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AT&T's laptop mobile broadband subscribers get free Wi-Fi

Glenn Fleishman, PC World05.20.2008
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AT&T extended free access to its Wi-Fi Home package of U.S. hotspots to monthly, unmetered subscribers to its LaptopConnect mobile broadband service with Windows installed. These customers, who pay US$60 per month with a two-year commitment for up to 5 GB of combined upstream and downstream data each month, will receive no-cost access to about 17,000 domestic hotspots, comprising mostly McDonald's stores (9,500) and Starbucks outlets (7,000). A few airports run by AT&T are also included, as well as Barnes & Noble stores.

Previously, AT&T had extended free Wi-Fi to its DSL customers with 1.5 Mbps or faster connections, all its fiber-optic U-Verse subscribers, and business remote access users. AT&T has a higher tier of Wi-Fi, Premier, which includes another 53,000 international hotspots, full US airport roaming, and some hotels excluded from the Basic package. The Wi-Fi Home service is available only to AT&T customers; Premier is $20 per month for everyone else.

The business case for AT&T is clear: moving data from its expensive, spectrum-limited 3G network to its much-cheaper-to-operate hotspot network provides faster and more consistent connections in many cases, especially indoors, while improving 3G service for everyone outside. AT&T is expanding its 3G mobile broadband network from 270 to all 350 of the top metropolitan markets in the US this year, as well as increasing upload speeds. (AT&T operates Starbucks itself through a managed services provider, Wayport, that has a separate contract with McDonald's; Wayport resells McDonald's access to AT&T.)

This announcement doesn't address smartphones. AT&T keeps accidentally slipping the kimono on its iPhone plans, enabling free access at Starbucks, then turning it off; changing their service plan details to list free access at hotspots, then removing it. (I blogged about this back on May 8.) Word on the street is that smartphone free Wi-Fi will be added later in 2008. Timing it with the launch of the 3G iPhone, expected for June 9 at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference would be wise, no?

The free offer requires the use of AT&T Communication Manager, which works only with Windows; AT&T, unlike Sprint Nextel and Verizon Wireless, have no unified connection manager for Mac OS X, although they do support that operating system.

Reprinted with permission from PC World. Story copyright 2008 PC World Inc. All rights reserved.

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