[Electronics-talk] Mobile hot spot question

gosselin_louis gosselin_louis at myfairpoint.net
Sat Sep 13 11:45:37 UTC 2014


The advantage of a land line is that you are not so likely to lose it when
power is lost.  Also, 911 calls made from a landline can produce more
reliable information about your whereabouts, than calls of that kind made
from a cell phone.

Louis Gosselin

-----Original Message-----
From: Electronics-talk [mailto:electronics-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Jim Barbour via Electronics-talk
Sent: Friday, September 12, 2014 1:55 PM
To: Linda; Discussion of accessible electronics and appliances
Subject: Re: [Electronics-talk] Mobile hot spot question

Hey Linda,

This is called tethering.  That is, it's possible to tether your ipad or
laptop to your cell phone so they can use your cell phone's internet.

There are several caveats here worth paying attention to.  The bottom line
is that I was set it up, test it, and understand how this will impact your
cell phone bill before turning off your household internet.

Below are a bunch of things that can go wrong with tethering.  Please don't
think I'm saying you shouldn't do it.  Tethering as your only internet
connection can work fine for folks, you just need to know what your
limitations are.

1) Your data plan needs to support it.  Depending on your carrier, you may
pay a fee for tethering service.  They'll understand the word tethering if
you call them and ask.

2) Tethering devices to your phone will likely mean that you'll be using
more data.  Be aware of your data cap, if any, and consequences for going
over the cap.

3) Your cell phone internet is very likely slower than your household
internet.  i.e. file transfers, etc. will likely take longer, and certainly
you won't be able to do as many things at one time.

5) with 99% certainty, I will say that you will only be able to tether one
device at a time to your phone.  If you're very techy, you can tether a wifi
access point to your phone, and that wifi access point can aczamodate more
devices at once.  Be aware of how this will effect the speed of your
connection and the amount of data being used.

Feel free to write back with questions.

Take Care,

Jim

On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 01:38:05PM -0400, Linda via Electronics-talk wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I want to make sure I have the proper understanding of what a mobile hot
spot is before I give up my landline and internet service.
>
> I heard that a smartphone can somehow be connected to my iPad so that I
will still be able to use it or my laptop.
>
> Is this tru?  Is it easy to connect to the mobile hot spot?  Thanks for
your assistance.  I have never been without a landline, and want to make
sure I'm doing the right thing in getting rid of it.
>
> Linda
> _______________________________________________
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