Washington, D.C./Telekommunikationsabieter

From Wikimania 2012 • Washington, D.C., USA
This page is a translated version of the page Washington, D.C./Telecoms and the translation is 50% complete.
Outdated translations are marked like this.
   All- gemeine Informa- tionen      Ge- schichte      Topo- grafie und Klima      Ver- kehr      Sehens-würdig- keiten      Kultur und Sport      Touris- ten- attrak- tionen      Wohin etwas Essen gehen?      Wohin etwas Trinken gehen?      Tele- kommuni- kations- anbieter    

Hoffentlich wird das die erste Wikimania, die das WLAN-Problem knackt und außerdem funktionierendes WLAN in den Unterkünften bietet.

  • So, to make things the easiest for those accustomed to Europe/Asia systems: if you're used to SIM cards and 3G on an unlocked phone you're bringing yourself, the easiest to deal with is AT&T. They play on the right frequencies, and use WCDMA standard most everyone else does. It won't be cheap!
  • Verizon and Sprint are a NO GO: they use the US-centric version of voice and 3G, based on CDMA: no SIM cards, no GSM
  • SimpleMobile, as mentioned before, is somewhat flawed. It seems like a good deal if you're a GSM user for voice, text, 2G. However, they use the T-Mobile 3G system on the 1700 Mhz band, which is unusual. (In short: no iPhone will work on this using 3G, nor will most international 3G phones like Samsung Galaxy S II, etc.).
  • There may be other MVNO or 2nd tier operators for cheaper, but I wouldn't bother unless you really know what you're doing. For most of the world, prepaid is widely used by normal folks and travelers. In the US, it's targeted towards low-income, risky phone users, so there's not a lot of premium choices here.
  • WARNING: US cell phone store workers are typically quite incompetent. That you can bring a phone from overseas and pop in an AT&T SIM chip and work is still quite mysterious and bizarre to them. I'm not kidding. Expect to know a lot more about phones than they do. Most Americans have never travelled abroad and have no idea how the rest of the world lives.