Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Why data limits and overage charges should go away

Share

google_cell_tower_720

Now, if you’ve read the latest news, T-Mobile’s John Legere has been on YouTube again, talking about other mobile carriers and overage charges. Unless you’re living under a rock, most of us probably agree with him. However, if you have either been in hibernation or you were living somewhere without a link to the outside world, let’s start from the beginning.

If you go back to the way the mobile phone industry used to be, there was no worries about going over any data cap. There simply wasn’t a reason to use data. Text messaging was the only extra charges you could incur, mainly because most people carried feature phones. They were dumb phones, and the only major smartphones at the time in existence were made by BlackBerry, Palm, or Samsung. These relatively expensive devices were some of the only phones that carried integrated QWERTY keyboards, or even crudely surfed the Internet. No one we knew really used the devices, aside from the businessmen or the technologically savvy super geek.

Then the announcement of the iPhone happened. People who were interested in buying the phone stood in lines for hours, and waited patiently, for a phone that could surf the Internet at a speed of a little more than a megabyte a second. The only negatives were that AT&T was the only carrier to get the handset, and for the first time the customer would really be charged for data usage. Then, a short time later Android was created, and not only did the age of the smartphone arrive, but so did the concepts of pooled data and the now reviled data cap.

Mostly everyone knows about the pooled data limit, but here’s an explanation. I’ll use myself as the example. If I use two lines with 50 gigabytes of pooled data and only use 48 gigabytes I still pay for all 50 gigabytes, but I didn’t exceed the data cap, so I don’t get charged for overage. However, if I used 60 gigabytes I get charged $15 for every gigabyte I used over the data cap.

Still, not a single person had to worry much about data back in 2007 because the carriers that had Android phones on shelves mostly just had an unlimited data plan. For example, when I bought my first T-Mobile G1 in 2008,(some people know that as the HTC Dream) I had one rate for unlimited talk, text and data. I used that plan for all the YouTube videos that I could stream on the edge network.

As the time wore on, increases in smartphone sales meant that carriers like Verizon and Sprint had less data capacity as before, and the concept of unlimited data began to sour. It would be a while before carriers could upgrade network signal and speeds.

However, Verizon ended the practice of unlimited data for new contracts and joined AT&T with using pooled data limits. Sprint is dabbling with pooled data limits, still offering unlimited data in most markets. Despite complaints about coverage.

So why all the fuss over the concept of data caps, or overage charges? Why can’t people like me or John Legere or everyone who uses a smartphone just sit back and shut up? There several reasons for this, and if you ask different people the same question you can get several answers depending on who you ask.. Here’s mine.

The first reason is that as time goes on, applications are using more and more data. Nowadays, YouTube can stream video at 2K resolution. That’s roughly between 1-2 gigabytes being used per hour of streaming. I know that seems like a lot of time, but it adds up fast. Watch 3 MKBHD videos, our review of the OnePlus One, and then watch the new Star Wars teaser a couple of times, and you’re already at 30 minutes. Not enough for you to worry about? Try using Spotify or Tidal, at high quality. A single song streaming on those applications just ate up ten megabytes on Spotify, and about three to six times that if you use Tidal.

My next point is that application size isn’t what it used to be either. Several years ago, apps were an average of 5 to 10 megabytes. Today the average is twenty, and the maximum size that Google and Apple allow is four gigabytes. Download a few of these and your data limit is gone.

My final reason is that the current rate of data delivery has also increased. Verizon has launched VOLTE (voice over data) with rates of about thirty megabytes a second. Sprint was working on the SPARK network. The project was planning to deliver speeds of up to 200 megabytes per second. Nokia is planning a 5G network in Europe. Speeds on that system have been tested at a mind numbing two gigabytes per second.

The reason that anyone should argue for the end of the data cap as we know it is that the concept doesn’t make sense any longer. The world of smartphones and data usage has changed. The mobile wireless carriers need to change with it.

 

 

The post Why data limits and overage charges should go away appeared first on AndroidGuys.

Read more

More News