| Ever
heard of something called GPRS?
The "general
packet radio service" - recently started by Bristol-based Orange
- is everything WAP should have been when it launched a few years
ago.
GPRS uses clever new technology to squeeze more speed out of the
traditional mobile network.
Usually connection
speeds are a measly 9.6KBps but GPRS can achieve theoretical speeds
of around 170KBps.
Don't get excited,
though. With current GPRS handsets and networks the speeds are much
lower than that.
Quick connections
But does it actually all work in practice?
Being the technical
gods we are at the BBC Bristol website, we have one of the first
GPRS handsets commercially available on the Orange network - the
Ericsson T68.
The service
connected very quickly showing Orange's WAP homepage.

One of the
great things you can do with the T68, is download custom backgrounds
over WAP. |
Hype
aside, the one thing GPRS does do is make WAP bearable - and even
usable.
With the T68
you have got a pleasant-to-use colour screen, and there's no more
waiting and no more connection failures.
In short, it
works.
It is especially
useful for extended periods of use - since you now only have to
pay for what you download, not the amount of time you spend online.
Effectively, it's an 'always on' connection.
This is great
for one of BBC Bristol's favourite uses for WAP - football matches.
The system worked
remarkably well, and took away the frustration of having to connect.
When you look
around at other people at the footy cursing at their mobiles as
they try to get the latest scores, you can see the advantage of
the system.
Bandwidth allocation
There are a
few downsides and minor gripes with the system
You are not
guaranteed any download speed, but you are allocated bandwidth depending
on how many other people are using the network at the same time.
We found the
speed was more like around 15KBps - although it does vary from one
minute to the next.
You certainly
notice those varying speeds when you connect your GPRS phone to
a PC.
The speed does
vary, and sometimes pages can see to take an eternity to appear.
The cost of
the system also varies depending on how much you want to use it.
How much does it cost?
The basic package,
half a megabyte of downloads a month, starts at £5. But if
you go over your allocation, the prices can sting a little.
If you are intending
to use GPRS for heavy computer use, then I would advise the HSCSD
system (another high speed data service) instead.
For casual wap
browsing, and collection of e-mail (which the T68 has an in-build
mail client) I simply cannot fault it.
Both Vodafone
and BT Cellnet (MM02) also operate GPRS services.
Chris Kelly
|