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A cheaper option for off grid internet?
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K
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17 Dec ’13 - 6:04 pm
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Quite a few of our members have less than stellar options when it comes to internet, high prices with not a lot of data transfer. Our new property has no internet, I will have to depend on tethering through my phone if I want to hop online there, luckily I have unlimited data, but that can go bye bye through verizon at anytime.

I came across this article

http://blogs.wsj.com.....o-the-u-s/

On Monday, Datawind announced that it plans to sell a $38 tablet in the U.S. through as-yet unnamed online and brick-and-mortar retailers early next year. The London-based firm plans to sell three models in the United States, ranging in price from $38 to as much as $149 with varying specs and capabilities.

The goal, says Suneet Singh Tuli, Datawind’s CEO, is the same as it’s always been – to bring the least expensive computers possible to schools and low-income communities.

“Affordability shouldn’t be the reason people can’t get on the Internet,” Tuli said in an interview. “We want to specifically reach a customer base that right now is not on the Internet.” According to the Pew Research Center, 15% of American adults don’t use the Internet.

Tuli says he wants to sell them devices, but also reach children who have limited access to the Web, or no connectivity at home.

“In India, the average person earns $200 to $300 a month and about 13% of people have Internet access,” Tuli said. “It’s easy to criticize our devices based on specs. But prices like this can be liberating in places like that, and there are places in the U.S where affordable technology can have a similar affect.”

Tuli declined to specify sales figures in India, but said that over the past year they have outstripped iPad sales there.

Datawind’s tablets won’t impress anyone with their performance or design. In fact, a major reason why they’re so cheap is that the components inside are outdated by today’s computing standards, making them relatively inexpensive to use in manufacturing, Tuli said.

The $38 UbiSlate 7Ci tablet, running on GoogleGOOG -0.29%’s Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich operating system, features a 1-gigahertz , single-core processor (the sort of CPU found in the first-generation iPad introduced in 2010). Just 4 gigabytes of storage is built in, although microSD card slots are included for those looking for more space to store apps and media. The 7-inch display offers a resolution of 800×480 pixels, which is a far cry from the HD displays found on AppleAAPL -0.45%’s iPads, Amazon’s Kindle Fire’s and Google’s Nexus devices.

But, specifications aren’t the point, access is, Tuli argues. “The power of the Internet is frankly essential in taking societies to the next level, in equipping young people to be able to even make it in the work force,” he said. “We can’t afford to have people who grow up without the Internet.”

Datawind’s $38 tablet is available now on the company’s website and it will be available through more retailers next year after the Consumer Electronics Show in January, which takes place in Las Vegas, Tuli said. The hardware maker will also sell a $100 version of its tablet, called the UbiSlate 7C+, that ships with 1 year of free web browsing over old Edge networks (the same cellular technology that 2007’s first-generation iPhone connected to).

this is the part that caught my attention though

At the top of the company’s lineup will be the UbiSlate 3G7, that runs on 3G networks with free unlimited web browsing, for $150. The UbiSlate 3G7 features a dual-core processor and will run Google’s Android 4.1 Jelly Bean software, which was released more than a year ago. The data to power Datawind’s free web browsing promise will come from little known pre-paid carrier Red Pocket Mobile.

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PorkChopsMmm
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18 Dec ’13 - 10:56 am
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That's a good price, especially if you have signal where you live.

We use a satellite for internet that is ~$90 a month that is as fast as 4G but has high latency, like any satellite, so using Skype doesn't work well at all. I installed an antenna assembly to rebroadcast cell signal. That works well for our cell phone non-data needs.

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K
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18 Dec ’13 - 11:07 am
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agreed, you can enter zipcode here and check the coverage

http://www.att.com/m.....ou-go.html

3g isn't the fastest but for just paying for the tablet, that's a pretty good deal for people like spotted and HFF who have to use hughes net which has a 10 gig cap I believe

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spotted-horses
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18 Dec ’13 - 5:32 pm
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I recently discontinued my Internet. It was 10.00/gig through Verizon. $15 if we went over our allowance which we regularly seemed to do.

So I switched my cell phone to AT&T and they gave me a .99 iPhone. So I'm just doing email and such and will go to town if I have other Internet needs.

Be RADICAL Grow Food

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Horse-Fork-Farm
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18 Dec ’13 - 8:48 pm
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Im in no mans land here. Even ATT has no coverage here. ):

I'd love to have Netflix etc.... but no way.

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K
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19 Dec ’13 - 1:07 pm
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no cable out in your areas?

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MountainMedic
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31 Dec ’13 - 5:23 pm
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We are lucky in that we are just at the functional edge of a tower that provides internet via microwave. We have what looks like a sat dish on our house. we pay $50/mo with no cap. We stream most of our entertainment and this works well 90% of the time. At the time I looked into hughs net, and it seemed like a shitty deal to only be taken if you had no alternative.

Hey PorkChop! Tell me more about the cell booster youu built! We don't have a hard line phone. Cell is pretty sketchy at our place. about 1/3 times I can answer my phone and be able to talk. Text gets to me within a few minutes usually, but a reliable phone would be nice.... as opposed to driving a couple miles to the sweet spot to call the fire dept...

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K
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1 Jan ’14 - 11:20 am
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I would like to hear more about that as well

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