that service will be given away for free and thus affordable for younger players. Many iPhone owners often use theirs for gaming as it consolidates gaming and cellphone calls into a single device.

Nintendo reports quarterly results, profits down 46 percent

Sales slow further on back of stiffer competition

Nintendo has reported its October to December quarterly results, which have arrived below analysts’ estimates. Profits fell 46 percent on the back of stalling DS handheld console sales and stiffer competition from both Sony and Microsoft who both recently debuted motion-controlled interfaces. Nintendo returned an operating profit of $1.3 billion, down from $2.3 in the year ago quarter.

While Nintendo has been fighting off competition from Microsoft and Sony in the console wars, it has also seen its handheld sales slump in the face of competition from Apple’s iPod touch. Consequently, Nintendo has revised its sales forecasts for the next quarter. It estimates that it will now ship 16 million Wii consoles, instead of a previously forecast 17.5 million. It also now believes that it will ship 22.5 million DS handhelds, down from 23.5 million. One reason cited for the slow down was the company’s inability to ship the forthcoming 3DS, glasses-free 3D handheld console in time for the holiday season.

Despite the news Nintendo shares closed 0.9 percent higher, although its shares dropped 12.5 percent over the course of 2010. [via Reuters]

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Under Construction

Under Construction

This is The Shard, a skyscraper currently under construction next to the London Bridge, as photographed by Rob Telford. It goes to show that with the right perspective, even an incomplete building can be a thing of beauty.

When it's finished next year, the Shard will be the tallest building in the European Union, though presumably it won't have the big blue numbers on the side counting the stories.

Wired Explains: What U.S. Carriers Mean by ‘4G’

  • 1:33 pm

In 2011, wireless carriers are banking on you going 4G with your next smartphone purchase.

Verizon says it will release 10 different 4G enabled handsets in the next year. AT&T says it will double that number, with 15 of its own offerings being Android OS-based devices. And T-Mobile, which offers a handful of 4G phones, claims its network is “America’s largest 4G network.”

But with all the wireless industry jargon being thrown around in marketing campaigns these days, it’s still unclear just what each carrier actually means when it touts its network as “4G.”

Let’s take a look behind the fog of marketing jargon that U.S. customers face today.

4G Technologies

Loosely defined, 4G stands for the the fourth generation of cellular wireless standards. In the narrow terms originally defined by International Telecommunication Union standards, it doesn’t count as 4G unless it offers download speeds of 100Mbps to 1Gbps. That’s about 100 times faster than any speeds we’re seeing on networks now.

If we were to judge the networks available to us now by this standard, none of them would be considered 4G.

Luckily for the carriers, we aren’t judging that way — at least, not any more. In December at the ITU World Radiocommunication Seminar in Geneva, the ITU allowed the term “4G” to “also be applied to the forerunners of these technologies, LTE and WiMax, and to other evolved 3G technologies providing a substantial level of improvement” compared to current 3G networks.

AT&T wasted no time embracing the new nomenclature, relabeling its network overnight.

And well it might, as rival T-Mobile has been using the same nomenclature for the same technology since early 2010.

Before we delve into each carrier’s offerings, let’s review the competing technologies being used today.

WiMAX

Developed by the IEEE, WiMAX is one of two competing technologies to blaze the 4G trail. WiMAX, also known as 802.16, is in the same family of standards as Wi-Fi. Sprint and Clearwire own the biggest share of the 2.5GHz spectrum — “the most readily usable licensed spectrum in the United States,” according to information site WiMAX.com – across which WiMAX is carried.

Users can typically expect download speeds of 2-4Mbps, with upload speeds topping out around .4-.5Mbps.

LTE

LTE stands for long-term evolution, the leading competitor to WiMAX for next-generation wireless data. Instead of expending efforts deploying a new network infrastructure — like Sprint has done and continues to do with WiMAX — LTE proponents like AT&T update existing 3G networks. While the WiMAX network is more fully developed at the moment, LTE won’t be widely available until 2013, according to forecasts from both AT&T and Verizon.

But LTE has the advantage in speed. Users can typically expect download speeds of 5-12Mbps, with upload speeds ranging from 2-5Mbps.

HSPA+

This is where it gets a bit tricky. High-speed packet access, or HSPA, is a third-generation (3G) data technology that’s widely used today. A faster version, HSPA+, has been widely considered 3.5G, until the ITU decision in December opened up those terms to a more liberal interpretation. Sprint, Verizon and AT&T weren’t happy. The technology is an incremental approach to upgrading existing HSPA networks, not a whole new generation of technology.

Still, the ITU decision means carriers can start referring to their HSPA+ networks as 4G. Speed tests of smartphones on HSPA+ networks have varied greatly, but users can generally expect download speeds of 1-3Mbps, with upload speeds from 0.4-0.8Mbps.

Let’s take a look at the big four U.S. mobile carriers and the flavors of “4G” they’re boasting.

Sprint

Launched in June of last year, the HTC Evo was the first WiMAX smartphone to appear commercially within the United States, as well as the first 4G-capable smartphone to hit Sprint’s network. With its attractive $10 a month unlimited 4G data plan, Sprint’s bottom line is the figure to beat.

Technology: WiMAX
Average Download/Upload Speed: 2-4.5Mbps down/.4-.5Mbps up, based on PCMag nationwide testing
Data Plan Cost: Unlimited data for $10/month
Availability: Currently available in over 70 markets

T-Mobile

It wasn’t a year ago that saw T-Mobile pimping itself out as the nation’s “largest 3G network.” But since 4G became the new black, T-Mobile started boasting “4G speeds” on its HSPA+ network, eventually relabeling the network itself as 4G. With a network that hosts 34 million data-thirsty subscribers, what you’ll most likely be getting are speeds somewhere in the 1-3Mbps down, and 0.4-0.8Mbps up range,according to recent testing.

T-Mobile ranks fourth in the U.S. amongst wireless carriers, but doesn’t want to be in that spot forever. The company will position itself as an “affordable data services” company in 2011 and beyond, according to Rene Olbermann, CEO of parent company Deutsche Telekom. T-Mobile plans to add over 25 4G devices in 2011, including the Samsung Galaxy S 4G,

Technology: HSPA+
Average Download/Upload Speed: 1-3Mbps down/0.4-.8Mbps up, based on PCMag nationwide testing
Data Plan Cost: 5GB/month for $40; 200MB/month for $25. Pre-paid plans also available.
Availability: Wide availability, with over 100 major cities covered by the network.

Verizon

Just recently launched in December, Verizon’s fledgling network measures in at the smallest, with service provided to 38 major metropolitan areas across 22 states. The company plans to expand its coverage nationwide by 2013. With a suite of 10 4G devices announced at CES in January — including HTC’s mammoth Thunderbolt smartphone and the sexy Motorola Xoom tablet – we’ll have to wait and see if network expansion can keep up with customer demand.

Technology:
LTE
Average Download/Upload Speed: 5-12Mbps down/1-5Mbps up, based on real-world testing from Verizon
Cost: Unlimited data for $30/month; 2GB/month for $20. Prepaid plans also available.
Availability: 38 metropolitan areas across 22 states

AT&T

AT&T has rebranded its enhanced 3.5G network with careful caveats that claim “4G speeds” rather than naming the HSPA+ network itself 4G. But unlike T-Mobile, AT&T is following in step behind Verizon with plans for LTE upgrades to its network to be completed by 2013 (just like Verizon). As of today, AT&T has deployed HSPA+ to “virtually 100% of its mobile broadband network,” company spokesperson Seth Bloom told Wired.com in an email, “which enables 4G speeds when combined with backhaul.”

Technology: HSPA+, roll-out to LTE in 2011
Average Download/Upload Speed: 1.5-3Mbps down/0.25-0.4Mbps up, based on PCMag nationwide testing
Cost: 2GB for $25/month; 200MB for $15/month.
Availability: HSPA+ is widely available across the continental U.S.; LTE to be deployed in 2013.

AT&T Offering Unlimited Data to Keep iPhone Customers From Defecting to Verizon?

Associated Press reports that AT&T is quietly offering some of its iPhone customers the ability to switch to unlimited data plans as a means to keep them from defecting to Verizon, which is rolling out an unlimited data plan of its own for a limited time as the carrier launches the iPhone next month.

According to the report, AT&T's offer is being made to customers who had previously been on an unlimited data plan for the iPhone on AT&T but had switched to one of the company's lower-cost capped plans when it restructured its data plans as the iPhone 4 was announced last June. As part of that restructuring, customers with unlimited data have been permitted to retain their plans, but those who opted to switch to capped plans were told that once that change had been made they would be unable to switch back to unlimited data at any time in the future.

Based on this new report, AT&T appears to quietly be making exceptions to that policy, allowing users to move back to unlimited data rather than seeing them defect to Verizon.

Verizon Wireless will start offering the iPhone on Feb. 10 with a draw that AT&T no longer offers to new subscribers: a plan with unlimited data usage. But The Associated Press has learned that some AT&T iPhone users on limited plans won't need to move to Verizon for unlimited data.

In an unadvertised loophole, AT&T Inc. has allowed subscribers who have had an unlimited data plan in the past to switch back. That includes anyone who had an iPhone before June, when the limited plans took effect.

AT&T has declined to comment on the change in policy.

Personal femtocell to cut roaming costs on iPhone, Android

Posted on Jan 26, 2011 10:50 am by Mikael Ricknäs, IDG-News-Service:Stockholm-Bureau

Femtocell maker Ubiquisys has developed a new type of small base station for 3G mobile phones that it calls an attocell. Plugged into a laptop PC with Internet access, it allows 3G phones to bypass international roaming charges and make phone calls as though they were still on their home network, the company said on Wednesday.

Although developed initially for the iPhone, the attocell works out of the box with any 3G phone, and has been tested with smartphones running Android or operating systems from Nokia and Research In Motion, said Ubiquisys.

The attocell connects to a user’s laptop via USB, and relays phone calls and mobile Internet access via the laptop’s Internet connection. For the latter it connects to the phone using HSPA (High-Speed Packet Access). The product has inherited a lot of technology from Ubiquisys’ femtocell products, using the same signaling to talk to an operators network. Femtocells are typically distributed by mobile network operators to improve coverage. Calls made through them are tunneled through a fixed broadband connection, over the Internet and back to the operator’s mobile network, where they are connected to the public telephone network.

Like Ubiquisys femtocells, the attocell also monitors its surrounding radio environment to ensure that there is no impact on existing mobile networks. When turned on, the product analyses the IP address and radio environment to determine which country it is in, and then configures the radio power to the locally allowed level.

Depending on the allowed power output, the transmitter could reach just 5 millimeters, or cover a whole room. In the first case, the phone has to be placed on top of the attocell, with calls made using the phone’s headset, said Keith Day, vice president of marketing at Ubiquisys. Radio licensing regulations make the 5 millimeter range the most likely scenario, said Day.

The cost of the phone calls will be up to operators that sign on to sell the product. Ubiquisys has been talking to operators for a few months, and is optimistic about the attocell’s future, but isn’t ready to announce the first operator customer, Day said.

Today, there are a number options for international travellers that want to cut the cost of calling. One is to call from a PC using a VOIP (voice over Internet Protocol) service such as Skype. Skype also offers a mobile client that can be installed on smartphones and allow users to make calls via a wireless data connection. Travellers outside their home country will need to find a cheap or free Wi-Fi hotspot in order to avoid 3G data roaming charges for such Skype calls, though.