The Original Gay Porn Community - Free Gay Movies and Photos, Gay Porn Site Reviews and Adult Gay Forums

  • Welcome To Just Us Boys - The World's Largest Gay Message Board Community

    In order to comply with recent US Supreme Court rulings regarding adult content, we will be making changes in the future to require that you log into your account to view adult content on the site.
    If you do not have an account, please register.
    REGISTER HERE - 100% FREE / We Will Never Sell Your Info

    PLEASE READ: To register, turn off your VPN (iPhone users- disable iCloud); you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.

Using an iPhone as a hot spot

bendted

Active
Joined
Jun 11, 2010
Posts
1,449
Reaction score
89
Points
48
So how feasible would this be? Ditching cable Internet and using an iPhone 5 as the Internet connection for a current version iMac?
 
It works just fine. But things to consider:

Mobile data is typically much slower than cable. Do you get good 3G (or better) reception in your home?

Mobile data is typically more expensive than cable. What's your data limit for your phone, and how does that compare to your typical at-home data usage?
 
So how feasible would this be? Ditching cable Internet and using an iPhone 5 as the Internet connection for a current version iMac?

This is generally not a very good option. The problem is not so much technical as it is financial and administrative. 4G LTE is fast enough for a desktop connection. But many mobile ISPs do not allow "tethering" like this at all. Also, mobile data plans are always "capped" in some way. They may tell you it is an "unlimited" plan, but that usually means that when you reach some monthly limit of data (e.g., 2,5 GB), the connection becomes so slow it is unusable. Since "unusable" is the same as no service, your "unlimited" data plan is actually quite limited.

If you have a big problem with your cable operator and DSL is not available (and you live in USA), look into a Virgin mobile data hotspots.

http://www.virginmobileusa.com/shop...rand_Hotspot_General_-_BMM_virgin_hotspot_BMM
 
This is generally not a very good option. The problem is not so much technical as it is financial and administrative. 4G LTE is fast enough for a desktop connection. But many mobile ISPs do not allow "tethering" like this at all. Also, mobile data plans are always "capped" in some way. They may tell you it is an "unlimited" plan, but that usually means that when you reach some monthly limit of data (e.g., 2,5 GB), the connection becomes so slow it is unusable. Since "unusable" is the same as no service, your "unlimited" data plan is actually quite limited.

Depends on the carrier. If I paid for tethering, I could use as many GBs as I wanted since I'm on an old Verizon unlimited plan.
 
^ I didn't manage to finish formatting the above post before it auto-posted for me (weird!).

Virgin Mobile is the only wireless solution (in the USA) that offers truly unlimited data, so long as it is 4G. Virgin (interestingly) caps 3G but not 4G data. They seem to have unlimited 4G bandwidth available but, their 3G spectrum is pretty crowded right now. Sprint, the parent of Virgin, also owns Clear Wireless, which is a 4G WiMax service. Virgin's 4G is not LTE, but WiMax. This does not matter, as Sprint/Clear's WiMax is plenty fast enough. You have to be lucky enough to live within range of a Sprint/Clear 4G signal, however. Otherwise, your service will fall back to 3G (which is barely fast enough for a desktop/laptop, and will get capped at 5 GB/month of 3G data).

You could, of course, just sign up for Clear's WiMax service directly. However, although it is technically the same service, I recommend dealing with Virgin over Clear. Clear is an administrative mess. You can't get help from them and they try to cheat you on the billing. Virgin is prepaid, straightforward, and helpful. Virgin's 4G WiMax service is either $35/month or $55/month, depending on how much 3G you think you might use. If you have a strong 4G signal inside your home, you can get truly unlimited, fast data for just $35/month.

For the vast majority of people, however, some kind of wired connection (cable or DSL) is generally preferable for desktop/laptop use.
 
Depends on the carrier. If I paid for tethering, I could use as many GBs as I wanted since I'm on an old Verizon unlimited plan.

As I understand it, those handful of people who have grandfathered "unlimited" Verizon data plans are stuck with 3G (which is not great for a desktop/laptop connection). And it's not really "unlimited" data, anymore, either. As Verizon's CFO is fond of saying, "'unlimited' is just a word". And then you have to pay extra to tether on top of what is already one of the most expensive data plans in the world.

As I said above, the problem with tethering a desktop/laptop through a cell phone is not so much technical as it is financial and administrative.
 
Alright, I don't think this scheme of mine would suit my needs. Thanks, all.
 
Back
Top