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AT&T's Wireless 3G Microcell is the gadget I hate to love
Like so many in Milwaukee, I've suffered through two and a half years as an AT&T Wireless customer, mostly unable to place or receive a call inside my own home. I encounter dropped calls and spotty reception in the places I need my phone most: on Lincoln Memorial Drive, in the Third Ward and atop the Hoan Bridge (my calls drop each and every single time), to name just a few. I left Verizon in 2008, after 10 years, first to be able to use my phone in Europe, then to purchase my first of two iPhones.
I've had great experiences with AT&T's customer service reps, from the store employees up to corporate; they even sent engineers to my house in Bay View to see if they could optimize the signal. They couldn't, but I appreciated their efforts.
Still, had you asked me last week if there was any chance I'd sign a new contract when mine expires this summer, even if it meant it was the only way to get a new iPhone on June 24, I'd say no freakin' way.
Then, on Monday, I got my hands on a 3G microcell, and I saw my reception instantly increase from zero to five bars within my entire house.
Problem solved. Finally. Not everywhere, but where I need it most.
And now I'm drawn. The microcell absolutely amazing, but it's also the product I hate to love.
You see, this tiny cell phone tower pulls at every fiber of my über-consuming, free-market advocating, gadget-obsessing being: using it diverts calls from AT&T's overstressed and underpowered network onto your own home Internet network ... but you are still charged your cell minutes to use it (unless you buy a higher-priced plan). By relieving network congestion, AT&T's service becomes better for everyone ... but you have to pay them for the privilege of having your phone work.
In other words, if you're an idealist and can tell Ma Bell that you're mad as hell and aren't going to take it anymore, you can switch carriers. Big talk, yes, but iPhone addicts aren't guaranteed to get the device on Verizon or any other carrier anytime soon -- if ever.
On the other hand, if you can stomach the idea of paying AT&T $150 to make your home a place where you and up to 10 friends can actually place a call, this is a godsend: you plug it into your router with a view of the sky (its GPS system ensures you're not installing this in Europe, for example) and in about 45 minutes, bam; perfect reception for calls and text.
Through a Web interface, you can add numbers that work on the microcell; people passing by don't get to use it. The activation is straightforward, but a little weird -- I'm not used to networking setups taking "up to 90 minutes." But it worked, and continues to work great. When you leave your 5,000 square foot bubble of coverage, the microcell automatically switches to a real tower without terminating the call. I've read some users who say the microcell hogs their bandwidth and slows down their Web surfing, but I haven't experienced that yet.
So far, I'm nothing short of blown away.
There are some tales online of furious customers complaining loudly enough to get this microcell for a discount or for free; my contact at AT&T said the price is a firm $150, so I wish you a successful negotiation with your rep.
For me, I can put up with the otherwise shoddy service for now, as long as I can make calls at home, and I can prepare to upgrade to the iPhone 4 with much less guilt. I'll still curse every dropped call on the Hoan Bridge, but sooner or later, I assume AT&T will get its act together.
So, decide where you want to make a stand on principles, and if this isn't it, run, don't walk to an AT&T store and get yourself a microcell -- cursing long-term contracts and device exclusivity the whole, maddening way.
Talkbacks
milROCKeeguy | June 11, 2010 at 3:33 p.m. (report)
something REALLY sad and pathetic about this...you are addicted to something so much that you have to go out and by something to make its BASIC feature work properly. Andy Tarnoff & T...hmm...AT&T?...because that makes sense...you buy a PHONE...because it has an "i" in front of it and everybody else has it...but it doesn't work in your own house? confusing little cycle... :)
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stephchin | June 10, 2010 at 1:03 p.m. (report)
Sick of having to stand by the back door to make a call, I bought a zboost cell repeater. Hubby thought I was nuts. Paid for itself the minute I turned it on. Haven't had a problem for three years now. My problem, my house is not conductive, Sprint network is just fine. Couldn't be happier zBoost YX510-PCS-CEL Dual Band Kit There are probably better ones now, but this one I bought 3 yrs ago did the trick. S. Chin
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brunocarlson | June 9, 2010 at 10:30 p.m. (report)
Living in a house built in the 1920's I have issues with the AT&T issued wireless router. I cannot see this using this since I have a router that can barely cover the 3,000+ sq. ft. area of my house. If AT&T had an overall service booster I will be the first in line and happily pay $300 dollars for it. Get with it AT&T!
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_Ken_ | June 9, 2010 at 6:33 p.m. (report)
That's terrible that AT&T's poor lakefront coverage keeps interrupting all the important calls you're making while driving on the Hoan bridge and Lincoln Memorial Drive. It's boring when all you can do is focus on the act of driving.
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