Were you riding one of AT&T’s unlimited data deals until recently? If so, this whole new Verizon iPhone thing is about to work in your favor, as the Associated Press is reporting AT&T iPhone users are being offered a sort of unlimited data amnesty: if they had it before, but switched to a limited data plan since, they can now have it back. This is clearly in response to Verizon’s promised $30 uncapped deal, though it remains entirely unofficial and unannounced — no reason why AT&T would want to advertise its desperation, after all. When asked for comment, a company spokesperson would neither confirm nor deny the news, saying only that AT&T handles “customers and their situations individually.” Still, we’d pick up the blower and threaten to start wearing red to see what the incumbent iPhone carrier might offer up as an incentive to stay blue.
Take a look at this, a bookshelf that you could potentially purchase from a store for about… oh… $10? So long that when heavy contents are placed along the center, it bends and arcs. Designer / artist Daniel Eatock saw this situation and decided to make the best out of it by grabbing all of his favorite books and placing them along the center in a perfect order, an order so perfect that the arc of the shelf and the height of each of the books perfectly compliment one another in harmony.
Although this would be an amazingly simple sort of bookshelf to produce and sell in hipster shops across the USA, Eatock has only produced two of these, and both times for installations. This particular one you see above is host to 75 books that were, every single one of them, used as research material that informed the art show this project was included in, Book Show, Eastside Projects, all of them owned by the show’s curator James Langdon.
MDF 1220mm long x 300mm deep x 18mm thick, two metal brackets, 75 books – take a peek on Eatock’s portfolio page for a full list of the books used (if you want to recreate it yourself, I suppose.)
Well, it was fun while it lasted, but it looks like Virgin Mobile customers in the US will soon have to make do without their truly unlimited $40 data plan. Starting on February 15th, that will be replaced with a new plan that gives you 5GB of unhindered data use, and throttled bandwidth for anything used beyond that limit. For its part, Virgin says that most customers who use the BB2Go plan for “internet surfing and reasonable downloading will likely not be impacted/notice any difference,” but we’re sure there’s plenty of folks out there that will beg to differ. As you may recall, T-Mobile also introduced some bandwidth throttling of its own this past year, but it actually did so in lieu of overage charges, which is a bit easier to accept than throttling slapped on top of a once unlimited plan.
In one of the most insensitive announcements in recent PR history, T-Mobile UK is telling its customers who want to download or stream online video to their mobile devices to “save that stuff for [their] home broadband.” The carrier, one half of the UK’s biggest operator Everything Everywhere, had up until now offered one of the better monthly allowance deals with a 3GB data consumption limit on Android phones. It still is, in fact, since its new changes aren’t coming into effect until February 1st, but come that fateful Tuesday, T-Mo’s understanding of “fair use” will shrink down to 500MB each month — after which point you’ll still get to browse the web and email for free, but any video content will presumably be subject to an extra charge. It’s not clear how “that stuff” will be handled by T-Mobile once you cross the frugal new threshold, nor is it clear whether customers who signed up for big bodacious 3GB of data will be set free once this new lockdown on mobile video is in effect. Godspeed to you all.
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
Update: T-Mobile has responded with a clarifying statement we’ve added after the break. There will be no surcharges for use over 500MB per month, but once you cross that line, any downloading activity will be “restricted.” By which the company seems to mean “restricted to whatever WiFi connection you can scrounge up,” because its 3G airwaves will be off-limits.
Stop us if you’ve heard this one before: a cell phone comes with an unlimited music subscription. Now, flip it on its head and say the cellular carrier was the one offering the all-you-can download audio buffet — built right into a totally unlimited data, text and voice monthly slate — and you’ve basically got the new $55 Muve Music plan from Cricket Wireless. Cricket doesn’t have the reach of the big four US carriers and may not even have coverage in your area, but that didn’t keep it from tempting Universal, Warner, Sony and EMI from signing over millions of songs. It’ll debut on the new Samsung Suede featurephone pictured at right, which comes with a “special” 4GB Sandisk encrypted flash memory card (et tu, slotRadio?) that will likely protect the music from prying pirate claws… at least for the weeks or months it takes the open-source community to rip it a new one.
The Suede will reportedly hold about 3,000 songs, which (barring antics) will be irrevocably tied to the phone and only play there, and disappear entirely if users stop paying for the Muve plan. PC Magazine got a brief hands-on with an early version, and says there’s a bit of irksome audio compression, but also some Zune-like social networking features, too. The service will debut at CES on January 6th, and spread to other devices and other markets over the course of 2011. PR after the break!
Unlimited data. No, for real this time. While US carriers are tripping over each other to claim the death of uncapped data allowances, the UK’s 3G-only network operator is bringing them back like a pair of retro sneakers. Three‘s grandly titled The One Plan takes all limits and fair usage gotchas away and just lets you suckle bandwidth to your heart’s content. And that explicitly includes tethering your phone to your laptop and using it as a 3G modem — very classy. New and old customers will benefit from this, meaning that if you’re already on this plan you’re in line for a free upgrade. The offer’s effective now and contracts start at £25 a month with a minimum term of one year. We’ll be highly impressed if Three’s network, never mind this deal, survives a full year of being bashed over the head by iPlayer streams and YouTube uploads, but here’s hoping, eh?
Unlimited data. No, for real this time. While US carriers are tripping over each other to claim the death of uncapped data allowances, the UK’s 3G-only network operator is bringing them back like a pair of retro sneakers. Three‘s grandly titled The One Plan takes all limits and fair usage gotchas away and just lets you suckle bandwidth to your heart’s content. And that explicitly includes tethering your phone to your laptop and using it as a 3G modem — very classy. New and old customers will benefit from this, meaning that if you’re already on this plan you’re in line for a free upgrade. The offer’s effective now and contracts start at £25 a month with a minimum term of one year. We’ll be highly impressed if Three’s network, never mind this deal, survives a full year of being bashed over the head by iPlayer streams and YouTube uploads, but here’s hoping, eh?
Sprint’s been doing this for some time, but it looks like Verizon is now toying around with the concept of carrier-agnostic mobile-to-mobile plans (it’s a mouthful, we know) for at least some of its customers. Specifically, Big Red’s trialing such plans in Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and “select markets” in Texas, Tennessee, and Florida ranging from $60 to $130 for individual and family plans ranging from 450 to 2000 minutes; notably, both voice and text buckets are bottomless for mobile-to-mobile. The plans are only slated to run through the end of the year, but we imagine that if they’re popular enough, they’ll be extended — and hopefully expanded.
Sprint’s been doing this for some time, but it looks like Verizon is now toying around with the concept of carrier-agnostic mobile-to-mobile plans (it’s a mouthful, we know) for at least some of its customers. Specifically, Big Red’s trialing such plans in Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and “select markets” in Texas, Tennessee, and Florida ranging from $60 to $130 for individual and family plans ranging from 450 to 2000 minutes; notably, both voice and text buckets are bottomless for mobile-to-mobile. The plans are only slated to run through the end of the year, but we imagine that if they’re popular enough, they’ll be extended — and hopefully expanded.
We told you so. The Wall Street Journal has updated its recent article detailing disclosures from Verizon Wireless chief Ivan Seidenberg, and the latest news is as bad as it is predictable: VZW plans to consign unlimited data plans to the annals of history over the next four to six months, to be replaced by tiered, consumption-based pricing. Seidenberg says Verizon’s prices will surely differ from what AT&T recently introduced, noting that his company values data differently to the competition — though he wouldn’t say whether that means costs will be higher or lower. Either way, Droidsters, enjoy your last few months in the unlimited sun.