Meanwhile, here in Australia, if you ask your mobile phone provider about them, you’re lucky if you get a “huh?” as your response.
We’ve spoken in the past about femtocell technology: devices that act as a small mobile phone cell, perhaps right in your own living room. These devices connect as a part of your local intranet connection, but connect back to your mobile phone service provider to give you coverage when you live, as I do, in what effectively is a Faraday Cage.
In the US, AT&T are now rolling these out into all regions, but here, nobody knows a damn thing about them Get your acts together, mobile service providers. You are not providing us with the services we’re paying you for.
Related posts:
- In Me We Trust How would you like to see your face on the...
- The INQ1: Kids Phone Home The good folks at three.com.au gave me one of their...
- Altec Lansing inMotion SoundBlade Altec Lansing’s SoundBlade is more than just an external Bluetooth...
- Support for Windows XP (SP2) ending on July 13 Microsoft have reminded us – which means everybody – that...
- Samsung UltraTouch It seems like everyone’s getting in on the whole “touchscreen...