An Engineer

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Posts Tagged ‘ATT

The End of Unlimited Data at ATT is Mostly a Good Thing

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ATT today announced the end of unlimited data plans for wireless customers. Why did they do it? It was not about revenue. They sat around the table at ATT and asked: What’s the number one issue with customer satisfaction today? And the universal answer is network performance. How do they fix it?

Well, they could add more capacity but that takes a long time and is very expensive. Instead, they decided to ration the scarce resource of the data network by offering tiered plans. When people pay for what they eat, they eat less and more efficiently. I remember my freshman year at Dartmouth we used to have all-you-can-eat-dining at “Full Fare.” In that dining hall, the trays would go to the dish room with food sculptures and uneaten desserts. Meanwhile, in the “A la Carte” dining room next door, where students paid for each item, trays would show up at the dish room with an empty plate and a fork. Really. It’s just human nature.

With tiered pricing, ATT’s network performance is going to improve in high congestion areas. 98% of their customers will see reduced costs and the top 2%, if they want to pay for extra data above 2GB, will get good download speeds on their additional usage. Plus, top 2% customers are no longer the enemy of ATT. They pay a fair rate and can do whatever they want.

It’s also good for consumers because you can now get a cheaper entry level data plan for $15/month, great for kids.

Alas, ATT could not help but throw in a few items that are not customer friendly or rational. I hope they rethink them:

  • If you go over the 200MB in the entry level plan, they charge you an additional $15 for the next 200MB, effectively charging you $30 for 400MB when you could have purchased 2GB for $25 if you had planned better. This harkens back to the very consumer unfriendly practice of making consumers guess at their voice usage minutes per month and hitting them with unreasonable overage charges when they guess wrong.
  • Tethering will cost $20 per month extra. This is a mistake. If I buy a 2GB package, they should be comfortable with my using that any way I see fit for personal use. After all, I am not likely going to be using my laptop simultaneously with my iPhone. This is ATT being greedy. They just want a per device charge, but a per-person charge is actually more rational and customer friendly. Tethering has enough shortcomings in battery life and convenience to be its own punishment relative to buying a separate data connection for a device.

Even with this nasty fine print, the move to tiered pricing is good for ATT customers. Sure, in a perfect world there would be enough capacity that everyone could just use as much as they want, but the reality is that wireless data is a scarce resource today for ATT, and by charging people for what they consume, they will better allocate their resources among their customers.

How does this affect photography? Cameras are used sporadically. Allowing consumers to pay for the data they use will allow cameras to get cellular data connections that don’t need to cost anything when you don’t use the camera. Today, some devices are already sold this way, like the Kindle. Of course, ATT is not selling iPhone data like that today. It’s use it or lose it, but maybe someday they will. This is what is needed to put cellular connections on every device on earth.

Written by erlichson

June 2, 2010 at 10:14 am

Why the wireless carriers won't permit Skype to work over 3G

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I am in France this week vacationing with family. I tried the new Skype app to make phone calls back to the US from my iPhone. Works very well. The Skype app is restricted to WiFi only. Want to know why? Just do the math.

I pay $30/month in the US for my unlimited data plan, and use about 160 megabytes per month. That comes out to $0.19/megabyte. Meanwhile, I also have a voice plan. My wife and I use a family plan. We have 2100 minutes and last month used 992 of those minutes, for which we paid $100. Assuming that a voice call over GSM uses approximately 10 kilobits/second, that is $1.34/megabyte we are paying to use the voice network, more than 7x as much.

ATT would rather sell access to their voice network at $1.34/megabyte versus their data network at $0.19/megabyte. And that is why the wireless carriers will not allow skype to use their data network. They don’t want to move people from voice to data.

If you look at SMS text and international rates, the situation only becomes more glaring. ATT charges $1.19/minute to make a voice call back to the US from France. That comes out to $15.87/megabyte. At that rate, I waited and made calls over skype using Wifi.

Text is even worse. Last month I had a 200 msg text plan for $5. That works out to $178/megabyte, assuming no breakage and full 140 character messages. But, I only used 47 of my messages, so I paid $759/megabyte. Ouch.

Of course, the wireless carriers won’t be able to continue getting so much more for their voice, text and international voice services compared to their data services. All are essentially the same service and over the long run, we will wind up paying the lower price of $0.19/megabyte. Nature finds a way. Just like I found a way to use Skype to make phone calls from France versus pay $15.87/megabyte to make a roaming international calls, so will everybody else. Because data is data.

Written by erlichson

April 11, 2009 at 7:57 pm

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