Mike Wilks' Blog

Technology

No FTTC for me

by on Jan.02, 2012, under Technology

Even though our exchange is due to be upgraded for FTTC in March there is no plan for it to come to our cabinet. Lots of new FTTC cabinets have appeared but our local PCP remains untouched. According to my ISP there is no planned date for our cabinet. This is the small print in the Infinity publicity – not all cabinets get it.

So we are stuck on 2Mbs ADSL and a Three tethered phone on the One Plan which is increasingly putting the slow ADSL out of use. My record from the phone is now 9.1Mbs on the bedroom window sill.

9.10Mbs down

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Even better speeds on Three

by on Dec.03, 2011, under Technology

I’ve upgraded my mobile to a Galaxy Nexus which has HSPA+. I now get much better speeds on Three that put my ADSL to shame.

Better Speedtest

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Kogan 7″ Android Tablet

by on Sep.03, 2011, under Technology

The Kogan tablet is £119 plus delivery on their website but if you are patient you can get it £30 cheaper on eBay.

For a 7″ Android 2.3.3 Tablet with a capacitive screen that is stupidly good value.  I’ve rooted mine to play about with Android but even on the stock ROM it is an awesome bit of cheap kit.

Other than a bit of trouble getting the SD card to lock in place and limited battery life I have no complaints.

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I have Spotify Invites

by on Jul.16, 2011, under Technology

Having been a Spotify Premium subscriber for a long time I have quite a few invites. These were pointless until the recent US launch but now seem to be in demand. I’m not going to go the ebay route (although I won’t turn stuff down!) but I will give these out.

DM me on twitter (@mikewilks) if you want one.

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My mobile phone is faster than my home broadband

by on Jul.03, 2011, under Technology

The hero of this little piece is Three and the Villain BT.

Three seem to have done something to the transmitter covering our house as I am now getting consistently better speeds than I did before. The signal is dodgy and only works in the front of the house but even so now manages to consistently give 2.5 to 3Mbs. This is faster than my home ADSL connection which achieves about 2.3Mbs even after reducing the SNR to make it faster but unstable. That clever piece of SNR trickery is made possible by our ISP ADSL24 who I am very happy with, they offer truly unlimited internet on the Premium Home product but are constrained by the infrastructure serving our house.

There is potential for BT to reverse the situation when Fibre to the Cabinet (FTTC) finally gets rolled out to our exchange, they have announced that for next year. That said in the cabinet specific data that leaked earlier this year our cabinet ominously had no FTTC besides it. This might just be because we are on a new estate or it might be (fingers crossed) that the estate with all its underground ducting is being saved for the faster Fibre to the Premises (FTTP).

In the meantime I find myself increasingly increasingly tethering my mobile at home and using this as my primary connection. I cannot recommend Three’s One Plan highly enough, it really is unlimited. I spend so much time in hotels that this plan made perfect sense and allowed me to cancel my Orange data card saving me £28 a month. Previously Orange came closest to properly unlimited data with a plan they offered briefly allowing “unlimited” off peak downloads, it was limited to 5Gb a day.

I have to put up with a less than perfect mobile signal in some parts of the house but when it does have a signal it is faster than my home broadband.

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Bad Experience with Vodafone UK

by on Jan.17, 2011, under Technology

I’ve had two sim-only contracts from Vodafone over the last year, one used by me and one by my fiancée. The end of the year is up so I’ve been looking around for better deals. I spend most of my time using data rather than calls and spend a lot of time in hotels. I am absolutely sold on the idea of the new Three One Plan with properly unlimited data but for the other number we genuinely were looking to get the best offer possible.

When I called to request a PAC for my number all was OK until I asked about offers on the other number. The two deals offered were both worse than staying on a rolling 30 day contract.

When the cancellation department called prior to issuing the PAC code things got worse. I had signed up for 900 minutes, 3000 texts and 1Gb data. The CS rep who called seemed to be under the impression I had 1200 minutes but only 500MB. I was leaving anyway but this doesn’t help. Confirming by looking at my online account I believe I am correct.

For my fiancée’s number we genuinely would stay for a decent offer but Vodafone really need to step up their game to regain confidence with me. We’ve contacted @VodafoneUKDeals so let’s see how we get on.

UPDATE:

Having got a call from the web relations team things seem to have got much better. Upgrade offer for my financée’s number accepted. 900 minutes, 3000 texts, 1Gb data for £15 a month (for 9 months then £30 for the remaining 3).

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MrSimCard, Localphone and a week in the US

by on Aug.07, 2010, under Technology

I recently spend a week in the US. On previous trips I have done without mobile data access and relied on hot spots. This year I decided to splash out and get a US SIM with data access. I chose MrSimCard basically because he appears to be the only game in town. The SIM I went with was $99 with unlimited web, phone and texts . This is actually a resold Simple Mobile SIM so you are paying a premium of around $40 (Simple sell it for $60). That said it is unclear to me whether you can actually get this delivered direct from Simple outside of the US or whether you could actually walk into a reseller in the US and buy without a US address. Either way I felt like I got reasonable value from MrSimCard.

Activation was a quick call to MrSimCard who activated the SIM on the phone and read the number to me. When we arrived the setup was easy, and we had working data and voice/text in the cab from the airport. Before I left I swapped a few emails with MrSimCard because I was concerned over whether the data was actually unlimited. I was assured it was and this seemed to be true. While in the US I managed to rack up over 2Gb of data mostly in podcasts but quite heavy browsing, foursquare and lots of usage of google maps. I never had an issue with signal or download speed but then we were mostly in Manhattan with the trips to Queens (to see the Mets), Bronx and New Jersey. The SIM reports it is on the Simple network but I understand this is the T-Mobile one underneath.

As a quick side note having phone access allowed us to make use of the Localphone calling card feature which seems to have better call quality than using VOIP (certainly over a 3G network). Localphone was pretty good for the whole week. Incoming calls to my UK based number allowed people at home to call me with me only paying the 1p/min divert costs to my US mobile. Outgoing calls works pretty well too, the only slight niggle was that one of the setup US numbers did not forward correctly to a mobile I was trying to call in the UK but I was able to call it through the calling card access number.

Skype on the other hand was a different story. I have credit in my Skype account from before I knew better. Skype have an access number system called Skype to Go which I decided to give a try. In contrast to my experience with Localphone the call quality was horrible. DTMF was so patchy that I managed to lock-out my work voicemail because while it seemed to get the number I was dialling it clearly didn’t pass the PIN correctly. I had similar DTMF problems trying to use my creditcard phone service.

In conclusion the SIM from MrSimCard in combination with Localphone was a great combination albeit a little expensive for the SIM itself. Skype was a huge disappointment, this along with the refusal to create a decent Android app means I am pretty much done with Skype – besides which I find Localphone much better.

I have no relationship with any of the companies mentioned here other than customer.

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Thoughts on my Nexus One

by on Jan.10, 2010, under Technology

I ordered a Nexus One during the announcement event and I’ve had it a couple of days now. I got it to replace my iPhone 3G (not S) which is looking slightly long in the tooth now. Initial thoughts:

Positives

  • It is blazing fast compared to the iPhone 3G.
  • The screen is much crisper and colours pop more.
  • The gMail client is infinitely better than the mail on the iPhone.
  • No more 10Mb download limit on podcasts over 3G !
  • Voip over 3G with Sipdroid and localphone.com is a killer app. That said SipDroid doesn’t seem to like localphone direct so I need to configure pbxes.org which will hopefully give better results.

Negatives

  • I really miss 1Password – hopefully there is an Android version before too long.
  • Multi-touch is not there on the standard apps. Not a huge thing but muscle memory keeps trying to do it.
  • Bookmark sync with safari is going to take some getting used to not having. That said Crossmarks mobile site as a replacement is working pretty well so far.

I’m currently on the O2 Simplicity for iPhone tariff so I thought I better tell them I no longer had an iPhone. In theory the normal Simplicity tariff has more minutes and texts than the iPhone one but in reality I never get anywhere near using them.  Calling O2 just led to confusion. Once I got across what I wanted to do they initially told me that I should move to Simplicity 20 – but only if I was sure I wasn’t going back to iPhone. Eventually after he struggled with the system for 5 minutes while I was on hold he advised me to leave it as is. If there’s any come back about me being on the wrong tariff I might need to request they listen to the tape!

The phone is unlocked so I guess I need to look through the Sim only deals out there. O2 is not a great signal where I live but does seem to be properly unlimited data (at least they have never complained). I spend at least as much time away from home as at home so I can just about live with 3 bars of 2G at home. Vodafone is a much better 2G signal (in fact we can see the 2G only tower) but has a pathetic 500Mb limit as does Orange. That said at least I could just about get a 3G signal on Orange at home. I really do not understand how they are allowed to advertise 500Mb as unlimited. 3 and T-Mobile are complete non-starters as there is no signal at home. Decisions decisions, my Vodafone 3G data contract is up in a couple of months just to complicate things, the Mifi I use in theory means I need less phone data when I travel.

More updates as I live with the phone a bit longer.

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Backupify

by on Dec.26, 2009, under Technology

I came across Backupify on some podcast or other. Their concept is fantastic – we all trust much of our data to the cloud now and Backupify backs up cloud data. Backupify is free until the end of January which also helps. The supported services have must people covered, I have started to use it for backing up WordPress, Twitter and Google Docs but it does other things.

Setup is dead easy and once you have authorised your accounts you just sit back and it does the hard work with daily or weekly backups. When I first signed up I had a couple of issues: the Google Docs backups just contained a line saying not authorised and my Twitter account had been ignored. I deleted the Google Docs accounts and re-added, I also got a reply on Twitter from Backupify so I am not sure whether they fixed it or I did – either way it works now. The only slight issue I have is that my WordPress has not backed up more than once, this may well be because it hasn’t changed but positive confirmation would be nice.

I have no affiliation with Backupify other than being a user of it and thinking it is a very cool concept that deserves to succeed. They also answered a tweet on Christmas day which makes them as sad as me!

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Snow Leopard, Windows 7, VMWare Fusion and PGP

by on Oct.31, 2009, under Technology

I finally got around to doing some upgrades on my MacBook recently. Snow Leopard has been sat on my desk for a little while but I was put off by PGP Whole Disk Encryption being a known issue with it. My MacBook spends a fair amount of time in hotel rooms so I wasn’t keen to remove it. I weighed the risks of going with the Snow Leopard friendly Beta of PGP and decided to give it a go. The thing that actually put me over the edge was the new Version (3) of VMWare Fusion.

So in order here is what I did:

  1. Paid for an upgrade from Fusion 2 to 3 and installed.
  2. De-encrypted with PGP and uninstalled
  3. Installed Snow Leopard
  4. Installed PGP 10 Beta and re-encrypted

All this worked fine. I actually also bought a download delivered Windows 7 Home Premium to run under Fusion also. Windows 7 itself is pretty impressive and works well under Fusion. I probably didn’t need to shell out £80 for an OS that is secondary and only going to be used under Fusion but I like new shiny technology. I’d had an RC version which had pretty much replaced my Vista install as my windows operating system already so this was a natural progression.

So I now have a nice shiny version of OSX with the new Windows running under the new VMWare all protected by a (too) new PGP – good stuff.

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