โMay-03-2018 04:03 PM
โMay-10-2018 09:50 AM
โMay-10-2018 08:56 AM
Sailingnuts wrote:coolmom42 wrote:
No advantage to a hotspot over a phone.
In your shoes, I would just buy or keep an older dedicated phone for data streaming, for convenience. Then if a phone gets lost/stolen/broken, you can use the older phone instead of being without.
I am sorry but I beg to disagree entirely... HotSpot like the NETGEAR Jetpack 4G LTE Mobile AC791L is optimized for DATA and Speed. It is not an OLD phone and does not work like a phone. Please look at the Data Specification.
The AC791L will have a much better reception in 4G and LTE than any existing phone given the same available signal. Additionally, you can buy reasonable internal antennas that will give you up to 7DB gain. Please check at the NETGEAR site and Amazon.
I have 2 iPhone 7s and there are several locations where I use the AC791L to be able to receive calls (over wi-fi) because the iPhone have very weak signal. I also have a pair of 7DB gain internal antennas that I normally attach to the AC791L when the signal is weak.
The limitation on the data plan and high consumption in HD is correct.
โMay-10-2018 08:21 AM
โMay-10-2018 07:45 AM
โMay-10-2018 07:20 AM
jplante4 wrote:
If you're a member of FMCA, they have a deal with Verizon Wireless a jetpack hotspot for $1 and $50 a month for unlimited data. After 25gig they throttle.
Set up a separate account for this deal using an email address that VZW doesn't kow. Trying to get it put onto you existing VZW account is a nightmare. Ask me how I know ๐
โMay-10-2018 06:12 AM
bowler1 wrote:
Hi,
I am looking for some advice on wireless hot spots. We are going to try living out of our 5th wheel and plan to use a streaming video service through the internet. I am assuming that an actual wireless hotspot (instead of using your phone as one) will provide more reliable and perhaps higher speed internet. Is my assumption correct?
We use Verizon as our carrier. Do their wireless hotspots "throttle back" on internet speed after using a certain number of gigs? I know that happens with your phone. Does the hotspot use the data from your cell plan as an additional line or does it require its own data plan?
Still trying to figure all this stuff out. I am not the most tech-savvy person. Thanks for your help
โMay-04-2018 05:29 AM
โMay-04-2018 05:20 AM
โMay-04-2018 04:39 AM
Sailingnuts wrote:coolmom42 wrote:
No advantage to a hotspot over a phone.
In your shoes, I would just buy or keep an older dedicated phone for data streaming, for convenience. Then if a phone gets lost/stolen/broken, you can use the older phone instead of being without.
I am sorry but I beg to disagree entirely... HotSpot like the NETGEAR Jetpack 4G LTE Mobile AC791L is optimized for DATA and Speed. It is not an OLD phone and does not work like a phone. Please look at the Data Specification.
The AC791L will have a much better reception in 4G and LTE than any existing phone given the same available signal. Additionally, you can buy reasonable internal antennas that will give you up to 7DB gain. Please check at the NETGEAR site and Amazon.
I have 2 iPhone 7s and there are several locations where I use the AC791L to be able to receive calls (over wi-fi) because the iPhone have very weak signal. I also have a pair of 7DB gain internal antennas that I normally attach to the AC791L when the signal is weak.
The limitation on the data plan and high consumption in HD is correct.
โMay-03-2018 06:17 PM
โMay-03-2018 05:16 PM
โMay-03-2018 04:57 PM
โMay-03-2018 04:33 PM
โMay-03-2018 04:28 PM
coolmom42 wrote:
No advantage to a hotspot over a phone.
In your shoes, I would just buy or keep an older dedicated phone for data streaming, for convenience. Then if a phone gets lost/stolen/broken, you can use the older phone instead of being without.